Monthly Archive for December, 2021

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Sport Psychology in Australia

Let’s read this in-depth and lengthy interview by Robert Nideffer with Jeff Bond, Director of the Department of Psychology at the Australian Institute of Sport, conducted 20 years ago after the Sydney Olympics.

Nideffer: What is the role of the sport psychology service provided by the Australian Institute of Sport Psychology (AIS) and when did it begin?

Bond: The Department of Psychology at AIS emerged in early 1982 as part of a Multidisciplinary Centre for Sport Science and Sports Medicine. AIS began in Canberra in 1981 as the Australian government’s response to the poor results at the 1976 Montreal Olympics. Until that time, sport was based on sports clubs, you had coaches and managers who were volunteers. From that day on, the government took on the responsibility of subsidizing sport and currently taxpayers provide sport with $135 million each year to promote sport at any level. AIS provides residential and even short term programs for elite athletes.

The Psychology Department currently employs 6 full-time sport psychologists. These are all graduates and licensed to practice psychology and must be members of the Australian Psychological Society’s College of Sport Psychologists. This means they have studied psychology, sport science and sport psychology for six years and must have a minimum of two years of supervision in sport psychology.

Nideffer: What sports psychology services are provided to athletes and coaches?

Bond: Psychologists provide consultations to individual athletes with appointments managed within the Sports Medicine and Science Center. Most athletes come independently, much less frequent are cases where it is the coach or another person still requesting intervention for a young person. The Dept. of Psychology also organizes many workshops for teams/groups. Usually psychologists are assigned to specific sports groups and work there for several years, participating in national and international competitions. This system results in a large number of informal meetings between psychologist, coach and athlete.

Five AIS psychologists were at the Sydney Olympics and the sports covered by this group were: rowing, swimming, track and field, archery, triathlon, men’s and women’s soccer, volleyball, shooting, boxing and gymnastics. Overall, however, there were 12 psychologists present at these last Olympics. The psychology program that AIS provides to athletes and coaches covers a wide range of services:

  • Performance Enhancement Training – This is an educational approach to the development of psychological skills directly related to elite performance. Examples of training programs include: goal setting/motivation and professionalism, activation control training, attentional control training, imagery and visualizations, emotional control training, race preparation and debriefing, routines in competition, skills for traveling, cognitive control training, alcohol and recreational drug education, and so on.
  • Personal Development Training – This program emphasizes the needs of athletes and coaches to enhance a number of life skills that can be applied outside of sports or after they have concluded their athletic careers. For example: leadership training, interpersonal communication, conflict resolution, interviewing skills, and sponsor service.
  • Lifestyle Management – This program helps to effectively deal with issues caused by an imbalance between the extreme goals of a sports career and broader lifestyle issues. For example: stress or time management, and counseling in the area of interpersonal relationships.
  • Group/team dynamics – This program area focuses on the complexities of developing and maintaining an effective team. It covers issues such as: leadership and positions of responsibility, communications systems, meeting management, team culture, team rules, and behavior management.
  • Critical Factor Interventions – Services are also provided that fall within the scope of clinical psychology, including: food and weight control behaviors, depression, childhood or adolescent trauma, and substance abuse. In all cases, when long-term treatment is contemplated, the youth is referred to specialized centers with whom they are in contact to continue therapy or rehabilitation.

Nideffer: Do you have a standard program for athletes at AIS?

Bond: In short, the answer is no. I am convinced that standardized programs can only be useful in particular situations, when direct contact is problematic or at the youth activity level. The focus here is on individualized programs for elite athletes, coaches and teams. In rowing, for example, the athletes are older than in women’s gymnastics. Therefore, to impose the same psychology program on both groups would impede understanding of the peculiarities of these disciplines and the ways coaches and athletes deal with them. Also the workshops that are held are always very specific and built on the needs that need to be met.

Nideffer: Do you use psychological tests at AIS? If so, for what reasons do you use them and how are they presented to athletes?

Bond: At AIS, the only test we use on a regular basis is the Test of Attentional and Interpersonal Style (TAIS). I introduced it in 1982 and chose it because it examines a vast number of attentional and interpersonal characteristics related to high-level performance. We use the TAIS in conjunction with the individual athlete interview, coaches’ reports, and observation of training/competitions by the psychologist. In this way, a psychological profile is developed that increases the athletes’ and coaches’ understanding of aspects that impact performance. I think TAIS is particularly useful in explaining the complexity of attention in operational, practical and easy to understand terms.

