Skip to content

Dr. John F Murray

Menu
  • Home
  • About
  • Services
    • Mental Training for Peak Performance
    • Psychological Counseling
    • Business Psychology
    • Sports Psychology Workshops
  • My Blog
  • Faq
  • Contact

Author: SEBASTIAN2025

11 Secrets of Sports Psychologists from Mental Floss Magazine

No Comments
| Blog

11 Secrets of Sports Psychologists from Mental Floss Magazine June 30, 2019 | By Suzanne Raga – September 1, 2017 – Sports psychologists help athletes of all kinds achieve optimal results on the court, field, or track. Whether they counsel individual athletes or work with teams, coaches, or managers, they focus on how mental and emotional factors influence athletic performance. But there’s more to their profession than teaching visualization techniques and positive thinking. We spoke to a few sports psychologists to learn about their job, from the extensive education and training it requires to their mastery of mindfulness. 1. IT TAKES YEARS OF TRAINING AND EXPERIENCE TO BE SUCCESSFUL. Sports psychologists spend about a decade or more in school, completing an undergraduate degree, master’s, and then a PhD. After completing a minimum of 3000 hours of supervised work experience (the exact number of hours varies by state), they must pass federal and state exams to become a licensed psychologist with a specialty in sports. “People don’t realize how much time and effort goes into not only acquiring the proper academic credentials, but also the immense time and energy devoted to kicking off a private practice and making it profitable,” says Dr. John F. Murray, a licensed clinical and sports psychologist in Palm Beach, Florida. Once they are licensed, sports psychologists must begin to build their career, whether they work at a sports clinic, university athletic department, gym, or their own private practice. MANY OF THEM WORK WITH JUNIOR ATHLETES RATHER THAN PROS. “Students [who ask for advice about working in the field] idealistically tell me that they plan to work with the Dallas Cowboys or New York Yankees when they get their degree,” Murray tells Mental Floss. “I have to take them off that delusion, while keeping them hopeful, and steer them to realize that their struggle only begins after they get all their degrees and a license to practice psychology.” Although Murray has two decades of experience and frequently treats professional athletes, the majority of his clients are still junior athletes hoping to improve their game or get into a good college. THEY’RE LIFELONG SPORTS LOVERS Most sports psychologists have a lifelong passion for physical activity and self-improvement. Dr. Michael Gervais, a high-performance psychologist (he prefers the term over sports psychologist since he counsels business executives and actors in addition to athletes) and host of the podcast Finding Mastery, tells Mental Floss about his early love of surfing: “I spent countless hours in the water, trying to understand how to get better. I walked home from high school, ‘surfing’ the imaginary waves from the neighbor’s hedges and arching tree branches.” Murray, who describes his job as a calling, explains that sports psychology is perfectly suited to his passion. “I always loved and played sports and I majored in psychology in college, so I just combined the two,” he says. 4. THE MIND-BODY CONNECTION FASCINATES THEM When a young Gervais entered his first official surf competition, his anxiety interfered with his performance. “I was in a foreign body completely unequipped to do the activity I loved the most, while being judged and critiqued,” he says. “I tried three more competitions, all with similar results. And then there was a paradigm shift.” After a fellow competitor told Gervais to stop thinking about what could go wrong, Gervais tried imagining what he wanted to happen in the waves. “Before I realized that I had shifted my entire psychology, I was paddling to catch a wave, free from worry and distraction,” he says. “That early experience set me down a path to want to understand the impact between the mind and body and performance—especially in hostile and rugged environments.” 5. THEY HAVE TO FIND THEIR OWN WAY. “Many advisors in college and graduate programs know nothing about [the field]!,” Murray says. “You still today have to forge your own path … For me it made sense to first get a master’s degree in the sports sciences (sports psychology track) and then to enter a doctoral program in clinical psychology that would allow me to continue my pursuit of sports psychology.” After studying the University of Florida’s Florida Gators football team for part of his doctoral dissertation, Murray did a (rare) sports psychology internship and a postdoctoral fellowship before sitting for the licensing exam. “It’s really a field comprised of two different specialties [the sports sciences and professional psychology], and you cannot ignore either part if you want to be a true professional,” he says. 6. THEY’RE MASTERS OF MINDFULNESS When performance anxiety causes athletes to doubt their abilities, they may unknowingly make subtle shifts in their movements, leading to a missed basket or a fumbled ball. In an interview with Forbes, sports psychologist Dr. Stan Beecham explains that he first teaches athletes to become aware of their own thought process. “We know that it’s the mental game that counts, whether it’s sports or business. Because the mind is controlling the body. You have to think of the brain as the computer system, and you have to think of your belief system as your software,” he says. Sports psychologists teach athletes techniques to focus on their breath, find a sense of calm, and think more clearly under pressure. “Mindfulness training is at the center of what I do with the majority of athletes for developing great awareness and mental ability to adjust and to focus,” Gervais says. “When the stakes are really high, one of the mental skills that we want to invest in is the ability to think under pressure and generate a sense of confidence no matter what the circumstances are.” 7. SOME OF THEM FOCUS ON HELPING PRO (VIDEO) GAMERS. Sports psychologists can apply their training beyond the world of sports. In addition to advising business executives and actors, some work with professional gamers who want to perform at a high level. Weldon Green, an eSport psychology trainer who coaches professional League of Legends (LoL) players, writes in a Reddit

