What successful athletes can teach us about self-doubt, even if you're not into sport
In his now-viral commencement speech for the 2024 graduating class of Dartmouth College, tennis great Roger Federer said that learning to master self-doubt is what makes a true champion.
'It's natural when you're down to doubt yourself and to feel sorry for yourself,' he said. 'Your opponents have self-doubt, too. Don't ever forget that.
'The best in the world are not the best because they win every point. It's because they know they'll lose again and again, and have learned how to deal with it.'
As we head into running season, hundreds of thousands of Australians are preparing to challenge themselves in one of many street events.
Likely, there will be times of self-doubt. These elite athletes can teach us how to navigate it. And, if you're not a runner? Well, this is about running, but it's also not about running.
Draw on the positives
Jess Stenson may be one of the country's best marathon runners, but she's not immune to self-doubt.
She admits being thrown by the 2024 Olympic marathon drama where she was selected over fellow Australian runner Lisa Weightman and public debate ensued.
'I've had some self-doubt for sure,' she says.
The 37-year-old mum-of-two chose to channel the positives, such as thinking about the day she phoned her family to tell them she'd made the team.
'We were all crying, and they all said 'we are going to come and support you',' says the Lululemon-sponsored athlete.
This was poignant: In late 2020, her father was diagnosed with a tumour. A difficult year of treatment followed and he was unable to see Stenson win gold at the 2022 Commonwealth Games.
Paris would be her 18th career marathon, so she focused her attention on the dream of having her whole family there to watch her for the first time.
Ahead of any race, Stenson also anticipates having a mental wobble, so she writes positive words on her hand and picks tough points during the race to look at them.
'If there's been a theme of bravery in the lead up then that's the word I'll have,' she says. 'That word will trigger memories of this session I did when I didn't think I'd get through it.'
Remember your resilience
Sometimes it's the not positive experiences that help us through self-doubt, but the humbling ones.
Kenyan-American athlete Betsy Saina, winner of the 2023 Sydney Marathon, was the favourite going into US Olympic trials in Florida last year.
But she went in overtrained and underweight and by the 34 kilometre mark, the 36-year-old was suffering from dehydration and had to pull out.
She sat by the side of the road and cried with frustration. 'There was no second chance,' she says.
After giving herself the rest of the day to feel the depth of her disappointment, she decided she couldn't let it get the better of her. One month later she finished the Tokyo marathon in two hours and 19 minutes. She was the first American over the line, and her time was a three-minute personal best.
'It changed the perspective in me,' says the ASICS athlete, who came fifth in the 10,000 metres at the 2016 Rio Olympics. 'You always celebrate when you get the chance to do it again – it's the redemption.'
If it's redemption that helps her get back up when she's down, it's knowing her own strength that sustains her when the going gets tough mentally or physically.
'You don't know what or when you're eating next,' she says of growing up in Kenya. 'That builds resilience not just in racing but in life.'
Redefine success
Batt-Doyle enters each race not with one goal in mind but multiple. In Tokyo, her plan A was to run sub 31 minutes and break her own Australian record. But, if she realised during the race that her A goal was unattainable she would move to B, and, if necessary C or D.
'You're reshaping what success looks like – it's not just one goal and if you can't achieve it, it's all over.'
She accepts that self-doubt may creep in at any stage of a race, she just needs to know what she will do with it when it appears.
In this journey of 10,000 metres in Tokyo, her confidence and Plan A prevailed: She crossed the finish line in 30 minutes and 44 seconds, setting a new Australian record.
It's an experience she will draw on the next time the going gets tough.
'I think of confidence as a bank,' adds McClurg. 'Every time we do hard things we drop a coin in the bank, so the next time we do something hard we have something to draw on.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


7NEWS
41 minutes ago
- 7NEWS
AFLW superstar Monique Conti and fellow Richmond player Rhyan Mansell go public with new relationship
Australian sporting superstar Monique Conti and fellow Richmond player Rhyan Mansell appear to have gone public with their new relationship. Conti posted a selfie of the pair smiling in the mirror and tagged Mansell, writing 'hehe'. He shared the same photo with a green heart. It's unclear how long they have been together, but they have exchanged cheeky comments on social media. Conti recently posted a series of photos from her trip to Bali with Mansell leaving a smiley face in the comments section, to which she replied with 'mwah'. Conti is in the middle of AFLW pre-season training ahead of Round 1 in just over six weeks. The superstar midfielder will be looking to continue her stunning career that already has her among the competition's best. The 25-year-old already has a host of accolades to her name, including the AFLW best and fairest award in 2023 and the best on ground medal in the 2018 grand final with former club Western Bulldogs. Conti won the club best and fairest in her final year at the Bulldogs before joining the Tigers ahead of the 2020 season. She has since won the club best and fairest in all six seasons at the Tigers. As well as being one of the AFLW's greatest ever players, Conti has also carved out a successful basketball career in the WNBL. Despite prioritising AFLW, she has still won the WNBL championship with the Southside Flyers. She played the most recent season for Geelong United. Meanwhile, Mansell has played 65 matches for the Tigers since his debut in 2021, establishing himself as a key member of the young forward line with his pressure and goal sense. Conti, 25, was previously in a relationship with former Richmond player Sydney Stack, but that ended in 2020.

