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Dr. Richard Lustberg, Ph.D.


On The Couch:
 
The Week In Review
(3/03)



NEW BLOG!

New Regular Posts


Print Media Appearances

NYDailyNews
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Sports Stars and Celebrities dating

Courant.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on office pools

Wave Magazine
Dr. Lustberg speaks on youth sport


ABC News
Dr. Lustberg speaks on ABC News

The Free Press - Mankato, MN
Dr. Lustberg's quotes are pure fiction

The Vail Trail
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
being a sports fan

OrlandoSentinel.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Forgiving Fans

Birkshire Eagle
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Red Sox's Nation

SignOnSanDiego
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
sports fans' emotions

Time
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
the fans' reaction to the Mets' collapse

New York Post
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Met Fans lost season

seattlepi.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Mike Hargrove

reviewjournal.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Michael Vick and Dog Fighting

Newsday.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
fan behavior

STL Today
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Barry Bonds and why he's a polarizing figure

Athens News
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
fan support

InfoSports
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
youth sport

KansasCity.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Post Traumatic NFL-Football Disorder

FresnoBee.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
focus, concentration, and preparation.

SignOnSanDiego.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
fan's behaviors

BerkshireEagle.com:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
how the fans relate to the players

Daily Herald:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
the psychology of Rex Grossman

Courier News:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
being a sports fan

Examiner:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
the Baltimore Ravens and the positive energy fans create

PajamasMedia:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
the psychology of autographs

ESPN.com:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Teammate sabbotage

VC2:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Steroids

Kane County Chronicle:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Superstitions

Christian Science Monitor:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Issues about youth sport

smh.com.au:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
World Famous swimmer: Ian Thorpe

NewsReview.com:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
the psychological importance of having a sports franchise in your city

Philadelphia Daily News:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Terrell Owens

Winston-Salem Journal:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Athletic Competitiveness

The Boston Globe:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
The Minds of NFL Kickers

USA Today:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Baseball Players' Fatigue

Journal Gazette:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Mental Illness in Athletes

The Associated Press:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Hero Worship

Newsday.com:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Alex Rodriguez

ReviewJournal.com:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Ben Rothlesberger

PJM News:
Phil Mickelsohn Infatuation

Unabated Sports:
A Doctor In The House

Sports Central:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Trash Talking

PE
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Rituals

Canoe
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Lucky Charms

Coloradoan
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Superstitions

Orlando Sentinel
Dr. Lustberg speaks on The Death of Tony Dungy's Son and Depression

Star Telegram
Dr. Lustberg speaks on fan and owner loyalty

Jacksonville
Dr. Lustberg speaks on losers

Belleville News Democrat
Dr. Lustberg speaks on emotional reaction to games

Star Telegram
Dr. Lustberg speaks on the line between players and spectators

Des Moines Register
Dr. Lustberg speaks on "how young is too young?"

DenverPost.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on perpetual losers in sports

dailypress.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on players and their uniform numbers

SignOnSanDiego.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Phil Jackson and Kobe Bryant

latimes.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Phil Jackson and Kobe Bryant

PE.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on athletes who have returned to their old teams

OCRegister.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks  on athletes and their jersey numbers

Mets Inside Pitch
Dr Lustberg speaks  on the psychological aspects of being employed in the major leagues and having your position reassigned.

post-gazette.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks  on enduring a long string of losing

Hartford Courant
Dr. Lustberg speaks on athlete's sudden illnesses

NorthJersey.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on the Yankees/Red Sox epic rivalry

Mercury News
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Barrett Robbins and Mental Illness in Athletes

phillyBurbs.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on the passion of sports fans

York Daily Record
Dr. Lustberg speaks on superstitions in sports

Denver Post
Dr. Lustberg speaks on trash talking in sports

The Duquesne Duke
Dr. Lustberg speaks on fans and sports

Chicago Tribune
Dr. Lustberg speaks on superstitions

Sunday Herald
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Barrett Robbins’ struggle against bipolar disease

New York Daily News
Dr. Lustberg speaks on the impact of the Jets playoff loss

The San Diego Union-Tribune
Dr. Lustberg speaks on the history of player/fan violence

New York Times

USA Today

Dallas Morning News

Denver Post

Chicago Tribune

The Baltimore Sun

Philadelphia Daily News

Daily News Sports

Denver Post

San Francisco Chronicle

Newsday

Orlando Sentinel

San Diego Union Tribune

timesunion.com

WebMDHealth

The Providence Journal

The San Diego Union-Tribune

UK Casino News

CBS NFL Kid Zone

The Kansas City Star

The Dallas Morning News

Star Telegram

San Diego Union Tribune

Forest Grove News Times

Scroll Online

The Daily Free Press

MyrtleBeachOnline.com

Toronto Star

San Francisco Chronicle

Orlando Sentinel

Femmefan.com

Monterey County Herald

Lincoln Journal Star

ChicKnits

Reveries Magazine

The Mercury News

International Network on Personal Meaning

Christian Science Monitor

Preteenagers Today

San Antonio Business Journal

eSports Media Group

The Marion Star

PsychNet-UK

The Record (Hackensack, NJ)

The Plain Dealer

delawareonline.com
The News Journal


iparenting.com

Christian Science Monitor

The Journal News

El Tiempo

The Observer & Eccentric Newspapers

outsports.com

 

 

Pats plan no-nonsense title defense

By TOM E. CURRAN
The Providence Journal
July 28, 2004

FOXBORO, Mass. - It's no coincidence that Ricky Williams retired just days before the Miami Dolphins were set to begin training camp. Or that, in each of the last three preseasons, newly acquired veteran offensive linemen have left the Patriots days after workouts began.

