How Bad Do You Want It?

How Bad Do You Want It? Mastering the Psychology of Mind Over Muscle

The greatest athletic performances take place in the mind, not the body. How Bad Do You Want It? explores some of the greatest moments in endurance sports to mine concrete habits and tactics we can use to cultivate our own mental strength. Great endurance athletes often seem godlike in their abilities. But no matter how great, their physical abilities can take them only so far. The greatest moments in sports demand that these champions rely on their mind to confront and overpower the same fears we all face in sports and in life: fear of failure, fear of suffering, fear of change, to name a few. When we understand how much mental strength is demanded of the greatest athletes in pursuit of victory, their performances become vastly more inspiring. Behind every glorious win are doubts overcome, personal demons faced and setbacks surmounted. How Bad Do You Want It? describes a new "psychobiological" model of endurance performance connecting the mind and body through the brain, and explains how athletes are sometimes able to overcome physical limitations with mental might. Each story in the book is viewed through the lens of this model, shedding new light on what science has to say about mental fortitude in sports. With its compelling accounts from triathlon, cycling, running, rowing, and swimming, How Bad Do You Want It? puts readers on the sidelines of more than a dozen epic races while also digging into the science to share the how and why of each transformative moment.
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Reviews

Photo of Kireth Sandhu
Kireth Sandhu@lifeofkarrot
3 stars
Sep 1, 2021

This read definitely held some gems for aspiring elite athletes, although I did have a few issues with it. I liked the idea that each chapter would focus on a particular sporting individual, and through this case study style exploration readers would learn something about the athlete mindset. However, these chapters were long and sometimes bogged in sport-specific detail, making it difficult to get through them. Additionally, I realised after some time that all the examples were endurance sports, and although I understand why the book was not marketed as such I felt slightly disappointed in this aspect. However, the physiological model and mindset learnings that Fitzgerald was able to both infer and pull from these real-life legends was astounding, and I definitely gained a new understanding and respect for individuals pushing themselves in whatever level of sporting arena they were in. I do wish that there was a condensed version of just the key lessons, but I can attribute some of my frustrations towards not being well-read in non-fiction generally.

Photo of Jimmy Cerone
Jimmy Cerone@jrcii
5 stars
Feb 4, 2023
Photo of Andre Schweighofer
Andre Schweighofer@dre
3 stars
Jan 13, 2023
Photo of Danté
Danté@dantenel
3 stars
Aug 31, 2022
Photo of Sloan, Kara
Sloan, Kara@kayraw
4 stars
Jan 1, 2022
Photo of Kathleen Burroughs
Kathleen Burroughs@reading_kitkat
4 stars
Aug 29, 2021