700 resultados para Tennis


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It has been repeatedly demonstrated that athletes in a state of ego depletion do not perform up to their capabilities. We assume that autonomous self-control exertion, in contrast to forced self-control exertion, can serve as a buffer against ego depletion effects and can help individuals to show superior performance. In the present study, we applied a between-subjects design to test the assumption that autonomously exerted self-control is less detrimental for subsequent self-control performance in sports than is forced self-control exertion. In a primary self-control task, the level of autonomy was manipulated through specific instructions, resulting in three experimental conditions (autonomy-supportive: n = 19; neutral: n = 19; controlling: n = 19). As a secondary self-control task, participants executed a series of tennis serves under high-pressure conditions, and performance accuracy served as our dependent variable. As expected, a one-way between-groups ANOVA revealed that participants from the autonomy-supportive condition performed significantly better under pressure than did participants from the controlling condition. These results further highlight the importance of autonomy-supportive instructions in order to enable athletes to show superior achievements in high-pressure situations. Practical implications for the coach–athlete relationship are discussed.

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It has been repeatedly demonstrated that athletes often choke in high pressure situations because anxiety can affect attention regulation and in turn performance. There are two competing theoretical approaches to explain the negative anxiety-performance relationship. According to skillfocus theories, anxious athletes’ attention is directed at how to execute the sport-specific movements which interrupts execution of already automatized movements in expert performers. According to distraction theories, anxious athletes are distractible and focus less on the relevant stimuli. We tested these competing assumptions in a between-subject design, as semi-professional tennis players were either assigned to an anxiety group (n = 25) or a neutral group (n = 28), and performed a series of second tennis serves into predefined target areas. As expected, anxiety was negatively related to serve accuracy. However, mediation analyses with the bootstrapping method revealed that this relationship was fully mediated by self-reported distraction and not by skill-focus.

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L-R: Head Coach Bitsy Ritt, Jaimie Fielding, Allison Schlonsky, Tara Graff, Sarah Cyganiak, Angie Popek, Liz Cyganiak, Simone Lacher, Bojana Jankovic, Assistant Coach Susan Sommerville

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Back Row (Left to right): Coach Brian Eisner, John Arthos, Mark Zausmer, Steve Swanson, Dan Asher, Ollie Owens, student manager John Wibalda

Front Row: Buddy Gallagher, Brad Holland, Eric Friedler, Jim Holman and Jeff Etterbeek.

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Front Row: Scott Seemen, Jack Neinken, Brad Holland, Jeff Etterbeek, Mark Freedman, Judd Schaufler

Middle Row: coach Brian Eisner, Mark Zausmer, Rick Garcia, Ollie Owens, Steve Solys, Steve Swanson and assistant coach Eric Fleischer

Back Row: Gary Grant, Clark Friedman, Tim Beyer, Dan Aronovic.