CoachPinkston
February 2, 2026

As a mental performance coach, I’ll tell you something most athletes don’t realize until late in their careers:
Your body language is always performing—even when you’re not.
Before a play is run.
Before a whistle blows.
Before you speak to a teammate, coach, or official.
Your posture, facial expressions, eye contact, and reactions are constantly sending signals—to others and to your own nervous system.
I’ve watched games where the scoreboard said “tie,” but the body language said, this one’s already over.
The good news?
Body language is a skill—and like any skill, it can be trained.
Body language isn’t about looking tough or fake confidence. It’s about regulating your internal state and influencing the environment around you.
Research in psychology and neuroscience consistently shows that nonverbal behavior plays a major role in how humans interpret confidence, leadership, and emotional control (Burgoon, Guerrero, & Floyd, 2016).
In sport, this matters because:
And maybe most importantly:
Your body influences your brain as much as your brain influences your body.
One of the most powerful concepts in mental performance is embodied cognition—the idea that our physical states affect our thoughts, emotions, and decisions.
Studies show that posture, facial expression, and movement patterns can influence:
For example, research by Riskind & Gotay (1982) demonstrated that slumped posture increased feelings of helplessness, while upright posture was associated with greater persistence.
Translation for athletes?
You don’t “think” your way into confident body language.
You often move your way there first.
Let’s get practical. Here are patterns I see constantly in athletes who struggle with consistency:
One missed shot turns into:
That reaction doesn’t just show frustration—it extends it.
Mistakes happen. But poor body language keeps the mistake alive.
Eye rolls. Heavy sighs. Arms crossed.
Parents and coaches: this matters more than you think.
These cues spread emotionally through teams—a phenomenon supported by research on emotional contagion (Hatfield, Cacioppo, & Rapson, 1994).
Arguing calls doesn’t just risk penalties—it signals loss of control.
Studies show officials are more responsive to calm, composed communicators than emotional ones (Slepian et al., 2015).
Here’s what separates high-level performers—not just physically, but mentally.
Elite athletes don’t stay “positive.”
They stay neutral.
Mistake? Reset.
Bad call? Next play.
Big moment? Same posture.
This aligns with research on emotional regulation, which shows that athletes who manage emotional expression perform more consistently under pressure (Gross, 2015).
Notice elite players:
These behaviors anchor the nervous system and create predictability in chaotic environments.
Great leaders don’t always talk more.
They stand differently.
Open posture.
Eye contact.
Stillness under pressure.
Teammates read that as safety and confidence.
Coaches and parents—this part matters.
Athletes don’t just learn from what you say.
They learn from how you react.
Research on modeling behavior shows that young athletes adopt emotional and behavioral responses from authority figures (Bandura, 1977).
Ask yourself:
If you want composed athletes, be a composed adult.
Here’s how I coach it—simple, actionable, and repeatable.
You can’t change what you don’t notice.
Film sessions shouldn’t just review plays—review reactions.
Teach athletes a physical reset:
These cues interrupt emotional spirals.
Body language breaks down when tired.
Train posture and presence late in practice, not just at the start.
One play ≠ identity.
Body language should always say:
“I’m still here. I’m still competing.”
Confidence isn’t loud.
It isn’t hype.
It isn’t pretending.
Confidence is controlled energy.
And body language is how that control shows up.
Your posture tells your brain whether you belong.
Your reactions tell others whether you’re steady.
Your presence tells the game whether you’re ready.
If you’re an athlete:
Train your body language like you train your skills.
If you’re a coach:
Demand composure as much as effort.
If you’re a parent:
Model the presence you want your athlete to develop.
Because long before the final score,
your body language is already telling the story.
If you want help training confidence, composure, and presence under pressure—not just motivation—this is exactly what mental performance coaching is built for.
Start coaching the invisible skills that separate good from great.
Teach body language as a performance weapon—not an afterthought.