
Play is Not a Break: The Science of Learning through Chaos | Hayden Mitchell
Just Fly Performance Podcast
00:00
Early coaching experiences and influences
Hayden outlines coaching since age 16 across populations, teaching roots, and how movement transformed lives in his work.
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Transcript
Transcript
Episode notes
Today’s guest is Hayden Mitchell, Ph.D. Hayden is a sports performance coach, educator, and researcher specializing in movement ecology and pedagogy, helping coaches design environments that support learning, resilience, self-actualization, and sustainable athletic performance through play and exploration.
There is a great deal of conversation in sports performance around methods, including exercises, drills, systems, and models, but far less attention is given to coaching itself. Coaching methodology quietly shapes how athletes experience training, how they relate to challenge and failure, and ultimately how fully they are able to express themselves in performance.
On the show today, Hayden speaks about exploring how coaching and physical education shape not just performance, but the whole human being. Hayden shares his path through sport, teaching, and doctoral work, including how life experiences changed his approach to leadership, control, and play. Together they discuss movement ecology, value orientations in coaching, such as mastery, learning process, self-actualization, social responsibility, and ecological integration, and why environment often matters as much as programming. The conversation highlights rhythm, joy, and exploration, along with practical ways coaches can use restraint, better questions, and playful constraints to help athletes own their development.
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Timestamps
0:00 – Hayden’s coaching background
6:42 – Learning through experimentation
13:55 – Movement quality versus output
21:18 – Constraints based coaching
30:07 – Strength that transfers
39:50 – Variability and resilience
48:26 – Developing youth athletes
57:41 – Decision-making under fatigue
1:06:10 – Simplifying training programs
1:14:22 – Long term coaching philosophy
Quotes from Hayden
"You start to develop more like moderate to really big like teaching orientations where you take away the command, you stop begging for repetition to be perfect and you allow things to become messier in due time."
"For me, it's like discovering what somebody is afraid to do."
"Whenever I get an adult who's in their like 50s or 60s, we're going to crawl. You have to have a certain charisma about this and you have to laugh and you have to do it with them. You got to be a willing participant in your own way. But once they do that, man, it lights them up."
"If I'd just released them to dance, because they love to groove, they love to feel themselves, it would have gotten them into a position of real readiness and their nervous system would have been lit up instead of me exhausting them because we needed that perfect small-sided rondo warmup that everybody else is doing."
"An athlete dancing is a joyful athlete and a joyful athlete is tuned in. I don't think there's too many things that offer more value than getting into rhythm throughout a session, before a session, after a session, you gotta feel into your body like that."
About Hayden Mitchell
Hayden Mitchell, PhD is a sports performance coach, educator, and researcher whose work sits at the intersection of movement ecology, pedagogy, and human development. He has coached and taught across a wide range of settings, from youth and collegiate sport to military, adaptive populations, and general fitness, working with ages 4 to 90. Hayden holds a doctorate in Human Performance and Sport Pedagogy and focuses on how environment, values, and teaching behaviors shape learning, resilience, and performance. His work emphasizes play, rhythm, and self-actualization, helping coaches and athletes move beyond rigid systems toward practices that develop both performance capacity and the whole human being.
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