Over my years coaching elite athletes, I’d confidently say that the three most common mental obstacles to success are i) an inability to move on from past mistakes, ii) pressure to succeed and iii) fear of something going wrong at some point in the future. Fear of failure. Fear of injury. Fear of judgment. Fear of letting the team down. Fear is an unspoken and often unnecessary burden that prevents individuals and teams from reaching their full potential.
The Weight of Fear
Fear is a silent disruptor. Most try to hide it from others, they seldom speak about it, and many judge themselves as ‘mentally weak’ because they ‘suffer’ it. It fuels hesitation, clouds decision-making, and inhibits bold, game-changing actions. In sport and business, fear leads to conservative play—teams playing ‘not to lose’ instead of playing to win.
Think about a cricketer in the final overs of a chase. If they let fear of losing dictate their shot selection, they hesitate, second-guess, and ultimately miss the opportunity to execute with confidence. The same applies to leaders in high-stakes environments—those who operate from fear avoid risks, stay within their comfort zones, and stifle creativity.
Fear and Performance—The Science
Research in sports psychology has shown that fear activates the amygdala—the part of the brain responsible for our fight-or-flight survival response. When an athlete perceives a threat of a pending loss, injury, embarrassment or disappointment, their body responds as if it’s in physical danger. The result? Increased heart rate, muscle tension, narrowed vision, and impaired cognitive function. In simple terms, fear makes it harder to think clearly and execute at your potential.
How High-Performing Teams Overcome Fear
Through working with teams and individuals who have both got it right and wrong, here are a few key strategies that can help combat the unnecessary paralysis of fear and unlock peak performance.
1. Redefining Failure
Great teams don’t see failure as something to fear—they see it as perfectly normal and important part of their learning journey. When failure is viewed as a natural part of progress, it loses its grip. The Indian cricket team’s journey to becoming World Cup champions in 2011 was built on embracing past setbacks, extracting the gift of learning they offered, and using this as motivation rather than as sources of doubt.
2. Creating Psychological Safety
If players are afraid of making mistakes, they play within themselves. But if a team environment encourages risk-taking and learning, individuals operate with greater freedom and confidence. This applies in business too—companies that allow employees to take calculated risks without fear of blame often see the greatest innovation. This is all on the leader, and how they manage themselves around failure and mistakes.
3. Exposure!
One of the best ways to combat fear is to expose individuals to challenging situations in controlled environments. The best teams simulate high-stakes situations in training, making the real thing feel less intimidating. Just as a soldier wouldn’t enter battle without preparation, an athlete or leader shouldn’t face pressure moments without having practiced for them. Exposure to that which scares you is the fastest ways to overcome it. Face your fears, and do it anyway.
4. Shifting Focus to the Present
Fear is a mental concept that you create for yourself, and you do this when you are in this present moment and your mind is dwelling on some future event. Fear thrives on ‘what if’ scenarios—what if I fail, what if I lose, what if I embarrass myself? Always, the situation you fear lives in the future. The best performers recognise this and learn to return their minds to the present moment, focusing on the task at hand, and only on what they can control.
Team Who Manage Fear Best Win More
The best teams and individuals aren’t those without fear—they’re the ones who refuse to be controlled by it. They embrace fear as a normal and important part of the journey to success, they lean into their fear in training, and have a blame-free culture that promotes people perform freely under pressure.
If you want to build a team that thrives at the highest level, don’t just focus on skills and strategy. Focus on embracing and training for the most challenging situations the team will encounter. Because when people are encouraged to take (calculated) risks, play with freedom, and feel the they are fully backed in the process, that’s when true high performance is unlocked.