Crisis Mode: What Elite Sport Teaches You About Pressure
Why how you respond matters far more than what happens
There are moments in elite sport where everything speeds up very quickly.
Something happens, often unexpectedly, and suddenly the pressure shifts. Phones start ringing. Messages come in. People want answers, and they want them immediately.
Those are the moments that define how you operate.
Not when things are going well.
But when they are not.
I remember one particular moment early in my career when that became very clear.
The phone rang, and within seconds it was obvious that this was not a routine call. Something had happened, something that was about to become public, and there was an expectation that I would respond to it.
Immediately.
There is a natural instinct in those situations to react.
To answer quickly, to fill the silence, to try and regain control by saying something, anything, that might help. The pressure to respond can feel overwhelming, particularly when you are aware that people are waiting.
But that instinct is usually the wrong one.
Because the moment you react emotionally, or before you fully understand what is happening, you lose control of the situation.
That was one of the first real lessons I learnt in elite sport.
You do not rush your response.
You manage it.
In that moment, I did not have all the information. I did not fully understand what had happened, and I did not know how it would unfold. What I did know was that anything I said too quickly had the potential to make the situation worse.
So instead of reacting, I paused.
Not outwardly, not in a way that suggested uncertainty, but internally. Just enough to stop myself from rushing into an answer that I could not stand behind.
Then I bought time.
That is something that people often overlook.
You are not obligated to respond immediately, even if it feels like you are. A calm, measured response that creates space, even a small amount of space, is far more valuable than a rushed answer that you cannot control.
“I’ll come back to you shortly.”
It is a simple line, but it gives you what you need.
Time to think.
Time to gather information.
Time to understand what you are actually dealing with.
From there, the focus shifts.
Not to how you feel about the situation, but to what is actually true.
What has happened?
What do we know for certain?
What do we not yet know?
Because without that clarity, any response is just guesswork.
And guesswork under pressure is where mistakes are made.
Only once you have that information do you decide how to respond.
Not react.
Respond.
There is a difference.
A response is deliberate. It is considered. It takes into account not just the immediate situation, but the wider impact of what you say and how you say it.
That is what elite sport teaches you very quickly.
Pressure is not the problem.
How you handle it is.
And over time, that becomes a way of operating.
Not just in crisis moments, but in everything.
Pause.
Gather the facts.
Control the response.
It is a simple framework, but it is incredibly effective.
And it applies far beyond sport.
Because most people, when faced with pressure, do the opposite.
They react quickly. They speak before they have all the information. They allow emotion to drive their decisions, and in doing so, they often make the situation harder to manage.
The ability to stay composed, to create space, and to respond deliberately is what separates those who handle pressure well from those who are overwhelmed by it.
That is not something you are born with.
It is something you learn.
And once you have it, you use it everywhere.




Very good points in this article.
From my corporate experience, taking the time to consider a response is key. I’ve fallen afoul of not doing that in the past and letting my emotional side get the better of me.
In moments where time is of the essence, it may not be possible to obtain all the facts, but taking the right amount of time to make a thoughtful and calculated response is key….even if you have to caveat for transparency.
Thank you for sharing.
For me, the “aha” moment was when you said, “the ability to stay composed.” I was thinking the piece was about composure from the first paragraph, and then you confirmed it.
I can see how this plays out in professional sports, but also in my own personal and professional life.
In sports, you often hear about superstar athletes coming out of college who struggle early because they haven’t adjusted to the pace of the pro game. They can’t slow things down, which leads to rushed decisions and less-than-ideal outcomes.
I can’t relate to being a pro athlete, but I can definitely relate to reacting too quickly. Not long ago, I was in a situation that required pause, and luckily a friend of mine was with me and he delivered a masterclass in slowing things down. I learned a lot from that moment.