Other tests are used on an as-needed basis. For example, we have long used the POMS, using it in a very practical way to increase coaches’ and athletes’ awareness of performance-related emotional states and to formulate operational strategies for improving mood.

Nideffer: How is the sports psychology service you offer accepted?

Bond: It is gratifying to see how well accepted sport psychology is at AIS and in Australian sport more generally. I remember in 1982 when I started this it was looked upon with great suspicion by most athletes and coaches. Within the community psychology was little considered and a traditional sporting culture (which still exists today in some small areas) reigned that did not recognize or discuss “weaknesses”. Of course, there was very little history of sport psychology in Australia in 1982, but that quickly changed. The first involvement at AIS was with swimming and I was the first Australian psychologist to participate in the Olympics (Los Angeles, 1984). The team had many successes and, of course, many other teams took note of the kind of services that were provided. Thus in Seoul the psychologists became three, seven in Barcelona, nine in Atlanta and 12 in Sydney. These psychologists are accredited to specific Olympic teams so that they can find a place, even a physical place, in the Olympics. Beginning in 1988, some psychologists have also been accredited to the Winter Olympic Games.

The acceptance of psychologists has also been fostered by speeches made by the same psychologists to the collegiate teams to explain their work and lectures given in training / refresher courses for coaches. The publication of scientific and popular articles has served to further raise the profile of sport psychology.

Psychologists are also active in high-level professional sports and this has increased acceptance of the discipline by the media and the sports world. The sports in which the presence of psychologists is most prevalent are tennis, golf, basketball, football, surfing and motorsports.

Nideffer: What services do coaches and athletes value most?

Bond: This is a difficult question to answer because the popularity of a program is dependent on the stage of preparation for competition. For example, in the early stages of training, athletes and coaches are more interested in focusing on personal development, managing lifestyle issues, and training basic mental skills. As we approach competition, personal development and lifestyle become less important and in their place more competition-specific elements become relevant. While traveling, I found myself more involved in activities to reinforce competition plans (often through visualization), review psychological skills necessary for competition, increase confidence, and manage group dynamics.

I found team culture and the ability of coaches to work cohesively with each other and manage the team effectively to be very important aspects. Problems can arise in training or competition, but it is clear to me that the additional stress associated with major competitions often brings up issues that should have been resolved at the beginning of preparation, so the presence of the psychologist is absolutely necessary. I have seen that when the psychologist travels with the team many issues can be addressed immediately. Furthermore, we will only be considered full members of the coaching and support staff if we can reinforce performance enhancement strategies and contribute to the overall performance of the team.

Finally, when something negative happens, the psychologist is able to make an effective contribution. Coaches always remember critical incidents, even after years they can remember what happened and how they solved the problem. In my opinion, this is because these incidents could have affected the individuals and the team very negatively. The real test of the effectiveness of the intervention of the psychologist, but also of the coach, is certainly not when everything is going well but instead after a mistake or in a critical period.

Nideffer: Do athletes value and/or perceive a need for sports psychology services?

Bond: In general, I think they do. There are, however, a number of people who do not think that way. Sometimes it depends on previous experience with sports psychology. I have noticed that athletes who have worked with sports psychologists who are too academically oriented are often struck by the distance between theory and practice. Athletes and coaches are very practical people and seek practical solutions and strategies. Sometimes the attitude of the athlete is significantly influenced by the attitude of the coach In my job I am constantly working on making sure that the coach is on my side. I work very hard to find the right opportunities (“teaching moments” if you will) to reinforce in coaches the idea that the psychological demands of performance situations interact with mental skills.

At AIS we conducted, with our stakeholders, a lot of research in an attempt to find out what they thought about our effectiveness, timing, and accountability. This was done in the various departments at AIS. The results showed a strong positivity towards AIS and an average acceptance score of 80% for psychology.

