5 Life Skills You Learn from Sports Experiences – Testing the paywall

The reason why sports is an integral part of young people’s lives, especially in the UK, is because many things learned in sports are transferable to every other part of life. Sports experiences develop skills that young people need in everyday life, including leadership skills. Here are five skills sports help you build.

1. Handling Failure (Resilience)

Learning how to handle failure and setbacks will set you up very well for the future. In sports, you fail a lot. In fact, you fail more than you win. How you handle those failures is the most important thing. 

By learning how to handle setbacks, you have a higher chance of achieving success in anything you do. This is because success usually comes despite failure, not in the absence of it.

2. Collaboration (Teamwork)

Most sports are designed such that you can only achieve success through teamwork. It’s baked into the game. Think of football. If the central defenders don’t play their part, the midfielders and strikers cannot single handedly help deliver success. The most successful teams in every sport had team members who played their role to very high levels, not just the star players.

This instills the spirit of teamwork into young people. One similarity you’d see in the workplace and in sports fields, is that both require teamwork to succeed. “Teamwork makes the dream work” is cliche but popular for a reason.

3. Consistency (Discipline)

Consistency is difficult. You can say it’s the most difficult part of life, because it requires discipline. In sports, discipline is necessary. For instance, in several sports, like basketball and football, you train everyday. This includes days you don’t have games. 

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Tomisin Bakare

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