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In the 2016 Olympics, Michael Phelps was making his comeback in the 200-meter butterfly final, facing Chad le Clos β the same swimmer who had beaten him in 2012. Before the race, le Clos tried to intimidate Phelps by shadowboxing, but Phelps stayed locked in. When the race began, Phelps focused on his lane and trusted his training. Meanwhile, le Clos made the mistake of looking at Phelps instead of the finish line β and that split-second distraction cost him the gold. The lesson? Winners focus on their own race, not the competition.
π― Stay focused on your process β not the competition.
Follow me for more!
Instagram: genesispdc_
(760) 685-4445
[email protected]
genesismpc.com
Send us a text
In the 2016 Olympics, Michael Phelps was making his comeback in the 200-meter butterfly final, facing Chad le Clos β the same swimmer who had beaten him in 2012. Before the race, le Clos tried to intimidate Phelps by shadowboxing, but Phelps stayed locked in. When the race began, Phelps focused on his lane and trusted his training. Meanwhile, le Clos made the mistake of looking at Phelps instead of the finish line β and that split-second distraction cost him the gold. The lesson? Winners focus on their own race, not the competition.
π― Stay focused on your process β not the competition.
Follow me for more!
Instagram: genesispdc_
(760) 685-4445
[email protected]
genesismpc.com