4.5 Article

Factors contributing to the quality of the transition out of elite sports in Swiss, Danish, and Polish athletes

Journal

PSYCHOLOGY OF SPORT AND EXERCISE
Volume 29, Issue -, Pages 27-39

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.psychsport.2016.11.008

Keywords

Athletic retirement; Career transition; Cross-national study; Elite sports; Dual career; Adaptation quality

Funding

  1. Danish Ministry of Culture Committee for Sports Research [562820]
  2. Team Denmark's research scholarship

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Objectives: The aim of this study was (a) to compare athletic retirement of former Swiss, Danish, and Polish athletes; and (b) to explore the influence of factors on the quality of the transition. Based on existing transitional models, we developed a working model to investigate the predictive power of commonly assumed resources and barriers related to the transition (Park, Lavallee, & Tod, 2013). Design and methods: Former international elite athletes from Switzerland (n = 231), Denmark (n = 86), and Poland (n = 84) from 35 different sports completed an online questionnaire in their native language. Mean/proportional differences across countries were explored using ANOVAs and chi-square tests. For each sample, a multiple regression analysis was performed with 26 predictors on the transition quality, which was a component score of seven variables. Results and conclusions: More differences were found among individual characteristics (e.g., educational level, athletic identity, confidence in skills), whereas athletes reported a similar pattern concerning retirement planning and voluntariness to end their career regardless of the context. The adaptation process following the career end was easiest for Swiss athletes and most difficult for Polish athletes. Results of the multiple regressions revealed both common resources (e.g., voluntariness) and barriers (e.g., athletic identity), but also factors that worked as resources in one context, but as barriers in another (e.g., high sportcareer income). We propose to avoid generalizations about resources and barriers influencing the transition, but to apply a culturally sensitive approach when studying athletic retirement in different contexts. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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