Month: February 2022

MINNEAPOLIS — With the 2022 Winter Games well underway, one psychologist from Minnesota is in Beijing as a resident sports psychologist for the U.S. Olympic Curling teams.

Doctor Carlin Anderson is the co-founder of Minnesota-based Premier Sports Psychology, one of the nation’s largest  sports psychology companies. Premier’s experts help top athletes from the NFL to the U.S. Olympic Team cope with anxiety, depression, burnout and overall wellness.

According to Dr. Anderson, who was a gymnast at UCLA, optimal performances are connected to mental and physical well-being. Her company has research and and resilience programs that are beginning to discover proactive methods organizations and teams can use to hone mental health skills and manage overall wellness.

Read the full article at KARE11

Team USA curler speaks about being part of the gold-medal winning Team Schuster, explains how important mental health is in Olympic sports, and shares why he leaned on USA Curling Sports Psychologist Dr. Carly Anderson to help him through some of the tough points during the pandemic.

Watch Yahoo! Sports video.

BEIJING — American mixed doubles curlers Vicky Persinger and Chris Plys survived an extra end against Sweden for a much-needed victory in the Olympics on Friday, quickly hugged and then found two friendly faces to wave to in a far corner of the eerily quiet and mostly empty Ice Cube.

Masked faces, of course, but definitely friendly faces. Persinger and Plys were pretty sure they were waving at team psychologist Carly Anderson and dietician Kaela Colvard, who were among the few spectators who saw the Americans take an 8-7 victory in the round-robin competition to even their record at 2-2.

“It’s hard to tell with the masks on. I think it was our sports psychologist and our dietician who were in the stands,” Persinger said. “They’ve kind of been our team around our team and were cheering us on especially coming back after a two-loss day.”

Every little bit helps in these Games, which are being conducted in a bubble environment because of COVID-19. That means family can’t attend. With few spectators allowed in, it’s a far different atmosphere than at the 2008 Summer Olympics, when raucous crowds watched Michael Phelps win a record eight swimming gold medals in the same venue, which was then called the Water Cube.

“We can’t even say enough good things about Carly our sports psychologist and Kaela and our whole team,” Plys said. “It’s been hard on everybody. It’s been hard on them, but they’ve taken a back seat to the way they’re feeling and really made sure that we’re taken care of and in a good spot to keep playing.”

Read the full article at ESPN