Late July is the most psychologically daunting time of year in the NFL. Players who have been poolside, barside and familyside for months are about to dip themselves into a vat of pain for a six-month stretch. For what? A paycheck? Glory? Duty? Fun? None of which is guaranteed.

Sisyphus exists in every coach and player in this league. Like the mythical Greek figure, they are duty-bound to roll a boulder uphill until it nearly reaches the top, then, after it rolls back down, they're compelled to start all over again.

"A few days after the Super Bowl, you might wake up and say to yourself, 'Man, it's all over. We did what we wanted to do. We reached our goal,' " said the Patriots' Larry Izzo.

Then what?

"You can't think that every single player shows up at training camp happy," said sports psychologist Richard Lustberg, who's based in New Jersey and has observed and lectured on group sports psychology. "Not everyone is dying to be there. Some are playing to merely earn a living. Outside, we assume they all love the job, but not everyone is hyped."

For the New England Patriots, the psychological situation is even more layered. They are Super Bowl champions, yes, but for that what do they get? A ring, the winner's share, parades and photo ops. Riding shotgun to all that is the fleeting respect of the media and every opponent's very best punch all season. And lurking behind it all is the specter that, if they don't win the Super Bowl again, they will have failed to defend.

And if one doesn't think the weight of that is significant, consider this: Not only have the last five Super Bowl champions failed to repeat, all except the 2001 Baltimore Ravens failed to even make the playoffs the following year.

The Patriots have been to the mountaintop. And they have seen the promised land. What dangling carrot will prompt them to begin the chase up the hill again? How hard is it to put the following season behind and begin rolling the rock again?

"I have definitely seen teams that had success who had difficulty (turning the page during the next season), and that's not good," Patriots head coach Bill Belichick said late last week. "A lot of it takes care of itself. For instance, when you pass the brink of having an edge to being overconfident, another team will usually come along and put everything in perspective in a hurry. But whenever players or coaches start to take the attitude of, 'We'll be there when it counts, don't worry about things, there's no urgency,' it usually doesn't get straightened out, and when you try to, it doesn't happen."

In the coming weeks, it will be fashionable to wave the 2002 Patriots season around as proof that a Belichick-coached team didn't have the belly to defend.

Repeat after us . . . .

Only seven times in NFL history has a team been able to successfully defend its Super Bowl championship, and no team has won three in a row:

1966-67 Green Bay Packers

1972-73 Miami Dolphins

1974-75 Pittsburgh Steelers

1978-79 Pittsburgh Steelers

1988-89 San Francisco 49ers

1992-93 Dallas Cowboys

1997-98 Denver Broncos

He disagrees.

"I don't think we played or coached well enough (in 2002)," he said. "The year before, we executed better at critical times. When the bar was raised (in 2002), we didn't rise with it. We went from 11-5 to 9-7, we missed the playoffs on the third tie-breaker, and we had the same record in the division and against the NFC, but we just weren't good enough. In the end, that's all it was."

And now?

"We're a much better football team," he said. "Forget all the psychology and all that (stuff), we're just a much better football team than that one. The 2001 team that won, it was a miracle to win a championship with that team. And you see how it turned out in 2002, when everyone was gunning for us."

Dr. Richard Lustberg, a sports psychologist, believes that the group mentality of training camp and the single-mindedness of Belichick and his leading players help the Patriots' chances of meeting the daunting task of defending their title.

"Teammates feed off each other," he said. "At various times, group contagion takes over. You really need a coaching staff and a core group of players that remains hungry. When you've smelled the roses, you want to smell them again. And there is also the ego piece of the puzzle. There is a burning desire to compete. Even when you are drained, competing is the job, and professional athletes are trained competitors."

The mindset that Belichick has spawned in the organization also works in New England's favor. The notion of living moment to moment, play to play, game to game. The belief that you don't look up to see the peak, you look down to see where your boot falls next.

It's ironic that these men who have the means to live lavishly have embraced Belichick's monkish teachings when it comes to football. There is no end to effort, no rest after success. Work is the reward. Glory is fleeting, like blades of grass on the wind. You do what you do as well as you can because that is what you do. Not for the biggest contract in the league or the most endorsement money or to be on the box of a video game.

Last year, said Izzo, is fading in the rear-view mirror.

You can't dwell on what you accomplished last year because it does you no good except to realize that it affects how other teams play you," he said. "You are the bar now. Teams will test themselves against you, your team. Teams think, 'Let's see how good we are, and if we can beat them that means we're pretty good. You face that every week, and that means you have to raise your level. Looking back to last year is pointless."

Training camp begins at Gillette Stadium today (Thursday). The rock is at the bottom and the mountain awaits.


(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, http://www.shns.com.)

 

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