22 resultados para Coaches (Athletics)


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Statistics published by the German Football Association indicate that women are significantly under-represented amongst soccer coaches, especially in the amateur leagues. In this paper we analyse how gender stereotypes influence the structural conditions surrounding the recruitment of coaches to soccer clubs that contribute to the exclusion of women from coaching positions. A qualitative study of five selected soccer clubs which are members of a German regional soccer association reveals that informal and personal decision-making practices still play a fundamental role in the recruitment of coaches. These practices undermine formal guidelines and give disproportionate weight to stereotyped preferences in the recruitment of soccer coaches. In this context, decision-makers' (functionaries') professed support of women largely serves a symbolic purpose and creates an illusion of equality concerning decisions that have already been taken at an informal level.

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Introduction: In professional soccer, talent selection relies on the subjective judgment of scouts and coaches. To date, little is known about coaches´ “eye for talent” (Christensen, 2009, p. 379) and the nature of the subjective criteria they use to identify those players with the greatest potential to achieve peak performance in adulthood (Williams & Reilly, 2000). Drawing on a constructivist approach (Kelly, 1991), this study explores coaches´ subjective talent criteria. It is assumed that coaches are able to verbalise and specify their talent criteria, and that these are related to their talent selection decisions based on instinct. Methods: Participants and generation of data. Five national youth soccer coaches (Mage = 55.6; SD = 5.03) were investigated at three appointments: (1) talent selection decision based on instinct, (2) semi-structured inductive interview to elicit each coaches´ talent criteria in detail, (3) communicative validation and evaluation of the players by each coach using the repertory grid technique (Fromm, 2004). Data Analysis: Interviews were transcribed and summarized with regard to each specified talent criterion. Each talent criterion was categorized using a bottom-up-approach (meaning categorization, Kvale, 1996). The repertory grid data was analysed using descriptive statistics and correlation analysis. Results and Discussion: For each coach, six to nine talent criteria were elicited and specified. The subjective talent criteria include aspects of personality, cognitive perceptual skills, motor abilities, development, technique, social environment and physical constitution, which shows that the coaches use a multi-dimensional concept of talent. However, more than half of all criteria describe personality characteristics, in particular achievement motivation, volition and self-confidence. In contrast to Morris (2000), this result shows that coaches have a differentiated view of the personality characteristics required to achieve peak performance. As an indication of criterion validity, moderate to high correlations (.57 ≤ r ≤ .81) are found between the evaluations of the players according to the coaches´ talent criteria and their talent selection decision. The study shows that coaches are able to specify their subject talent criteria and that those criteria are strongly related to their instinctive selection decisions. References: Christensen, M. K. (2009). "An Eye for Talent": Talent Identification and the "Practical Sense" of Top-Level Soccer Coaches. Sociology of Sport Journal, 26, 365–382. Fromm, M. (2004). Introduction to the Repertory Grid Interview. Münster: Waxmann. Kelly, G. A. (1991). The Psychology of Personal Constructs: Volume One: Theory and personality. London: Routledge. Kvale, S. (1996). InterViews: An introduction to Qualitative Research Interviewing. Thousand Oaks: Sage. Morris, T. (2000). Psychological characteristics and talent identification in soccer. Journal of Sports Sciences, 18, 715–726. Williams, A. M., & Reilly, T. (2000). Talent identification and development in soccer. Journal of Sports Sciences, 18, 657–667.

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The objective of the present study was to measure the occurrence of orofacial and cerebral injuries in different sports and to survey the awareness of athletes and officials concerning the use of mouthguards during sport activities. Two hundred and sixty-seven professional athletes and 63 officials participating in soccer, handball, basketball and ice hockey were interviewed. The frequency of orofacial and cerebral trauma during sport practice was recorded and the reason for using and not using mouthguards was assessed. A great difference in orofacial and cerebral injuries was found when comparing the different kinds of sports and comparing athletes with or without mouthguards. 45% of the players had suffered injuries when not wearing mouthguards. Most injuries were found in ice hockey, (59%), whereas only 24% of the soccer players suffered injuries when not wearing mouthguards. Sixty-eight percentage of the players wearing mouthguards had never suffered any orofacial and cerebral injuries. Two hundred and twenty-four athletes (84%) did not use a mouthguard despite general acceptance by 150 athletes (56%). Although the awareness of mouthguards among officials was very high (59%), only 25% of them would support the funding of mouthguards and 5% would enforce regulations. Athletes as well as coaches should be informed about the high risk of oral injuries when performing contact sports. Doctors and dentists need to recommend a more intensive education of students in sports medicine and sports dentistry, and to increase their willingness to become a team dentist.

