Developmental biographies of Olympic super-elite and elite athletes – a multidisciplinary pattern recognition analysis
Authors: Güllich, A., Rees, T. et al.
Journal: Journal of Expertise
Volume: 2
Issue: 1
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/31820/
Source: Manual
Developmental biographies of Olympic super-elite and elite athletes – a multidisciplinary pattern recognition analysis
Authors: Güllich, A., Rees, T. et al.
Journal: Journal of Expertise
Volume: 2
Issue: 1
Pages: 23-46
ISSN: 2573-2773
Abstract:This multidisciplinary study used pattern recognition analyses to examine the developmental biographies of 16 Great British Olympic and World Champions (‘Super-Elite’) and 16 matched international athletes who had not won major medals (‘Elite’). Athlete, coach and parent interviews (260 total interview hours) combined in-depth qualitative and quantitative methods. A combination of demographics, psychosocial characteristics, coach and family relationships, practice, competition, and performance development discriminated Super-Elite from Elite athletes with > 90% accuracy. Compared to Elite athletes, Super-Elite athletes were characterized by: (1) An early critical negative life experience in close proximity to significant positive sport-related events; (2) higher relative importance of sport over other aspects of life, stronger obsessiveness/perfectionism, and sport-related ruthlessness/selfishness; (3) conjoint outcome and mastery focus, and use of counterphobic and/or ‘total preparation’ strategies to maintain/enhance performance under pressure; (4) coaches who better met their physical and psychosocial needs; (5) coming back after severe performance setbacks during adulthood, and career ‘turning points’ leading to enhanced determination to excel; (6) more pronounced diversified youth sport engagement, and prolonged extensive sport-specific practice and competitions; and (7) continued performance improvement over more years during adulthood, eventually attaining their (first) gold medal after 21 ± 6 practice years. The findings are discussed relative to potential causal interactions and theoretical implications.
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/31820/
https://www.journalofexpertise.org/
Source: BURO EPrints