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Handling Pressure in Big Moments: Lessons from Truls Moregard’s Grand Smash Victory

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(by Dr. Alan Chu, Ph.D., CMPC)

Champion mindsets aren’t born—they’re built, one focused breath and pressure point at a time.

When Truls Moregard became the first European to win a WTT Grand Smash title in August 2025, defeating world number one Lin Shidong on home soil in Sweden, his victory revealed as much about his mental game as physical technique. His post-match interview insights offer practical lessons for players at every level.

Breakthrough From Pressure to Flow

The most revealing moment came in Moregard’s description of the crucial final points in the finals, “It felt so easy to breathe suddenly – when I looked at my dad, my mom, my brothers, and all my friends and my girlfriend. It felt so easy to play the last points.”

This wasn’t luck—it was the physiological shift from stress response to flow state. When we’re anxious, breathing becomes shallow, limiting oxygen to the brain’s decision-making centers. Moregard’s ease of breathing signaled his nervous system switching from sympathetic (“fight or flight”) to parasympathetic (“rest and digest”) mode, optimizing performance.

Your Application:

  • Practice controlled breathing during pressure situations. For instance, use a simple 4-6 breathing pattern between points: inhale for 4 counts through your nose, exhale for 6 counts through your mouth. This activates the vagus nerve, naturally calming your system and improving focus.
  • During timeouts, scan for calming, supportive faces in your environment—just as Moregard did—to trigger positive emotional responses that aid performance. The science backs this up: when we see familiar, caring faces, our brains release oxytocin, which counteracts stress hormones and enhances our ability to perform under pressure.

Home Court Mental Advantage

Moregard mentioned the environmental factors that boosted his performance, “It wouldn’t have been possible if it wasn’t on home soil.” But this wasn’t just about crowd noise—it was about creating what sport psychologists call “environmental anchoring.”

The Swedish crowd’s chants provided more than motivation; they created a familiar, comfortable context that allowed his trained skills to emerge naturally. This demonstrates a crucial principle: our environment directly affects our mental state, which in turn affects our physical performance.

Your Application:

  • Create consistent environmental cues that trigger your best performance state. This might include playing the same warm-up music, using routines that involve consistent cues (e.g., equipment), or mentally visualizing supportive people during tough moments.
  • Develop a “portable home court advantage” by carrying familiar elements with you to tournaments. It could be a specific set of apparel, a mental image of your best performance, or a physical gesture that reminds you of your preparation.

Resilience Through Consistent Pressure

Perhaps most importantly, Moregard acknowledged that he had “consistently knocked on the door of the sport’s biggest prizes before finally delivering when it mattered most.” This pattern of his success isn’t a coincidence—it’s evidence of systematic mental conditioning. Each previous “setback” at major tournaments (e.g., finalist at the World Championships, bronze medalist at the Olympics) wasn’t a failure but an invaluable experience that built his confidence and capacity to handle the pressure of historic moments.

Moregard’s breakthrough came not because the pressure disappeared, but because experience had taught him to channel it effectively. The goal isn’t to eliminate pressure but to become comfortable performing within it.

Your Application:

  • Reframe competitive setbacks as mental training opportunities. Each match where you feel pressure—regardless of outcome—is building your psychological resilience for future breakthrough moments.
  • Keep a “pressure journal” noting situations where you felt nervous and how you responded, environmental factors that helped or hindered your performance, how you recovered mentally from difficult points or matches, and what worked or did not work.

Your Mental Training System

Moregard’s historic victory demonstrates that elite mental performance isn’t magical—it’s systematic. His key insights about mental preparation can be adapted by any player willing to train their mental game as deliberately as their forehand and backhand.

Start with one element—practice controlled breathing between points this month, add environmental anchoring next month, and build your pressure tolerance over the season. Like Moregard, your breakthrough moment will come when systematic mental preparation meets competitive opportunity.

 

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