• How Arsene Wenger’s Approach To Performance Changed My Life | Martin Keown
    Jan 14 2025

    Martin Keown is one of the Premier League’s most formidable defenders, a leader in Arsene Wenger’s most successful Arsenal side that went on to go unbeaten in the famous ‘Invincibles’ season of 2003/4, in what would be his last season at Arsenal aged nearly 38.


    Now an insightful pundit, and author of his recent memoir ‘On the Edge’, Martin talks candidly and entertainingly about what made him tick, the coaches that influenced him, the players that impressed him the most and the techniques and lifestyle habits that Arsene Wenger introduced him to which would transform him as a player and a person.


    It’s an episode full of sporting anecdotes from one of the Premier League’s golden eras, plus there’s also a lot to absorb on what makes good leadership, the importance of personal values and making the absolute best of your talents.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    34 mins
  • How I Went From Support Man To Tour de France Winner | Geraint Thomas
    Jan 7 2025

    Geraint Thomas is one of Britain’s most popular and successful cyclists, a Tour de France winner and double Olympic gold medalist who’s also known as a team man willing to give everything for the cause.


    Speaking direct from the massage table and in reflective mood, the man everyone calls ‘G’ looks back on the career-defining moment when he realised he could make the switch from Tour de France support man to yellow jersey contender in his own right. He discusses what it took mentally, physically and tactically to make this massive step, and what it felt like to achieve his dream to actually win the world’s greatest and toughest bike race in 2018.


    Now entering his 19th - and most likely final - season as a professional, Geraint talks about how cycling has changed, what he still wants to achieve and how he’s looking for a new challenge once he finally hangs up his lycra.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    33 mins
  • Performance Tips From Team GB’s Lead Psychologist | Jess Thom
    Dec 31 2024

    Jess Thom is Team GB’s lead psychologist, a sports and performance specialist who helps elite athletes to fulfil their potential, on and off the field.


    Jess shares some of the key mental strategies she uses to help her athletes excel, many of which can be applied to anyone looking to improve their everyday performance.


    You’ll hear Jess explain how to handle your inner critic, when and how visualisation can be most useful, how to handle nerves and fear and why ‘what-if’ planning builds resilience and reduces anxiety. These are insights from someone making a difference at the very top of elite sport.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    34 mins
  • Reflections From Top Athletes featuring Lewis Hamilton, Ben Ainslie, George Russell, Gary Neville and more
    Dec 24 2024

    It’s been a big 12 months on Performance People and we thought we’d close it out the year with a selection of clips from some of our favourite episodes, many of which were recorded out in in Barcelona, where Ben Ainslie and his INEOS Britannia team were attempting to fulfil their ‘moment in time’ and bring the oldest trophy in sport back to Britain for the first time.


    We were joined by some stellar guests in our recording studio out there, including Lewis Hamilton, Ben Ainslie, Gary Neville, George Russell, Toto Wolff, Hannah Mills and Ellie Aldridge, who shared some of the insights they rely on for performance, and the career lessons they value the most.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    13 mins
  • How Data Helped Win The Premier League | Ian Graham
    Dec 17 2024

    As Liverpool’s Director of Research for over a decade, Ian Graham was at the heart of the data revolution in football, and his approach helped Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool, the team he also supports, to win the Premier League and Champions League in his time there.


    Ian shares the stories and insights that helped them to win - why Brendan Rodgers left partly because he couldn’t get on board with the new approach, how the experience of Liverpool’s owners in American sport allowed data to thrive, the players, including Mohammad Salah and Joel Matip, that were identified by this approach and why even Jurgen Klopp’s appointment as manager was only green lit after some last-minute data analysis.


    Ian also gives his thoughts on the state of the Premier League, why data’s most effective when combined with the human touch and how he can still watch football as a fan, not just as an analyst.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    43 mins
  • How Crushing Disappointment Helped Castore Disrupt The Sports World | Tom Beahon
    Dec 10 2024

    Tom Beahon is the co-founder of sportswear label Castore, which in less than a decade has grown in to a major global challenger brand, and can be seen on athletes and teams including Andy Murray, Red Bull Racing, Newcastle United and the England cricket team.


    Growing up, all Tom ever wanted to be was a pro footballer, but that particular dream ended when he was let go by Tranmere Rovers as a 19-year-old. It was this crushing disappointment that fuelled the fire for what came next. He made the decision that this failure wouldn’t define him and, with his brother Phil, took his passion for sport on a new path.


    Tom shares the stories of starting out on his journey with no clue how to start a clothing label, the qualities he believes opened the doors which allowed the business to grow and shares the most important lessons for anyone looking to start out on their own.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    37 mins
  • The Rugby Player Who Turned Personal Disaster Into a New Life of Purpose | Ed Jackson
    Dec 3 2024

    Ed Jackson says he has lived two lives. For ten years he was a professional rugby player, who was defined by his physicality and performance.


    But in 2017, at a family friend’s barbecue, an accident ended this old life forever. He dived into a swimming pool, not realising it was three feet deep. On the way to the hospital he had to be resuscitated three times. Not long after, he was told he’d never walk again.


    Incredibly, just three years from this moment, Ed was standing on the world’s highest trekking peak, Aconagua. He shares this rollercoaster story, from the initial devastation of his prognosis to the slow flicker of hope, from long rehabilitation to a level of recovery he didn’t think was possible.


    It was a fundraising expedition to Snowdon that then sent his life in an entirely new direction, when he saw the opportunity to use his experience to help others in a similar boat. Now, as co-founder of the Millimetres 2 Mountains foundation, such is the purpose he has found, he says he no longer regrets the accident that led him here.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    41 mins
  • At The Heart Of a Media Storm For Doing The Job You Love | Jacqui Oatley
    Nov 26 2024

    Jacqui Oatley is a hugely respected sports journalist, commentator and presenter who in 2007 became the first woman ever to commentate on Match Of The Day. In fact, her career is full of media firsts for women, although all she ever wanted to do was the job she loved.


    A football obsessive from a young age, a serious knee injury in her twenties led to her reappraising her career. She retrained as a sports journalist, she worked her way up from non-league football, to the Premier League on Radio Five Live.


    An opportunity to commentate on Britain’s flagship football highlights programme blew up into a huge national media story with her at the centre.


    As the first woman to ever call a match on the show, she faced a torrent of publicity, criticism and, frequently, abuse.


    Jacqui tells her story vividly and honestly from the inside, describing what it was like to be at the centre of a cultural moment, how she had to develop a thick skin to get through the aftermath, how things have progressed and why there’s still work to do across the board.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    49 mins