The Age
an hour ago
- The Age
Amadou Seini blunder in Australia vs Cameroon: Player dunks ball in his own net to hand Australia miracle win at the under-19 basketball World Cup
Australian Emus coach Robbie McKinlay had a list of plays drawn up with just 48 seconds left in the fourth quarter and his team down by six points to Cameroon at the under-19 basketball World Cup. McKinlay's playbook wasn't needed to win the game, however. Cameroon's Amadou Seini dunked the ball in his own basket to help send the game into overtime and Australia staged a remarkable comeback win. Seini's mistake is extremely rare, but it has happened before in basketball. In an exhibition game in 2013, University of Kentucky player Joe Young tried to save the ball from going out of bounds and as he flicked it behind his back, it landed in his own net. Seini's act was remarkable in that the centre received the baseline pass from his own player after an Australian basket and immediately dunked to gift the Emus two points and reduce the margin to four. Alex Dickeson hit a crucial three-pointer for Australia with four seconds remaining to tie the game and send it into double overtime. The Emus eventually secured a 101-96 victory with Roman Siulepa and Dash Daniels each scoring 22 points. The Emus are in the toughest group in the tournament, paired with favourites the USA, Cameroon and France. Australia had lost on the first day of the tournament against the USA by 15 points, meaning they needed a win against Cameroon to keep their tournament hopes alive ahead of the final group game against France. Apart from gifting the Emus two valuable points, Seini had enjoyed an outstanding game, finishing with 15 points and an under-19 World Cup all-time high of 25 rebounds, sharing the record with Australia's former NBA star and Sydney Kings owner Andrew Bogut.


7NEWS
2 hours ago
- 7NEWS
Boos rain down at Wimbledon as Taylor Fritz's clash against Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard suspended due to curfew
Boos have rained down at Wimbledon after play was suspended after the fourth set of the first-round clash between fifth seed Taylor Fritz and Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard. Fritz fought back from two sets down and 5-1 in the fourth set tiebreaker to force a deciding set on Court No.1, which has a retractable roof. WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Wimbledon clash stopped due looming curfew. It was about 10.15 pm, and the players met up at the net with an official to discuss whether or not to continue. After a short discussion, the tournament referee made the decision to suspend the match despite there still be 45 minutes until the controversial 11pm curfew. 'Ladies and gentlemen, due to the late time of the day, we will not be able to finish the match. Therefore the match will be suspended until tomorrow. Play is suspended,' he chair umpire said. The crowd erupted in boos at the decision, while Fritz was clearly fuming at the call. Fritz did not appear pleased about the interruption of his match. He looked toward his guest box with his palms up and said: 'I couldn't do anything. I tried.' Australian tennis great Todd Woodbridge was 'surprised' by the decision. 'I'm a little surprised by that decision, I think the referees have come out too early, they could have given them the option,' he said on Stan Sport. 'We still had over 45 minutes to go to curfew. The sets we have had have all been under 45 minutes, they have been close to it, but there was definitely a chance of an outcome there tonight. 'I think for Mpetshi Perricard, good for him, he should get off and be very happy with that. 'Taylor Fritz would be a little annoyed by that decision I have no doubt because he played an exceptional tiebreaker from 5-1 down.' Mpetshi Perricard took the initial two sets 7-6 (6), 7-6 (8), before Fritz grabbed the next two 6-4, 7-6 (6). In a match between two of the tour's top servers, Mpetshi Perricard hit 33 aces before play was stopped, and Fritz hit 24. Mpetshi Perricard never earned a break point during the four sets contested Monday; Fritz had five chances and converted one. Fritz, a 27-year-old Californian, was a quarterfinalist at Wimbledon in 2022, losing to Rafael Nadal, and again a year ago, losing to Lorenzo Musetti. Mpetshi Perricard, a 21-year-old Frenchman, reached the fourth round at the All England Club last year, also eliminated by Musetti. The Frenchman also created Wimbledon history by clubbing the fastest serve ever at the tournament. He hammered a 153mph (246km/h) serve, which was five miles master than the previous record set by Taylor Dent in 2010. Over at Centre Court, Monday's last match also was halted, with No. 3 Alexander Zverev, a three-time major finalist, even at a set apiece against Arthur Rinderknech when they stopped at 10:54 p.m. There were no breaks of serve in either of the two sets they played. Rinderknech took the first 7-6 (3), and Zverev the second by a 7-6 (8) score.