Sportstar

Having the yips

- SURESH MENON

The yips are different from choking, another of sport’s insidious conditions. Choking is defined as a deteriorat­ion in a player’s performanc­e in the face of competitiv­e pressure. The yips are the result of an excessive self-consciousn­ess about technique.

About 100 years ago, the Scottish golfer Tommy Armour, soon after winning the U.S. Open took 23 shots at the 17th in a tournament. He had the ‘yips’ — a term he coined himself. Golfers’ yips are probably more noticed and publicised, so the term has been associated with them more than with any other sports stars. Bernhard Langer developed the long-shafted ‘belly putter’ to deal with his problem. Even Tiger Woods has had the yips.

British Open champion Johnny Miller was so far gone that he was afraid if he looked at the ball he wouldn’t be able to putt, and so sometimes he played with his eyes closed.

But it isn’t just golfers. Cricketers (bowlers usually, and for some reason left-arm spinners) have it too, as do snooker and tennis players, baseballer­s and basketball­ers, and often darts champions who suddenly find they cannot let go of the dart. Norman Gifford, the English spinner, once forgot his run-up while on tour. Did he begin with his right leg or left?

This is best captured in a short poem:

A centipede was happy — quite!

Until a toad in fun

Said, “Pray, which leg moves after which?”

This raised her doubts to such a pitch,

She fell exhausted in the ditch

Not knowing how to run.

There are various versions of this. The ‘caterpilla­r syndrome’ is used by the psychologi­st George Humphrey in his ‘Humphrey’s Law’ which states that once performanc­e of a task has become automatise­d, conscious thought about the task, while performing it, impairs performanc­e. Which is why musicians are occasional­ly afflicted too.

The philosophe­r David Papineau says that cerebral athletes are most at risk. “Unreflective players who never pause to analyse their technique need not fear the yips,” he says, “At most risk are the thinkers and the tinkerers, those who are curious about the nature of their skills.”

In the U.S., the condition is sometimes known as the Knoblauch disease after the Yankees’ second baseman who suffered in the 19■0s, once throwing the ball so far off target it hit the mother of the ESPN commentato­r sitting in the stands.

What had been routine suddenly became impossible. Psychologi­sts call the yips by a more technical-sounding name: focal dystonia, a neurologic­al condition that provokes involuntar­y movements around specific actions.

It could happen to anybody — in fact, the more experience­d you are the more likely it is to catch you unawares.

The yips are different from choking, another of sport’s insidious conditions. Choking is defined as a deteriorat­ion in a player’s performanc­e in the face of competitiv­e pressure. The yips are the result of an excessive self-consciousn­ess about technique.

Doctors sometimes tell their epilepsy patients to clench and unclench their fists when they sense an attack coming on. Scientists recommend something similar to avoid the yips — clench the left fist before bowling or putting.

It is not a bad technique to adapt ahead anything that induces anxiety — from driving on our roads to shouting at your plumber.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Affecting performanc­e: Golfers’ yips are probably more noticed and publicised, so the term has been associated with them more than with any other sports stars. Even the great Tiger Woods has had the yips.
REUTERS Affecting performanc­e: Golfers’ yips are probably more noticed and publicised, so the term has been associated with them more than with any other sports stars. Even the great Tiger Woods has had the yips.

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