Daniel F Gucciardi1, Ben Jackson2, Sheldon Hanton3, Machar Reid4. 1. School of Physiotherapy and Exercise Science, Curtin University, Australia; School of Human Movement Studies, The University of Queensland, Australia. Electronic address: daniel.f.gucciardi@gmail.com. 2. School of Sport Science, Exercise, and Health, The University of Western Australia, Australia. 3. Cardiff School of Sport, Cardiff Metropolitan University, United Kingdom. 4. Tennis Australia, Australia.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to examine motivational correlates of mentally tough behaviours among adolescent tennis players. DESIGN: Two-phase study, involving the development of an informant-rated measure of mentally tough behaviours, followed by a cross-sectional survey including athlete and parent assessments of study variables. METHODS: In Phase One, 17 adult, high-performance tennis coaches and 20 athletes participated in focus group interviews. Four scholars with expertise in performance psychology also completed a short, online survey. In Phase Two, a total of 347 adolescent tennis players (nmales=184; nfemales=163) aged 12-18 years (M=13.93, SD=1.47) and one respective parent took part in this study. An online multisection survey containing dimensions of passion, inspiration, fear of failure, and mentally tough behaviours was completed. Athletes self-reported all motivational variables, whereas parents rated their child solely on mentally tough behaviours. RESULTS: Structural equation modelling revealed that harmonious passion (β=.26, p<.01) and frequency of inspiration (β=.32, p<.001) were associated with significantly higher levels of mentally tough behaviours. In contrast, fear of failure (β=-.32, p<.001) and obsessive passion (β=-.15, p<.01) were inversely related to mentally tough behaviours. Inspiration intensity was not significantly associated with mentally tough behaviour (β=.13, p=.21). CONCLUSIONS: Motivational variables that are dispositional in nature, contextualised and contingent upon features of the environment, and concern one's identity are important considerations for understanding mentally tough behaviours. Crown
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to examine motivational correlates of mentally tough behaviours among adolescent tennis players. DESIGN: Two-phase study, involving the development of an informant-rated measure of mentally tough behaviours, followed by a cross-sectional survey including athlete and parent assessments of study variables. METHODS: In Phase One, 17 adult, high-performance tennis coaches and 20 athletes participated in focus group interviews. Four scholars with expertise in performance psychology also completed a short, online survey. In Phase Two, a total of 347 adolescent tennis players (nmales=184; nfemales=163) aged 12-18 years (M=13.93, SD=1.47) and one respective parent took part in this study. An online multisection survey containing dimensions of passion, inspiration, fear of failure, and mentally tough behaviours was completed. Athletes self-reported all motivational variables, whereas parents rated their child solely on mentally tough behaviours. RESULTS: Structural equation modelling revealed that harmonious passion (β=.26, p<.01) and frequency of inspiration (β=.32, p<.001) were associated with significantly higher levels of mentally tough behaviours. In contrast, fear of failure (β=-.32, p<.001) and obsessive passion (β=-.15, p<.01) were inversely related to mentally tough behaviours. Inspiration intensity was not significantly associated with mentally tough behaviour (β=.13, p=.21). CONCLUSIONS: Motivational variables that are dispositional in nature, contextualised and contingent upon features of the environment, and concern one's identity are important considerations for understanding mentally tough behaviours. Crown
Authors: Faheem Gul Gilal; Nisar Ahmed Channa; Naeem Gul Gilal; Rukhsana Gul Gilal; Syed Mir Muhammad Shah Journal: Psychol Res Behav Manag Date: 2019-09-23