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Objectives Despite many reports on best practises regarding onsite psychological services, little research has attempted to systematically explore the frequency, issues, nature and client groups of onsite sport psychology consultancy at the Olympic Games. The present paper will fill this gap through a systematic analysis of the sport psychology consultancy of the Swiss team for the Olympic Games of 2006 in Turin, 2008 in Beijing and 2010 in Vancouver. Design Descriptive research design. Methods The day reports of the official sport psychologist were analysed. Intervention issues were labelled using categories derived from previous research and divided into the following four intervention-issue dimensions: “general performance”, “specific Olympic performance”, “organisational” and “personal” issues. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics, chi square statistics and odds ratios. Results Across the Olympic Games, between 11% and 25% of the Swiss delegation used the sport psychology services. On average, the sport psychologist provided between 2.1 and 4.6 interventions per day. Around 50% of the interventions were informal interventions. Around 30% of the clients were coaches. The most commonly addressed issues were performance related. An association was observed between previous collaboration, intervention likelihood and intervention theme. Conclusions Sport psychologists working at the Olympic Games are fully engaged with daily interventions and should have developed ideally long-term relationships with clients to truly help athletes with general performance issues. Critical incidents, working with coaches, brief contact interventions and team conflicts are specific features of the onsite consultancy. Practitioners should be trained to deal with these sorts of challenges.

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A debate about Caster Semenya's female sex began shortly after the South African runner won gold in the women’s 800m final at the 2009 Athletic World Championships held in Berlin. Her victory was disputed through questions about her right to compete as a ‘woman’, with the International Association of Athletics Federation (IAAF) announcing she would be required to undergo a gender verification test before her victory could be confirmed. Using the theoretical frame of social constructionism (Berger & Luckmann), poststructuralism (Foucault), gender- and postcolonial theories (Butler; Hall; Spivak) and the methodology of critical discourse analysis (Jaeger), the paper explores the way the possible intersexuality of Caster Semenya was contextualised in mainstream Swiss German-language print media. The analyses will firstly look at the way in which Caster Semenya was constructed as a ʻfallen hero’ and stigmatised as a double-dealer and unacceptable deviant body. The rumours amongst athletes and commentators became news in the media, which focused on descriptions of her habitus, her muscular body and her deep voice. Through theoretical discussion the paper argues that the media response to Caster Semenya exemplifies Butler’s claim that the discursive framework of gender constructs and naturalises sex. A key question is therefore whether the designation of deviant bodies to a ʻfield of deformation’ (Butler) works to pluralise the field of gender, or rather, as Butler suggests, it tends that those bodies might call into questions. The final part of the paper discusses how gender, ethnicity and sexuality combine to constitute the black female sporting body as a spectacle of otherness. It is evident that this otherness is made manifest through the function of those bodies as a site of transgression, as the boundary between male and female, and often as the boundary between culture and nature (Hall). Using the example of the controversy surrounding Caster Semenya, this paper aims to demonstrate how the post/colonial white female body is reproduced by western norms of gender, sexuality, beauty and sporting behaviour, in the sense of a feminine sporting genderperformance. The media controversy will be also read through the lens of the globalisation of certain ideas of normative bodies, sex, ethnicity and gender and the challenge of changing stereotypes through transgression. Keywords: gender- and postcolonial theories, discourse analysis, print media, Caster Semen-ya, deviant body, ethnicity, intersexuality

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A debate about Caster Semenya's female sex began shortly after the South African runner won gold in the women’s 800m final at the 2009 Athletic World Championships held in Berlin. Her victory was disputed through questions about her right to compete as a ‘woman’, with the International Association of Athletics Federation (IAAF) announcing she would be required to undergo a gender verification test before her victory could be confirmed. Using the theoretical frame of social constructionism (Berger & Luckmann), poststructuralism (Foucault), gender- and postcolonial theories (Butler; Hall; Spivak) and the methodology of critical discourse analysis (Jaeger), the paper explores the way the possible intersexuality of Caster Semenya was contextualised in mainstream Swiss German-language print media. The analyses will firstly look at the way in which Caster Semenya was constructed as a ʻfallen hero’ and stigmatised as a double-dealer and unacceptable deviant body. The rumours amongst athletes and commentators became news in the media, which focused on descriptions of her habitus, her muscular body and her deep voice. Through theoretical discussion the paper argues that the media response to Caster Semenya exemplifies Butler’s claim that the discursive framework of gender constructs and naturalises sex. A key question is therefore whether the designation of deviant bodies to a ʻfield of deformation’ (Butler) works to pluralise the field of gender, or rather, as Butler suggests, it tends that those bodies might call into questions. The final part of the paper discusses how gender, ethnicity and sexuality combine to constitute the black female sporting body as a spectacle of otherness. It is evident that this otherness is made manifest through the function of those bodies as a site of transgression, as the boundary between male and female, and often as the boundary between culture and nature (Hall). Using the example of the controversy surrounding Caster Semenya, this paper aims to demonstrate how the post/colonial white female body is reproduced by western norms of gender, sexuality, beauty and sporting behaviour, in the sense of a feminine sporting genderperformance. The media controversy will be also read through the lens of the globalisation of certain ideas of normative bodies, sex, ethnicity and gender and the challenge of changing stereotypes through transgression. Keywords: gender- and postcolonial theories, discourse analysis, print media, Caster Semen-ya, deviant body, ethnicity, intersexuality

