Two minutes before a playoff game, your best player is standing in the tunnel breathing like they just sprinted a mile, and the game hasn’t started yet. Most coaches teaching breathing exercises for athletes default to the same line: “Take a deep breath.” They nod. One sharp chest inhale. Nothing changes. That’s a suggestion, not a tool. There’s a difference, and it matters more than most coaches realize.

I’ve worked through variations of these breathing tools with youth and high school teams, and the shift in pre-game composure is noticeable within a few weeks — not dramatic, but real. The difference isn’t athletes who never get nervous. It’s athletes who have something to do with it.

Almost everything written about pre-competition breathing is aimed at individual athletes, not the coach standing at the sideline trying to settle down 25 kids at once. This article gives you three specific tools for three specific moments, with the exact language to introduce them. No psychology degree required.

For the full mental prep toolkit, including focus drills, visualization cues, and how to structure a warmup that builds mental sharpness alongside physical readiness, the complete mental toughness coaching guide covers it all in one place.

Table of Contents

If you’re already on the sideline with 20 seconds on the clock, the picker below will hand you the right script right now. Otherwise, keep reading — understanding why each one works is what lets you coach it, not just recite it.

Which Breathing Tool Fits This Moment?

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Why Breathing Is a Coaching Skill, Not Just Athlete Advice

When athletes get nervous before a big game, their sympathetic nervous system fires. Heart rate climbs, breathing goes shallow and fast, muscles tighten. This is the stress response doing its job, and it’s why breathing exercises for athletes are a coaching skill, not just personal advice. The freeze response also narrows attention, slows decision-making, and disrupts fine motor control. Your quarterback starts forcing throws. Your point guard rushes her shot. Your striker kicks wide on a penalty she’s made a hundred times in training. If you’re seeing this pattern show up well beyond game day, it’s worth looking at how to coach athletes through anxiety and performance pressure more broadly — breathing is the in-the-moment tool, not the whole answer.

Here’s the short version: breathe out longer than you breathe in, and your nervous system calms itself down. That’s the body’s natural off switch for the stress cascade, and the research backs it up — a 2023 Stanford study (Balban et al.) found that a double-inhale followed by an extended exhale reduced acute stress faster than mindfulness meditation. One study on competitive tennis players found that box breathing before a match measurably lowered cognitive anxiety and improved reaction time. (For more on the field broadly, the sports psychology overview on Wikipedia is a useful starting point.)

The mechanism isn’t complicated: breathe out longer than you breathe in, and your nervous system downregulates. Diaphragmatic breathing (using the full depth of the lungs rather than shallow chest breathing) is the baseline all three tools in this article build on. What is complicated is getting a team of 16-year-olds to actually do it when it counts. That’s the coaching problem. That’s what this is about.

Why Each Tool Fits a Different Coaching Moment

Different moments call for different tools. Here’s the framework I’d give any coach starting out with this:

Moment Tool Time needed Works for
Pre-game huddle (locker room / tunnel) Box Breathing (4-4-4-4) 60–90 seconds Whole team, group-led
Timeout reset (mid-game) Physiological Sigh 20–30 seconds Individual or small group
Pre-shot / post-mistake composure Exhale Anchor 5–8 seconds Individual, invisible on the field

Tool 1: Box Breathing — The Pre-Game Huddle Reset

Box breathing for athletes is four equal counts: inhale for 4, hold for 4, exhale for 4, hold for 4. Four sides of a box. It’s used by Navy SEALs, surgeons, and professional athletes before high-stakes performance, not because it’s trendy, but because equal-phase breathing slows the heart rate and creates a focal point that interrupts the mental spiral.

For a team setting, you’re conducting it. That’s the key difference from how most articles describe it. You’re not handing your athletes a technique and hoping they remember it. You’re leading it out loud, counting them through it, doing it with them. Three rounds takes about 90 seconds.

Here’s the script. You can read this directly to your team the first time you introduce it, then shorten it once it becomes part of your routine.

Pre-Game Huddle Script — Box Breathing (90 seconds)

“Alright, bring it in close. Feet flat on the floor, shoulders loose. We’re going to do three breaths together before we go out there — this is how we flip the switch.

Follow my count.

In through the nose — two, three, four. Hold — two, three, four. Out through the mouth — two, three, four. Hold — two, three, four.

[Repeat twice more at the same pace.]

That’s it. That’s how we walk out of here. Ready.”

