Unleashing FIERCE: Turn on the Fire

By Coach Wheeler


What Does It Mean to Be FIERCE?

Every champion, in sports or in life, has a moment when something inside them clicks. It’s not luck. It’s not hype. It’s the decision to compete with conviction—to play like losing isn’t an option. That decision is what it means to be FIERCE.

It’s not about yelling louder, talking tougher, or trying to intimidate others. FIERCE is deeper than that. It’s the steady, confident fire that burns underneath everything you do. It’s when your eyes say, I’m here to win. I’ve put in the work. And I’m not backing down.

The truth is, most competitors never learn how to find that switch—let alone flip it on at will. But you can. And when you do, it changes everything.


Your Game Face: More Than an Expression

“Put on your game face” isn’t just a cliché. It’s a signal to your brain and body that it’s time to perform.

When you’re FIERCE, your mind and body align. Distractions fade, fear quiets, and the moment sharpens into focus. You stop thinking and start doing.

Your game face isn’t a mask. It’s a trigger. It’s your physical cue that tells your nervous system, “This is go time.”

And the best competitors learn to access that state intentionally—not by accident.


How to Flip the FIERCE Switch

FIERCE isn’t something you hope for. It’s something you activate.

Here’s how:

1. Trigger the State Physically

Your body leads your mind. How you move and carry yourself tells your brain what kind of person you are at that moment.

  • Take a powerful stance—feet grounded, shoulders back.
  • Exhale with purpose.
  • Use a phrase or mantra that lights your fuse: “Let’s roll.” “Lock in.” “Bring it.”
  • Treat warmups like competition—because that’s how competitors prepare.

Act FIERCE, and your body will follow.


2. “Anchor” to a Moment of Power

Think back to a time you dominated—a test, a game, a challenge you crushed.
Replay it vividly.
Feel your heartbeat. Hear the crowd. Remember how unstoppable you were.

That’s your FIERCE anchor. Fire that memory before every big moment. Your body will remember the rhythm of winning.


3. Breathe into Control

FIERCE doesn’t mean frantic. The calmest mind wins. It means intensity… under control.
Try this breathing pattern to gather yourself:

  • Inhale for four counts.
  • Hold for two.
  • Exhale for six.

That single act tells your body: I’m in control.
Now the fire sharpens. The energy focuses. The storm is yours to command.


The Identity Behind Being FIERCE

You don’t act FIERCE—you become FIERCE.

It starts with identity. You’re not training to win one competition; you’re training to become the kind of person who competes differently. Someone who doesn’t need an audience to go hard. Someone who treats preparation as sacred.

Being FIERCE means deciding:

“I am the type of person who gives everything I’ve got,
every time, no matter what.”

You can’t fake that. You have to live it.
In how you train.
In how you recover.
In how you talk to yourself when things get hard.

The best competitors don’t just play FIERCE—they walk FIERCE, breathe FIERCE, and live FIERCE.


The Role of Challenge: Doing Hard Things

Here’s the truth: FIERCE doesn’t grow in comfort. It’s forged in friction.

Every time you do something difficult—something you didn’t want to do—you’re training your identity. You’re proving to yourself that you can handle more than you thought.

When you drag yourself out of bed for that early morning workout . . .
When you stop procrastinating and take care of business . . .
When you make the choice to Play Like A Champion . . .

When you push through the rep that burns, the mile that hurts, or the project that scares you—you’re building more than just muscle. You’re building proof.

And that Proof becomes belief.
Belief becomes confidence.
Confidence becomes FIERCE.

That’s why we do hard things.
Not for punishment. For power.
For proof . . . to ourselves and others . . . that we have the fire inside.


Practicing FIERCE Every Day

Most people wait for game day, the big stage, the job interview, the tryout—then hope the fire shows up.

But FIERCE isn’t something you switch on once a week. It’s a daily practice.

Here’s how to train it:

  • Finish strong. The last rep defines the standard.
  • Compete in everything. Make every drill, task, or challenge matter.
  • Celebrate effort, not comfort.
  • Refuse to coast. If you catch yourself drifting, reset.
  • Hold your posture of power. Shoulders up. Eyes forward. Confidence is physical.

Being FIERCE means you don’t just show up—you show out.


The Difference Between Angry and FIERCE

Let’s be clear: FIERCE is not anger.

Anger is wild energy. It burns hot and fades fast. FIERCE burns steady.
Anger is reactive. FIERCE is intentional.

Anger wants to hurt.
FIERCE wants to win.

That’s why the greats—Michael Jordan, Serena Williams, Kobe Bryant, Diana Taurasi, Tiger Woods—weren’t just emotional. They were precise. They had that look that said, “I’m not mad. I’m certain.”

They turned emotion into execution. And that’s what separates champions from competitors.


Building Your Inner Badass

Everyone has a more confident, powerful, and capable version of themselves buried inside. FIERCE is how you bring that version to the surface.

Here’s the process:

  1. Visualize your best self. See yourself performing with total confidence.
  2. Choose your power word. Something that activates your intensity—“Fire.” “Steel.” “Unstoppable.”
  3. Do one thing daily that proves you’re FIERCE. It could be finishing that workout, making that tough call, or choosing discipline over comfort.
  4. Surround yourself with competitors. Energy transfers. Be around people who challenge and charge you.

