FC Tulsa adds mental performance partnership with Make One Day Happen
FC Tulsa on June 24 added Make One Day Happen as a mental performance partner, putting visualization training and nervous-system recovery into the club’s daily soccer operation. The deal is aimed at players, coaches and staff, with live Sound Visualization sessions, access to the MODH app and targeted support designed to sharpen focus and help the roster reset during the long USL Championship season.
The club says it is the first USL Championship side to build structured visualization training and nervous system recovery into its athlete development program. That matters in practical terms, because the work is meant to show up between training sessions and matchdays, not just in a pregame talk. FC Tulsa is betting that better mental reps can improve how players handle pressure, recover after heavy minutes and stay available when the schedule tightens.

The timing fits where FC Tulsa sits in the league. The club entered the 2026 season as the 2025 Western Conference champion, and it has spent the past year under sporting director and general manager Caleb Sewell, who took the job on January 9, 2025 after leading Memphis 901 FC to three straight top-four seeds from 2022 through 2024. Sewell has been clear that the club wants every available resource around performance, and this partnership pushes that idea beyond strength work and tactics into recovery habits and mental preparation.
FC Tulsa’s roots also give the move some added weight. The club says it was founded in 2015 as Tulsa Roughnecks FC and relaunched as FC Tulsa in 2019, and this latest step reinforces an identity built around trying new ideas in a league where margins are tight. Make One Day Happen was founded by Tulsa entrepreneur Shenna Jean, whom the company describes as a leadership coach and visualization guide with more than 15 years of experience creating wellness experiences for leaders, teams and communities.

MODH says its Sound Visualization approach combines guided visualization, breathwork, sound frequency and recovery practices, which could give Tulsa a more repeatable routine for managing stress across a full season. The partnership arrives as the United Soccer League has also been expanding player-health infrastructure league-wide, announcing on June 18 a partnership with Kitman Labs for all 25 USL Championship clubs. Tulsa’s move suggests the next competitive edge may come not only from how a team plays, but from how well it prepares its minds and bodies to do it again every week.