Read More »

FOCUS ON TASK, KEEP COOL, AND YOU CAN RIDE IN STYLE

No Comments
| Blog

FOCUS ON TASK, KEEP COOL, AND YOU CAN RIDE IN STYLE Cincinnati Enquirer – Updated by John F Murray – June 3, 2024 – John Eckberg – Crosstown Shootout highlight is when underdog wins prize – Mike Zilliox turned his XU hat around backward, then ambled out onto the floor at halftime at the Crosstown Shootout basketball game between University of Cincinnati and Xavier in January. He was one of three picked from the Cintas Center crowd to attempt the improbable: a lay-up, a foul shot, a three-pointer and a half-court shot – and to make all the shots within 24 seconds. The winner was promised a two-year lease on a new Chevrolet Tahoe. Keep in mind that top college hoops players will usually miss most of these shots: one of 10 lay-ups, two of 10 foul shots, six of 10 shots from the field, seven of 10 three-pointers and just about every half-court shot they will ever attempt. Zilliox, a former No. 1 tennis player for Xavier, didn’t care about those stats because he figured they didn’t apply to him. No matter that he hadn’t picked up a basketball in six months and that the last time he did launch one, it was in his backyard, where the hoop is 9½ feet from the ground, not a regulation 10 feet. While he waited for the first participant to shoot – and fail – Zilliox, 34, was optimistic, focused and brimming with confidence. “I thrive in those kinds of situations,” Zilliox said, remembering a decade back to when his tennis match would determine whether the entire Xavier tennis team would win or lose. That is pressure. This, by comparison, was a lark. Did he choke? Did his hands get clammy? Did his breathing get labored? None of the above. The West Chester resident drained all the shots and because of that, his family’s time on the highway has changed for the good. His 3-year-old daughter, Olivia, loves having a built-in DVD player for her favorite movie, Shrek. Zilliox and his wife, Tammy, appreciate the cutting-edge sound system and how the group Bare Naked Ladies sounds on it. Their take, after paying $4,000 in taxes for the “gift,” is $12,000 “Really, I never thought about winning,” Zilliox said. “I just wanted to do better than the guy who went before me.” One onlooker, Ron Joseph, president of event sponsor Montgomery Chevrolet, watched with keen interest, knowing Zilliox’s good fortune would bring attention to the dealership. Joseph had the presence of mind to take out a $1,100 insurance policy so that his dealership would not be out the expense of the lease on the $47,000 Tahoe. When Zilliox made the shot, it turned that insurance premium into gold. “The marketing value of the event was so much greater when you have people talking about the guy who made the basket,” Joseph said. But the workplace lesson, aside from Joseph’s smart marketing strategy, is what Zilliox brought to the competition. Performing under pressure, finding focus in a chaotic situation, wooing a little Lady Luck – that’s what most workers and executives want every day from their job, according to John F. Murray, a Palm Beach, Fla.-based performance psychologist who advises professional athletes and others on achievement under stress. He reviewed a video of Zilliox’s shots and offered up some observations. “He was smiling, relaxed, steady, playful, calm, poised, fluid in his movements and confident,” Murray said. “He looked like he was having fun. And that is the essence of great focus.” (Shaded Box) Perfomance pressure and a hoops ‘zone’ Grace under pressure is almost always about focus, says performance psychologist John F. Murray. Murray reviewed a video of West Chester’s Mike Villiox recently making four shots in a row – a lay-up, foul shot, three-pointer and half-court shot – and concluded: The background music helped. “The last shot was made at the same time the music was reaching a climax – good instincts on his part,” Murray said. The crowd helped thanks to a phenomenon called social facilitation. “And he is the kind of guy who thrives in situations others might perceive as pressure,” Murray said. Villiox had luck on his side. “That ball will not fall more than 30 percent of the time even if shot by an NBA player,” Murray said, “so he was, indeed, fortunate.” Villiox managed, too, to get himself in a hoop zone. “The basket seemed like it was as wide as a swimming pool,” Murray said. Villiox said: “I wanted to remain cool.” Dr. John F. Murray is a sports psychologist and clinical psychologist providing sports psychology and counseling services based in Palm Beach, Florida. Leave a Reply Cancel reply Logged in as Admin. Edit your profile. Log out? Required fields are marked * Message* More Posts All Posts Blog 11 Secrets of Sports Psychologists from Mental Floss Magazine July 10, 2025/No Comments 11 Secrets of Sports Psychologists from Mental Floss Magazine June 30, 2019 | By Suzanne Raga – September 1, 2017… Read More The Importance of Confidence in Sports, Business, and Life July 10, 2025/No Comments The Importance of Confidence in Sports, Business, and Life NORTH PALM BEACH, Fla., June 3, 2024 – Updated by Dr…. Read More Sports psychologist: Anxiety often root of performance problems July 10, 2025/No Comments Sports psychologist: Anxiety often root of performance problems NORTH PALM BEACH, Fla., June 3, 2024 – Updated by Dr. John… Read More