A positive influence of sport psychology concerns the presence, in interviews given by athletes and coaches, of references regarding the importance of mental aspects in high-level performance. For example, our best marathoner often calls the marathon a mental race. A few years ago Australia appreciated the performance of one of its top tennis players during Wimbledon. At that time it was recognized that the psychology program could make a significant difference. This player possessed a high level of fitness, speed and explosive power. Like all tennis players, he had developed his technical skills through years of training and competition. The key to exploiting the advantage given to him by his physical and technical skills lay in careful preparation to manage the psychological issues associated with this high performance profile.

Of course, we must also recognize that psychological training may not be a significant factor for some coaches and athletes. Sport psychology does not have a solution for everything. In many cases, however, psychological factors are the final hurdle to overcome to achieve success.

Nideffer: You have been the director of sport psychologists at AIS since 1982, what evidence have you gathered to say that the services you provide to athletes make a difference?

Bond: Among the indicators that provide objective support are, in general terms, the results of research conducted by AIS that have shown on several occasions that increased findings in sports medicine and sports science are associated with a parallel improvement in the performance of our athletes. In addition, the TAIS data that we have collected over the years shows that we can make a difference in relation to attentional and interpersonal characteristics. And I am convinced that our contribution is significant in improving stress management during competition.

I believe that coaches and athletes are very competent clients. In this sense the acceptance that they show towards sport psychology can be considered as a further good indicator of the validity of the services we offer. There is an economic cost in having a psychologist on the team and in having him participate in international tours. Moreover, if the coaches thought that the psychologist would interfere with the training program or would be useless, they would not tolerate his presence.

Nideffer: What effect will the advancement of technology in the next five years have on the work of psychologists?

Bond: I have to admit that I am a traditionalist and believe that the face-to-face relationship between the psychologist and the coach/athlete is essential. I also believe that psychology, as well as sports psychology, would be poorer if it moved away from the personal contact that is a traditional part of our profession. I would not want sports psychology services to be offered through correspondence. When I think back over the 25 years I have been working in this field, I believe that the validity of my intervention would be greatly compromised if I had done it sitting behind my desk and talking by phone or fax. I am aware that I would have lost awareness and would not have understood the critical aspects of performance if I had not been present for these situations.

This pattern based on personal and situational contact affects a certain percentage of our profession. It pertains, for example, to the way I operate with the national rowing team. At the time of national competitions I work with the AIS team and once the national team has been selected I work with them. I have organizational support and support from the rowing organization to be with the athletes and coaches as they enter the final phase of preparation for the Olympics. I don’t think I could have worked as well as I did if I was sitting behind my desk in Canberra. A few years ago I worked with a tennis player who won at Wimbledon. During the final stages of preparation I lived with him, his family and coach and was able to provide him with some effective strategies that I am convinced contributed to his success in tennis’ most important tournament. There is no way to do this over the phone, by fax or email.

There are sports psychologists who do not have similar organizational support or who work for athletes and teams from multiple sports. It is not possible for them to travel with the team or be present at training sessions. These psychologists have faced the dilemma of working in the absence of face-to-face and situational contact. The advent of the internet, digital video, and email technology now allows for contact regardless of location and could be a way for the psychologist to do their counseling work.

In addition, many athletes travel with their labtop or handheld computer and are in permanent contact with locations in other parts of the world. There is still some difficulty due to incompatibility of telecommunications systems, but in the next five years there may be significant advances in this area.

For developing athletes, the potential of the Internet is very promising for psychological training programs. These athletes may not be able to use their own sports psychologist, but they can have access to the internet. So by structuring a site in a hierarchical manner, it would be possible to access a very large amount of information, psychological profiles and communicate briefly with a sport psychologist.

Another area of technological development concerns biofeedback that can increase our work thanks to developments in instrumentation. In fact, these devices are always reliable and compact and with the possible developments in the ability to create a virtual reality, could spread rapidly among athletes to see three-dimensional images of their performance. This technology could replace the visualization exercises commonly practiced by many athletes. Our national rowing team already has access to a great deal of biomechanical information as they perform. They are able to modify their technical efficiency through shifts in body position, simply by directing their attention, breathing, muscle tension and center of gravity accordingly.

The future potential of sport psychology is very exciting. We will need to become capable of offering our services to a much greater number of athletes and coaches in different locations.The advent of the global athlete is a good thing and sport psychology will be at the forefront of tracking future developments in elite sport and actively using the latest technology to overcome the limitations due to the psychologist and coach/athlete not being physically present in the same location.