When you live like a badass, the results take care of themselves.


How FIERCE Wins Championships—and Everything Else

Championships, promotions, personal bests—they’re not random. They belong to the ones who bring consistent fire to inconsistent moments.

The FIERCE competitor doesn’t rely on mood or motivation. They rely on identity. They don’t shrink from pressure—they crave it.

Pressure is where they prove who they are.

Because when you’re FIERCE, every challenge is an opportunity to show your power.


The Fire Is Already There

You don’t have to find the fire—you already have it. It’s just buried under hesitation, self-doubt, and overthinking. It’s under everything that you have been taught about “Being Nice” and letting everyone else have a chance to win. That’s not going to work. Release your Fire!

The next time you face a challenge, remember this:
You’ve done hard things before. You’ve fought through fatigue. You’ve overcome setbacks. That’s proof.

FIERCE isn’t something new—it’s a part of you waiting to be unleashed. You don’t find the fire—you release it.

FIERCE is a daily practice, not a feeling. It’s how competitors evolve into champions.

So take a deep breath.
Square your shoulders.
Flip the switch.

You were built for this.

Be FIERCE. Win the moment.

Let’s roll.

🔥 Ready to unleash your fire?

Download the free Winning Mindset Playbook at CoachWheeler.com.
Learn to Flip the Switch, build confidence that lasts, and Be FIERCE—on demand.

Mamba Mentality – a tribute to Kobe Bryant

Kobe Bryant coined the phrase, “Mamba Mentality” to describe his approach… to basketball, to competition, to life.

Mamba Mentality - tribute to Kobe BryantAs a life-long Celtics fan, it was hard for me to root for a Lakers player but you have to respect Kobe Bryant and his approach to the game of basketball. With his untimely passing, the time was right to take a look at how his mind worked and hopefully discover some of the secrets to his success.

I recently found the video below and it provides some of the best insights into how Kobe approached the game and his life. I’m not sure what else I can say except that it is well worth watching. If you want to be one of the best at something, this video will give you ideas that you can implement today. If you feel like you didn’t really know Kobe Bryant aside from his basketball career, this video provides glimpses into many other dimensions of the man.

I encourage you to watch this video and if you like it, please leave a comment below.

What did you think?
What can you learn from the Mamba Mentality?

Are you putting in the effort that is required to get what you SAY you want? Does your daily process and habits support your goals?

Do you have the Mamba Mentality? Are you serious about your game? Your life?

Inspirational Video – How hard are you working?

The inspirational video below is by ET, the hip hop preacher, and contains one of my favorite quotes…

“All men are created equal… some work harder in preseason.”
– Emmitt Smith

Check it out and see if it is as inspirational for you…

Ask yourself…

How hard are you working on the most important things in your life?

Do you have your priorities clear and in front of you at all times?

Are you willing to give up your cell phone to achieve success?

 

Intensity Wins

This past week, I witnessed an interesting example of how “Intensity wins basketball games”. Before I tell you that story, let me explain what I mean by “Intensity” as it relates to athletic competition.

Focus + Energy = Intensity

I know you have seen it in games. One team or maybe just a few players on a team want to win more than the other team. They are more “dialed in” on what they need to do as well as what the other team is giving them. These teams have more energy and they get to the loose ball more often than the other team. They are focused. Nothing distracts them when their opponent applies pressure. They execute their game plan and adjust to situations as they come up. They are intent on winning. I have yet to see a team lose that maintains their level of concentration and engages with energy.

Are some times when teams overmatched and have little chance to win? Yes … but they are usually overmatched in how intense they are playing as well.

Where does Intensity come from?

As a coach, how can you improve the intensity that your team brings to the floor? It’s a deep subject but let me say this, “The ability to play with intensity is a skill that is built in the unseen hours of practice and the off-season.” Intensity, while a skill that can be improved, is also a form of character. Players with intensity have enough ego to believe they can win and the will or determination to make it happen. It is rarely something that happens by accident.

I hope you have a sense of what I mean. I may write more about it in the future because I feel it is a topic that is often overlooked yet is critical to a winning mindset. If you want to discuss it further, send me a note via the Coach Wheeler Contact Page or leave a comment below this post.

Back to this week’s game…

The teams were evenly matched with similar records. Physically they were very similar as well. The difference in the intensity that one team brought to the contest showed up early in the first half. They raced out to a good lead. Double digits at times.

The other team mustered a bit of competitive energy and fought back to within 6 points or so. The first team did not lose their intensity and rebuilt their lead. As the game winded down, with less and less time remaining, something interesting happened.

Intense Patience

The team with the lead applied their intensity toward being patient and getting the best shot they could. In this state there is no shot clock so they were able to extend their possession time which reduced the chances for a comeback by the other team.

There were a few sparks of intense effort from a couple players on the other team but there were other players who had clearly given up. In a team sport like basketball, if someone gives up it is very difficult for a team to function at a high level.

It was such a clear demonstration of how intensity wins basketball games that I had to pass along the story to you. Do you have examples of how your team’s intensity helped you win? Or the opposite? How do you channel your teams energy into an intense focus on the game and not on distractions? I would love to hear your thoughts in the comments below!