Read More »

The Importance of Confidence in Sports, Business, and Life

No Comments
| Blog

The Importance of Confidence in Sports, Business, and Life NORTH PALM BEACH, Fla., June 3, 2024 – Updated by Dr. John F. Murray – When sports psychologist John F. Murray decided to auction the idea of “Confidence” on eBay he had no idea how much interest this auction would draw. Top athletes and film stars use mental coaches and sports psychology, but he didn’t know whether the general public would pay for what might be called nothing more than an idea. Bidding opened at $10 and after fifteen bids this idea sold for $250, representing perhaps the first time an “idea” has been sold in an auction. The winner was a recreational tennis player in New York. She received one hour of mental coaching by Dr. Murray. “I had a hunch this would draw some attention since so many are beginning to recognize the value of confidence and mental training. The auction testified to broad-based interest,” said Dr. Murray, who has coached some of the top athletes in the world. “The public response justified my hunch.” The auction was started to demonstrate public and professional interest in training the brain. “We’ve gone almost as far as we can go physically, but mental training is a territory with unlimited potential for improvement in business, sports, or life,” said Murray, who has spoken on this topic on numerous talk shows. Many pro athletes, teams, businesses, and organizations receive the benefits of mental coaching, but most people are still often surprised to know that these services even exist as there are few legitimate performance psychologists or other professionals to provide these services. Confidence is described as an umbrella term reflecting all the thoughts, feelings, actions and sensations reflecting self-belief and expectations of success. Top tennis professional Vincent Spadea spoke on national television about the benefits of mental coaching to reverse the longest losing streak in tennis history and return to top 20 in the world. NBA legend Tracy McGrady (t-mac) spoke about improved confidence after working with Dr. Murray. Same with thousands of other pro and amateur athletes and high performers in many realms. For more information about “mental training” and Dr. Murray go to https://johnfmurray.com. Contact:John F. Murray, PhDTEL: 561-596-9898FAX: 561-805-8662 Dr. John. F. Murray is a Sport and Clinical Psychologist in Palm Beach, FL and helps athletes, and business people build their confidence. Leave a Reply Cancel reply Logged in as Admin. Edit your profile. Log out? Required fields are marked * Message* More Posts All Posts Blog Sports psychologist: Anxiety often root of performance problems July 10, 2025/No Comments Sports psychologist: Anxiety often root of performance problems NORTH PALM BEACH, Fla., June 3, 2024 – Updated by Dr. John… Read More FOCUS ON TASK, KEEP COOL, AND YOU CAN RIDE IN STYLE July 10, 2025/No Comments FOCUS ON TASK, KEEP COOL, AND YOU CAN RIDE IN STYLE Cincinnati Enquirer – Updated by John F Murray –… Read More 11 Secrets of Sports Psychologists from Mental Floss Magazine July 10, 2025/No Comments 11 Secrets of Sports Psychologists from Mental Floss Magazine June 30, 2019 | By Suzanne Raga – September 1, 2017… Read More

