4.5 Article

When the final whistle blows: Social identity pathways support mental health and life satisfaction after retirement from competitive sport

Journal

PSYCHOLOGY OF SPORT AND EXERCISE
Volume 57, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.psychsport.2021.102049

Keywords

Athletic identity; Social identity model of identity change; Mental health

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP160102514]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71762013]

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The study highlights the impact of athletic and social identities on retirement adjustment for athletes, influencing life satisfaction, depression, and perceived physical health. Maintaining and gaining new social group memberships can mitigate the negative effects of athletic identity loss on adjustment, with Chinese athletes showing a stronger influence on accessing psychological resources.
For many athletes, retirement from higher levels of competitive sport poses significant challenges. Research has shown that athletic identity is a key predictor of adjustment trajectories, but the mechanisms through which this affects outcomes are less clear. Added to this, there has been limited research on the role that wider social identities, and the resources they enable, play in adjustment. Addressing both these issues, we examined theoretically derived social identity pathways to retirement adjustment in athletes who had played sport at higher competitive levels and two potential mechanisms, or psychological resources, through which adjustment might be enabled. This was examined in two samples: retired athletes from countries in Western (n = 215) and Eastern (n = 183) regions. Loss of athletic identity, social group memberships (multiple, maintained and new), psychological resources (perceived meaning in life and control), and adjustment (life satisfaction, depression, and perceived physical health) were assessed. In both samples, the loss of athletic identity undermined adjustment by reducing meaning in life and perceived control. Path analysis showed that both maintained and gained social group memberships counteracted the negative effects of athletic identity loss on adjustment. Evidence that these pathways enabled access to psychological resources was found primarily in Chinese athletes, with maintained groups influencing personal control and new groups influencing meaning in life. These findings highlight the importance of social identity processes to retirement from higher levels of competitive sport and the mechanisms through which they can either support or undermine adjustment.

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