Preparing Mentally for the Olympics
DU professor helps athletes compete at their very best
The thrill of competing in the Olympics. Athletes will train their entire life for an event that may last only a few minutes. It鈥檚 almost impossible to imagine the pressure or the mindset required for an athlete to perform at peak on the world鈥檚 biggest stage.
鈥淭he Olympics are perfectly set up to make great performances a challenge,鈥 says Steve Portenga of DU鈥檚听Graduate School of Professional Psychology听(GSPP). For the last 15 years he has worked closely with some of the best athletes in the world, including the U.S.A. Track and Field team (USATF) during the 2012 Olympic Games in London. The professor in the GSPP鈥檚听Sports and Performance Psychology Program听started working closely with athletes while earning his PhD from the University of Missouri-Columbia. Portenga remembers how for weeks he would show up at track and field practices to help the coach, who had a PhD in sports psychology. 鈥淗e asked me if I [was] planning to keep coming. When I told him I was, he told me to go make myself useful by talking to one of his high jumpers.鈥 For the next three years, Portenga helped at practices, traveled with the team and helped at NCAA Nationals and USA Nationals.
After completing his PhD, Portenga joined USATF working as a sports psychologist. At about that same time, he started working at DU, first in Athletics and at the Counseling Center before becoming a full-time professor at GSPP.
When Portenga was working with athletes preparing for the 2012 Olympics, he knew he had one clear objective: 鈥淢y responsibility was to help athletes perform more consistently in the upper range of their abilities.鈥 Portenga says accomplishing this goal means working with athletes before and after competitions and also on location at many big events.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a very unique pressure cooker that鈥檚 hard for anyone who hasn鈥檛 lived in the Olympic Village to truly understand,鈥 Portenga says about the stress facing Olympians. 鈥淎thletes are away from family and friends for a month or more. They are often sharing a room. There鈥檚 constant energy around them. There are Olympics rings, national colors, foreign languages. They have little privacy and it鈥檚 very difficult to find a quiet space to relax.鈥