Read More »

Sports psychologist: Anxiety often root of performance problems

No Comments
| Blog

Sports psychologist: Anxiety often root of performance problems NORTH PALM BEACH, Fla., June 3, 2024 – Updated by Dr. John F. Murray – When sports psychologist John F. Murray decided to auction the idea of “Confidence” on eBay he had no idea how much interest this auction would draw. Top athletes and film stars use mental coaches and sports psychology, but he didn’t know whether the general public would pay for what might be called nothing more than an idea. Bidding opened at $10 and after fifteen bids this idea sold for $250, representing perhaps the first time an “idea” has been sold in an auction. The winner was a recreational tennis player in New York. She received one hour of mental coaching by Dr. Murray. “I had a hunch this would draw some attention since so many are beginning to recognize the value of confidence and mental training. The auction testified to broad-based interest,” said Dr. Murray, who has coached some of the top athletes in the world. “The public response justified my hunch.” The auction was started to demonstrate public and professional interest in training the brain. “We’ve gone almost as far as we can go physically, but mental training is a territory with unlimited potential for improvement in business, sports, or life,” said Murray, who has spoken on this topic on numerous talk shows. Many pro athletes, teams, businesses, and organizations receive the benefits of mental coaching, but most people are still often surprised to know that these services even exist as there are few legitimate performance psychologists or other professionals to provide these services. Confidence is described as an umbrella term reflecting all the thoughts, feelings, actions and sensations reflecting self-belief and expectations of success. Top tennis professional Vincent Spadea spoke on national television about the benefits of mental coaching to reverse the longest losing streak in tennis history and return to top 20 in the world. NBA legend Tracy McGrady (t-mac) spoke about improved confidence after working with Dr. Murray. Same with thousands of other pro and amateur athletes and high performers in many realms. For more information about “mental training” and Dr. Murray go to https://johnfmurray.com. Contact:John F. Murray, PhDTEL: 561-596-9898FAX: 561-805-8662 Dr. John. F. Murray is a Sport and Clinical Psychologist in Palm Beach, FL and helps athletes, and business people build their confidence.   Leave a Reply Cancel reply Logged in as Admin. Edit your profile. Log out? Required fields are marked * Message* More Posts All Posts Blog 11 Secrets of Sports Psychologists from Mental Floss Magazine July 10, 2025/No Comments 11 Secrets of Sports Psychologists from Mental Floss Magazine June 30, 2019 | By Suzanne Raga – September 1, 2017… Read More FOCUS ON TASK, KEEP COOL, AND YOU CAN RIDE IN STYLE July 10, 2025/No Comments FOCUS ON TASK, KEEP COOL, AND YOU CAN RIDE IN STYLE Cincinnati Enquirer – Updated by John F Murray –… Read More The Importance of Confidence in Sports, Business, and Life July 10, 2025/No Comments The Importance of Confidence in Sports, Business, and Life NORTH PALM BEACH, Fla., June 3, 2024 – Updated by Dr…. Read More

Read More »

Recent Posts

  • 11 Secrets of Sports Psychologists from Mental Floss Magazine
  • FOCUS ON TASK, KEEP COOL, AND YOU CAN RIDE IN STYLE
  • The Importance of Confidence in Sports, Business, and Life
  • Sports psychologist: Anxiety often root of performance problems

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

  • July 2025

Categories

  • Blog

Dr John F Murray

CONTACT

Email: johnfmuray@mindspring.com

Phone:561-596-9898

FAQ

CONNECT WITH Dr. John F. Murray

Facebook X-twitter Linkedin Instagram