Journal
SPORT PSYCHOLOGIST
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
HUMAN KINETICS PUBL INC
DOI: 10.1123/tsp.2023-0029
Keywords
sport culture; coach pressures; ideals; norms; masculinity
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This study examines how three Australian football coaches learn and understand mental toughness. The findings show that mental toughness is influenced by the sociocultural environment, with dominant understandings of mental toughness being internalized and reinforced, while deviating from these standards leads to punishment.
The present study explored how three professional Australian football coaches learned and understood mental toughness. Participants shared stories regarding mental toughness through semistructured interviews. Reflexive thematic analysis was used to interpret the data. Creative nonfiction was employed to develop a composite story. All participants' voices contributed equally to the narrative, which follows Sam (our composite coach) through three periods in his career: as a junior player, an elite footballer, and, finally, a coach in the professional football environment. Mental toughness was fundamentally determined by the sociocultural environment in which one was immersed. Athletes and coaches were expected to internalize dominant understandings of mental toughness and reinforce ideals and were punished if they deviated from mentally tough standards set up in their clubs. Mental toughness was defined by various values, beliefs, and norms that originated from the sociocultural environment, indicating the importance of context in understanding the roots of being mentally tough.
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