A few coaching notes on running this for the first time:

  • Don’t apologize for it. If you introduce it as “I know this might seem weird, but…” you’ve already lost half the room. Lead with confidence. “This is what we do.”
  • Do it yourself, visibly. If you’re standing there watching them breathe while you check your clipboard, they won’t take it seriously. Close your eyes for a second and do it with them.
  • Expect noise the first time. Some kids will laugh. Let it go. Start the count. The ones who roll their eyes in October are the ones who close their eyes in March.
  • Don’t save it for big games only. That’s the biggest mistake. If athletes only ever breathe this way in high-stakes moments, it becomes associated with anxiety rather than performance. Build it into regular warmups so it functions as an automatic signal: focus mode on. One caveat: box breathing is the slowest of the three tools here, so if you have less than 60 seconds before a timeout ends, use the physiological sigh instead.

Tool 2: The Physiological Sigh — Timeout and Sideline Reset

The physiological sigh is what your body does automatically when you’ve been holding tension for too long. A double inhale through the nose followed by a long, slow exhale. Babies do it when they stop crying. You do it after a stressful meeting. The body is self-correcting.

It’s the fastest single-breath tool for acute stress relief, which makes it perfect for timeouts and sideline moments when you have 20 seconds with one athlete who’s in their head.

Timeout Script — Physiological Sigh (20 seconds)

“Look at me. Two quick sniffs in through the nose — fill all the way up — then one long slow breath out through the mouth. Just one. Do it with me.

[Demonstrate: sniff-sniff… long exhale.]

One more time. Good. Now you’re back.”

The reason this works quickly is mechanical: the double inhale fully inflates the lungs, including the lower lobes that tend to collapse during shallow stress breathing, and the extended exhale then drives the parasympathetic shift hard. The physiological sigh athletes use takes under 30 seconds total. You can do it with one person on the sideline without the rest of the team noticing.

Tool 3: The Exhale Anchor — Invisible Composure at the Line

You can’t call a timeout for a free throw, a penalty kick, or a serve before a tiebreak. The athlete is out there alone, and you can’t count them through a breathing exercise from the bench — that’s exactly the moment this third tool is built for.

The exhale anchor is simple: one slow breath out before the performance moment, paired with a single focus cue. Research in archery, shooting sports, and golf consistently shows that a controlled exhale before execution reduces the micro-tremors and attentional scatter that cause performance errors. It looks like nothing from the outside. It’s invisible.

Your job is to build this in practice, not on game day — athletes don’t invent pre-shot routines under pressure, they fall back on what they’ve already grooved. Here’s how you install it:

  1. In a low-stakes practice situation, have the athlete stand at the line before a shot.
  2. Cue them: “Before you shoot, one slow breath out. Long exhale. Then your normal process.”
  3. Pair it with whatever pre-shot cue they already use: a bounce of the ball, a look at the rim, a word. The exhale becomes part of that sequence.
  4. Repeat every practice. Not just “remember to breathe,” but specifically: one exhale, then the cue, then the shot.

Once it’s automated, they’ll do it in games without thinking about it. That’s the goal: not “remember to breathe when you’re nervous,” but a physical habit that fires before pressure ever registers consciously.

How to Make It Stick

Three rounds of box breathing works on the first attempt. You’ll see visible physical relaxation in most athletes within 90 seconds. That’s the acute effect. The performance benefit compounds with repetition.

A useful rule of thumb: 10 repetitions across low-stakes practices before you expect the behavior to show up in a game. That means introducing box breathing in week one of the season, running it at every warmup through week three, and treating it as part of the routine, the same way you’d treat a tackling drill or a free throw sequence. By week four, you won’t need to cue it as loudly. Some athletes will start doing it before you count them in. I’ll be honest: not every athlete takes to it at the same pace. A few won’t feel anything from it for weeks, and that’s fine — consistency matters more than early buy-in.

Athletes who’ve been doing pre-game box breathing for six to eight weeks go into pressure situations with a practiced reset reflex. That’s the difference between athletes who’ve been trained and athletes who’ve just been told. Start now, use it consistently, and by the middle of your season it’ll be part of how your team walks into a game. Pair it with a few dedicated concentration drills at practice and the two skills reinforce each other — a calm athlete concentrates better, and a focused athlete calms down faster. And if you’re already rebuilding your sideline routine, it’s a good moment to look at how you’re organizing play calls and practice plans too — reducing cognitive load works the same way on both sides of the whistle.

