The Phenomenological Experience of Competitive State Anxiety for Female Beach Volleyball Players at the 2012 Olympics

Anxiety is one of the most studied research topics in sport psychology literature (Guillen & Sanchez, 2009); however, even though the Olympics are considered to be one of the most pressure-filled sporting events (Birrer, Wetzel, Schmidt, & Morgan, 2012), to date there has been no research ai...

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Main Author: Zakrzewski, Katherine
Other Authors: Orlick, Terry
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/32295
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-3933
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-322952018-01-05T19:02:11Z The Phenomenological Experience of Competitive State Anxiety for Female Beach Volleyball Players at the 2012 Olympics Zakrzewski, Katherine Orlick, Terry Competitive state anxiety Phenomenology Interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) Olympic Athletes 2012 Olympics Beach Volleyball Facilitative Anxiety Debilitative Anxiety Anxiety Interpretation Focus Imagery Reframing Mindfulness Anxiety Management Routines Confidence Team Cohesion Heidegger Anxiety is one of the most studied research topics in sport psychology literature (Guillen & Sanchez, 2009); however, even though the Olympics are considered to be one of the most pressure-filled sporting events (Birrer, Wetzel, Schmidt, & Morgan, 2012), to date there has been no research aimed specifically at investigating Olympic athletes’ competitive state anxiety and its impact on subsequent performance. Furthermore, according to Nesti (2011), in order to support athletes in dealing with their experience of anxiety, researchers must turn towards the phenomenological, real-lived experience of the athlete to uncover what might best support positive anxiety management and interpretation in competition. The purpose of this study, therefore, was to respond to the gap in Olympic athlete anxiety research by examining the phenomenological experience of competitive state anxiety for female beach volleyball players at the 2012 London Olympics. Six in-depth, phenomenological interviews were conducted with these Olympic female beach volleyball players. Results indicated that, while all athletes in this study experienced anxiety at the 2012 Olympics, it was not the reduced intensity of anxiety that positively impacted their performance but rather the athletes’ ability to recognize, manage, and positively interpret their anxiety. In addition, it was shown that self-confidence further buffered the potentially negative impacts of anxiety. It is recommended that future research focus on extending phenomenological anxiety research to other sports and genders, and to specifically examine the impact of trait anxiety, team dynamics, and the experience of flow on athletes’ anxiety interpretation. 2015-04-30T16:49:01Z 2015-04-30T16:49:01Z 2015 2015 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/32295 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-3933 en Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Competitive state anxiety
Phenomenology
Interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA)
Olympic Athletes
2012 Olympics
Beach Volleyball
Facilitative Anxiety
Debilitative Anxiety
Anxiety Interpretation
Focus
Imagery
Reframing
Mindfulness
Anxiety Management
Routines
Confidence
Team Cohesion
Heidegger
spellingShingle Competitive state anxiety
Phenomenology
Interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA)
Olympic Athletes
2012 Olympics
Beach Volleyball
Facilitative Anxiety
Debilitative Anxiety
Anxiety Interpretation
Focus
Imagery
Reframing
Mindfulness
Anxiety Management
Routines
Confidence
Team Cohesion
Heidegger
Zakrzewski, Katherine
The Phenomenological Experience of Competitive State Anxiety for Female Beach Volleyball Players at the 2012 Olympics
description Anxiety is one of the most studied research topics in sport psychology literature (Guillen & Sanchez, 2009); however, even though the Olympics are considered to be one of the most pressure-filled sporting events (Birrer, Wetzel, Schmidt, & Morgan, 2012), to date there has been no research aimed specifically at investigating Olympic athletes’ competitive state anxiety and its impact on subsequent performance. Furthermore, according to Nesti (2011), in order to support athletes in dealing with their experience of anxiety, researchers must turn towards the phenomenological, real-lived experience of the athlete to uncover what might best support positive anxiety management and interpretation in competition. The purpose of this study, therefore, was to respond to the gap in Olympic athlete anxiety research by examining the phenomenological experience of competitive state anxiety for female beach volleyball players at the 2012 London Olympics. Six in-depth, phenomenological interviews were conducted with these Olympic female beach volleyball players. Results indicated that, while all athletes in this study experienced anxiety at the 2012 Olympics, it was not the reduced intensity of anxiety that positively impacted their performance but rather the athletes’ ability to recognize, manage, and positively interpret their anxiety. In addition, it was shown that self-confidence further buffered the potentially negative impacts of anxiety. It is recommended that future research focus on extending phenomenological anxiety research to other sports and genders, and to specifically examine the impact of trait anxiety, team dynamics, and the experience of flow on athletes’ anxiety interpretation.
author2 Orlick, Terry
author_facet Orlick, Terry
Zakrzewski, Katherine
author Zakrzewski, Katherine
author_sort Zakrzewski, Katherine
title The Phenomenological Experience of Competitive State Anxiety for Female Beach Volleyball Players at the 2012 Olympics
title_short The Phenomenological Experience of Competitive State Anxiety for Female Beach Volleyball Players at the 2012 Olympics
title_full The Phenomenological Experience of Competitive State Anxiety for Female Beach Volleyball Players at the 2012 Olympics
title_fullStr The Phenomenological Experience of Competitive State Anxiety for Female Beach Volleyball Players at the 2012 Olympics
title_full_unstemmed The Phenomenological Experience of Competitive State Anxiety for Female Beach Volleyball Players at the 2012 Olympics
title_sort phenomenological experience of competitive state anxiety for female beach volleyball players at the 2012 olympics
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/32295
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-3933
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