Author:
Adams Caleb,Coffee Pete,Lavallee David
Abstract
Research suggests that social support can enable athletes to successfully adapt to the difficulties associated with athletic transitions. The present study examined athletes’ perceptions about the availability of social support from their parents, coaches and teammates during normative within-career transitions from junior to senior level in their respective sports clubs. Seventy male university student-athletes aged 20.06; ±1.74 years completed the Perceived Available Support in Sport Questionnaire (Freeman et al., 2011). A one-way repeated measures ANOVA indicated some significant differences among the availability of support from parents, coaches and teammates. Overall, coaches were perceived to provide significantly more social support than teammates. Several significant effects were also found between the availability of different types of social support across the three providers. Findings suggest that parents, coaches and teammates in diverse ways play vital roles in the provision of social support to athletes at the developmental stage who are faced with normative within-career transition from junior level to senior level.
Publisher
British Psychological Society
Reference34 articles.
1. SOCIAL SUPPORT AND LIFE STRESS.
2. Alfermann, D. (1995). Career transitions of elite athletes: Drop-out and retirement. In R. Vanfraechem-Raway & A.Y. Vanden (Eds.), Proceedings of the 9th European Congress of Sport Psychology (pp.828–833). Brussels: European Federation of Sports Psychology.
3. Alfermann, D. & Stambulova, N. (2007). Career transitions and career termination. In G. Tenenbaum & R.C. Eklund (Eds.), Handbook of sport psychology (3rd ed., pp.712–736). New York: Wiley.
4. The ‘sport career death’ of college athletes: Involuntary and unanticipated sports exits;Blinde;Journal of Sport Behavior,1992
5. Bloom, B.S. (1985). Developing talent in young people. New York: Ballantine.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献