Two Mistakes Coaches Make With Breathing

Framing it as “calming down.” This is a subtle but real problem with teenage athletes especially. If you say “this will calm you down,” some athletes hear “this is for people who can’t handle pressure.” Frame it as performance activation instead. “This is how we settle into game mode.” “This is how we tell our bodies it’s go time.” Same tool. Completely different reception.

Treating it as a technique instead of a routine. The technique itself is simple enough to teach in one practice — the real failure isn’t explaining it wrong, it’s never running it again after that first walkthrough. If it only shows up before a state semifinal, it reads as a stress signal instead of a focus cue. The fix isn’t a better explanation. It’s running it every week until nobody has to think about it anymore.

Most coaches ask the same handful of questions the first time they try building this into a season. Here are the ones that come up most.

Frequently Asked Questions

What breathing exercises are good for athletes before a game?
Box breathing (4-4-4-4) is the most practical for a coach-led pre-game routine: group-friendly, takes 90 seconds, and has strong research backing for reducing cognitive anxiety. The physiological sigh (double inhale through the nose, long exhale through the mouth) works faster for individual resets during timeouts. For pre-shot composure like free throws or penalty kicks, a single extended exhale paired with a focus cue is enough.
Can breathing exercises actually improve athletic performance?
Yes, and the evidence is specific. A meta-analysis of pre-performance routines including breathing found a moderate-to-large performance effect across ages and skill levels, even under pressure. One study on competitive tennis players found that 10 minutes of box breathing before a match measurably lowered cognitive anxiety and improved reaction time. The mechanism is the extended exhale activating the vagus nerve, which counteracts the stress hormones that impair fine motor control and decision-making.
How do you teach breathing exercises for athletes who roll their eyes at it?
Don’t apologize for it. The frame matters more than the technique. Don’t call it “calming down.” Call it activating focus or flipping the switch. Lead it with confidence, do it yourself visibly, and don’t single anyone out. The first time you run it, some athletes will smirk. Start the count anyway. Most athletes who resist it in preseason are doing it automatically by playoffs if you’ve built it into the routine consistently.
What is the physiological sigh and how does it help athletes?
The physiological sigh athletes and coaches use is a double inhale through the nose followed by a long, slow exhale through the mouth. It’s what your body does naturally to release built-up tension. Stanford research (Balban et al., 2023) found it reduces acute stress faster than mindfulness meditation. For coaches, it’s the best tool for a 20-second timeout reset with an individual athlete who’s in their head.
How does breathing affect performance under pressure?
Under pressure, shallow fast breathing increases heart rate, tightens muscles, and narrows attention, which degrades fine motor control and slows decision-making. Controlled breathing, specifically longer exhales, activates the parasympathetic nervous system via the vagus nerve and reverses the stress cascade. The result: lower heart rate, better attentional control, and reduced muscle tension in 60 to 90 seconds.
What is a pre-game breathing routine coaches can run as a team?
Box breathing is the most reliable group option. Gather the team, have everyone stand with feet flat on the floor. Count them through: in through the nose for 4, hold for 4, out through the mouth for 4, hold for 4. Three rounds takes 90 seconds. The key is conducting it yourself out loud so athletes follow your pace rather than guessing. Run it the same way every game and it becomes a reliable focus trigger.
How should athletes breathe during a game compared to before one?
Before a game, controlled slow breathing (like box breathing) is the right tool because you’re trying to downregulate the stress response. During a game, breathing naturally follows exertion and you can’t (and shouldn’t) slow it down artificially. What you can train is the ability to take one reset breath during a pause, timeout, or dead ball: a single extended exhale that briefly reactivates composure without disrupting the physical demands of play.

Conclusion

Breathing exercises for athletes don’t require a psychology background or special equipment. They require a coach who builds a pre-game breathing routine for athletes into the regular schedule, frames it as performance activation rather than anxiety management, and runs it consistently enough that it becomes automatic. Pick one of the three tools above and start this week. By the time your season matters most, it won’t be a technique your team remembers — it’ll just be what they do.

You just picked up three tools that take the guesswork out of pre-game nerves. If you want that same “no more winging it” feeling on your sideline, your play-calling setup is the next easy win — See the Best Coaching Clipboards & Playbook Tools

The breathing techniques described here are based on sports psychology research and are intended for general coaching education. These tools work across sports and age groups, but coaching judgment always comes first. Every athlete responds differently. If any athlete has a respiratory condition, anxiety disorder, or other medical concern, consult a healthcare professional before introducing structured breathing protocols.

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