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Einleitung Die mediale Debatte um das Geschlecht der südafrikanischen 800 Meterläuferin Casta Semenya entbrannte in dem Moment, in dem die Athletin im Finale der Leichtathletik Weltmeisterschaften in Berlin am 19. August 2009 als erste über die Ziellinie lief. Ihr Sieg war begleitet von vielseitig öffentlich geäusserten Zweifeln an ihrer Zuordnung zur weiblichen Geschlechterkategorie. und damit ihrem Recht, mit Frauen in sportlichen Wettstreit zu treten. Die International Association of Athletics Federations (IAFF) forderte für die Anerkennung der gewonnen Goldmedaille einen sogenannten Geschlechtertest (gender verification test). Theorie, Fragestellung und Methode Aus sozialkonstruktivistischer (Berger & Luckmann) poststrukturalistischer (Foucault) sowie gender und postkolonialer (Butler; Hall; Spivak) Perspektive, wird durch den diskursanalytischen Ansatz (Jäger) aufgezeigt, wie eine mögliche Intersexualität der nicht weissen, südafrikanischen Läufer_in Casta Semenya im hegemonialen Diskurs deutsch-schweizerischer Printmedien verhandelt wurde. Eine zentrale Fragestellung ist, wie der Körper als deviant konstruiert wurde und welche Diskursverschränkungen eine Pluralisierung und Diversifizierung hätten nahelegen können, jedoch zu der gänzlichen Infragestellung des als abweichend rezipierten Körpers und seiner legitimen Existenz im leistungssportlichen Kontext führte. Im Zusammenhang mit der Fragestellung werden empirisch Befunde zu intersektioneller Überlagerungen der Differenzkategorien, Geschlecht, Ethnizität und Sexualität vorgestellt. Ergebnisse und Diskussion In der abschliessenden Diskussion wird durch eine theoriegeleitete Kontextualisierung aufgezeigt, wie die verschränkten Kategorien Geschlecht, Ethnizität und Sexualität den nicht weissen, Körper als spektakulär Anderen konstituierten (Gilman). Am Beispiel des vielfältig verschränkten Diskurses zu Casta Semenya wird in Rückbezug auf postkoloniale Theorien gezeigt, wie an hegemonialen westlichen Normen eines weissen weiblichen Sportkörpers das „Othering“ des vermeintlich devianten Körper vollzogen wird (Coleman-Bell; Hall). Deutlich wird am Ende, dass nicht nur das binäre, geschlechterdifferenzierende Modell des Sports im Diskurs rekonsolidiert wurde, sondern vor allem auch die Postulate der Natürlichkeit, Fairness und Chancengleichheit des Leistungssports.

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Einleitung: Die mediale Debatte um das Geschlecht der südafrikanischen 800 Meterläuferin Casta Semenya entbrannte in dem Moment, in dem die Athletin im Finale der Leichtathletik Weltmeisterschaften in Berlin am 19. August 2009 als erste über die Ziellinie lief. Ihr Sieg war begleitet von vielseitig öffentlich geäusserten Zweifeln an ihrer Zuordnung zur weiblichen Geschlechterkategorie. und damit ihrem Recht, mit Frauen in sportlichen Wettstreit zu treten. Die International Association of Athletics Federations (IAFF) forderte für die Anerkennung der gewonnen Goldmedaille einen sogenannten Geschlechtertest (gender verification test). Theorie, Fragestellung und Methode Aus sozialkonstruktivistischer (Berger & Luckmann) poststrukturalistischer (Foucault) sowie gender und postkolonialer (Butler; Hall; Spivak) Perspektive, wird durch den diskursanalytischen Ansatz (Jäger) aufgezeigt, wie eine mögliche Intersexualität der nicht weissen, südafrikanischen Läufer_in Casta Semenya im hegemonialen Diskurs deutsch-schweizerischer Printmedien verhandelt wurde. Eine zentrale Fragestellung ist, wie der Körper als deviant konstruiert wurde und welche Diskursverschränkungen eine Pluralisierung und Diversifizierung hätten nahelegen können, jedoch zu der gänzlichen Infragestellung des als abweichend rezipierten Körpers und seiner legitimen Existenz im leistungssportlichen Kontext führte. Im Zusammenhang mit der Fragestellung werden empirisch Befunde zu intersektioneller Überlagerungen der Differenzkategorien, Geschlecht, Ethnizität und Sexualität vorgestellt. Ergebnisse und Diskussion In der abschliessenden Diskussion wird durch eine theoriegeleitete Kontextualisierung aufgezeigt, wie die verschränkten Kategorien Geschlecht, Ethnizität und Sexualität den nicht weissen, Körper als spektakulär Anderen konstituierten (Gilman). Am Beispiel des vielfältig verschränkten Diskurses zu Casta Semenya wird in Rückbezug auf postkoloniale Theorien gezeigt, wie an hegemonialen westlichen Normen eines weissen weiblichen Sportkörpers das „Othering“ des vermeintlich devianten Körper vollzogen wird (Coleman-Bell; Hall). Deutlich wird am Ende, dass nicht nur das binäre, geschlechterdifferenzierende Modell des Sports im Diskurs rekonsolidiert wurde, sondern vor allem auch die Postulate der Natürlichkeit, Fairness und Chancengleichheit des Leistungssports.