Search for a command to run...

Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this compelling episode of Essential Habits of High Performance, host Damian Hughes explores the critical difference between playing the game and playing the occasion through the lens of Newcastle United defender Dan Burn's contrasting experiences at Wembley Stadium. (02:42) The episode reveals how pressure can either elevate performance or destroy it, examining Burn's devastating 2023 Carabao Cup final defeat against Manchester United where he admitted being "absolutely shattered" emotionally before the game even started. (05:01) Fast forward to March 2025, and the same player at the same stadium delivered a match-winning header against Liverpool - this time playing the game, not the occasion. (05:04) Hughes unpacks the psychological science behind choking under pressure, drawing from research by psychologist Sian Beilock and Harvard's Alison Brooks to reveal actionable strategies for managing high-stakes moments.
Damian Hughes is a renowned performance psychology expert who has served as an adviser to leaders in sport, business, and the arts for over 25 years. He specializes in helping individuals and organizations shape, create, and sustain high-performance cultures, drawing insights from elite performers to create practical applications for everyday excellence.
Dan Burn is a Newcastle United defender and England international who represents the ultimate local hero story - a Geordie lad living his childhood dream at his boyhood club. Standing as a commanding figure at center-back, Burn has overcome significant mental health challenges and social media struggles to become a key player for both club and country, earning his first England call-up at age 32.
Harvard psychologist Alison Brooks' research reveals a counterintuitive truth about managing pre-performance anxiety. (07:34) Rather than trying to calm down, high performers benefit from reframing their nervous energy as excitement. Brooks conducted experiments where participants facing stressful tasks like karaoke or public speaking were split into two groups - one told to calm down, the other to say "I'm excited." Those who reframed their nerves as excitement consistently performed better, appearing more confident and competent. This works because both anxiety and excitement are high-arousal states, but one directs energy toward fear while the other channels it toward engagement. Dan Burn's Newcastle teammates adopted this mindset before their successful 2025 final, shifting their language from "it would be good if we win" to "when we beat Liverpool." (07:14)
Elite performers distinguish themselves by ruthlessly filtering distractions through one simple question: "Does this really make a difference to performance?" (09:06) Dan Burn revealed how Newcastle's 2023 final preparation was consumed by peripheral concerns - ticket logistics, suit choices, accommodation details - that ultimately had zero impact on their ability to play football. By 2025, the team had learned to strip away everything that didn't directly contribute to performance. This echoes the approach used by England's 2003 Rugby World Cup winners, where Johnny Wilkinson reduced the enormity of a World Cup final to simple, repeatable actions: catch, set, kick. (10:07) The lesson extends beyond sport - whether facing a crucial presentation or important exam, high performers focus exclusively on elements within their direct control.
Psychologist Gabrielle Wulf's research demonstrates that pre-performance routines serve as mental anchors that combat the natural tendency to overthink under pressure. (11:05) When nervous, our attention turns inward, monitoring every detail of breathing, posture, and technique - this interference disrupts skills that normally run on autopilot. Routines shift focus outward, away from anxious overthinking and back to familiar, repeatable patterns. Rafael Nadal's famous ritual of tugging his shirt, bouncing the ball precisely, and adjusting his hair creates a bridge between nerves and habit. (12:06) These aren't superstitions but scientifically-backed methods to tell the mind "I've been here before" and allow the body to execute what it already knows how to do.
Sian Beilock's groundbreaking research reveals a paradox: the harder you try to control performance under pressure, the worse you often become. (13:15) Her golf putting experiments showed that normal conditions produced fine results, but adding pressure through cameras, audiences, or prize money caused performance to collapse. This "paralysis by analysis" occurs when conscious control interferes with automatic processes. The solution is counterintuitive - think less, not more. When Beilock distracted players before putting by asking them to hum or memorize numbers, their performance actually improved because it prevented overthinking. (06:55) Elite performers understand that pressure moments are not the time to reinvent technique but to trust the thousands of hours of training already invested.
Research consistently shows that athletes who emphasize process goals (what to do) outperform those who obsess over outcome goals (what to avoid). (13:52) Dan Burn articulated this perfectly when reflecting on Newcastle's contrasting Wembley experiences: "I think we're a big team on the process. If we get the process right, the result will take care of itself." (14:08) This mindset shift prevents the mental interference that destroys performance under pressure. Instead of being consumed by thoughts of winning, losing, or consequences, elite performers narrow their focus to the immediate next action - the first pass, the opening line of a presentation, or the next small step in their process. This approach transforms overwhelming occasions into manageable sequences of familiar actions.