MENTOR

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26/3/2026

 

WHY YOU NEED A MENTOR

 

 

Having a mentor can make a real difference in your personal and professional journey. A mentor offers guidance, shares valuable insights based on their experience, and helps you navigate challenges with confidence. They can introduce you to new perspectives, provide honest feedback, and help you set achievable goals. With their support, you’re more likely to develop skills faster, avoid common pitfalls, and build a stronger network. Whether you’re starting out or seeking growth, a mentor is a trusted sounding board who encourages you to reach your full potential.

 

A mentor has already faced the challenges you will encounter. By sharing their experiences—both successes and mistakes—they help you avoid common pitfalls and shorten your learning curve. This transfer of practical knowledge is one of the most valuable aspects of mentoring.

 

When you are close to a problem, it is often difficult to see it clearly. A mentor offers an independent, experienced perspective, helping you make better decisions under pressure and maintain focus on what truly matters over the long term.

 

Mentoring is not just about results. A mentor helps you develop confidence, discipline, resilience, and good habits—qualities that support performance but also extend well beyond the range. This broader, holistic role is a defining feature of mentoring compared with coaching.

 

Every sport has its unwritten rules. A mentor helps you understand expectations, etiquette, and standards of behaviour within clubs, competitions, and officiating environments—knowledge that is rarely found in rulebooks but is essential for long‑term success.

 

Long‑Term Guidance and Continuity

Unlike short‑term instruction, mentoring relationships often develop over years. This continuity allows mentors to guide major transitions—such as moving between levels of competition, taking on officiating roles, or giving back to the sport as a mentor yourself.

 

Difference between a Mentor and a Coach

 

Coaching and mentoring are not alternatives—they are complementary.

A coach helps you execute skills correctly.

A mentor helps you understand where those skills fit into the bigger picture.

Athletes who progress and remain engaged in the sport over the long term typically benefit from both: coaching to improve performance, and mentoring to sustain growth, perspective, and enjoyment.

 

Both mentors and coaches are important, but they serve different purposes. Understanding the distinction helps you get the right support at the right time.

A MENTOR

A COACH

Is in contact with you several times a week

Is in contact with you to meet specific coaching items

Is with you for every on-range session

Only for coaching sessions

Monitors your training sessions

Recommends training regimes

Supports your long‑term development

Focuses on performance and skills