Viaggio nella mente dei campioni

Per presentare l’edizione del Master di psicologia dello sport organizzato da Psicosport che si terrà a Roma nel 2022, abbiamo organizzato questo webinar dedicato al tema “Viaggio nella mente dei campioni”.

Da Robert Nideffer e dagli atleti di élite ho imparato che ciò che hanno in comune i top performer in qualsiasi ambito professionale come i top manager o i corpi speciali dell’esercito consiste nell’abilità a prestare attenzione, a non farsi distrarre e a rimanere focalizzati su un compito alla volta. Se sei un manager o un atleta non potrai fornire prestazioni efficaci se non sei concentrato.

Parleremo di questo tema e di come si sviluppa questa mentalità che considera, come ha detto Novak Djokovic, lo stress come un privilegio.

The role of the motivation in the athlete-coach relationship

The sport activity allows the affirmation of an attitude that can be summarized in the following sentence: “It is thanks to my commitment that I become better and better at what I do. Young athletes who will become champions are motivated by an inner drive that is fed by the subjective perception of satisfaction that they derive from performing a given task to the best of their ability.

Any external intervention that tends to reduce this perception will negatively affect the athlete’s motivation. This is the case when a subject is committed only to receive a material prize (win a trophy) or symbolic (“I do it for my parents or the coach so they will be happy or because I will be more admired by my classmates”). The sporting performance thus becomes only a means to achieve another purpose that is, instead, the true end of the action: the young person does not act for the pleasure that the activity itself provides, but to receive a certain recognition. Therefore, external reinforcements that encourage him to attribute his participation to external motives may reduce his internal motivation.

What the coach can do

Operationally, the coach should not use reinforcements that are perceived by the athlete to be more important than participation in the sport itself, but should provide useful feedback to increase the sense of satisfaction that the young person derives from the competitive experience. In this regard it has been documented that sports results that are perceived as the result of internal personal factors, such as skill, dedication, commitment, rather than external factors (luck, limited ability of opponents, refereeing decisions in favor) are associated with states of mind of satisfaction and pride.

Sampling is a better choice for children?

 

Across a range of youth sport contexts, early specialization (i.e., intensive engagement in a single sport from an early age) has been associated with a variety of negative outcomes such as burnout, injury, and premature sport attrition. Accordingly, researchers and health practitioners have suggested that young athletes participate in a range of sports (i.e., sampling between sports) at differing levels of intensity to avoid these negative consequences. Whereas a growing body of research continues to explore the effects that early specialization can have on developing athletes, questions remain regarding the impact of sampling between sports from an empirical standpoint. Therefore, the purpose of this scoping review was to systematically search the youth sport literature for articles linking the practice of sampling between sports to outcomes related to sport performance, sport participation, or personal development (i.e., the 3Ps). In total, 9257 articles were captured through a scoping search procedure and 53 were retained for further analysis. Broadly, sampling between sports appeared to support improved sport performance and continued sport participation. It was also observed that relevant research completed on the sampling topic exhibited an overrepresentation of (a) quantitative approaches; (b) retrospective methodologies; (c) male participants, men, and boys; and (d) findings related predominantly to sport performance. It is recommended that researchers continue to explore the effects that sampling multiple sports in childhood and adolescence can have on athlete development through the use of varied methods as well as increased engagement with diverse athlete populations.

Physical activity is more beneficial for brain health than previously known.

Research involving close to 6,000 young children aged 9 to 10 found that physical activity is more beneficial for brain health than previously known.

According to the study by Boston Children’s Hospital, no matter the extent of physical activity, children could benefit from all forms of exercise, leading to organizational properties of the children’s brain circuits.

The 5,955 child participants examined were part of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development cohort.                                                           We estimated significant positive effects of regular physical activity on network connectivity, efficiency, robustness and stability (P ≤ 0.01), and on local topologies of attention, somatomotor, frontoparietal, limbic, and default-mode networks (P < 0.05), which support extensive processes, from memory and executive control to emotional processing. Additional mediation analyses suggested that physical activity could also modulate network topologies leading to better control of food intake, appetite and satiety, and ultimately lower BMI. Thus, regular physical activity may have extensive positive effects on the development of the functional connectome, and may be critical for improving the detrimental effects of unhealthy weight on cognitive health.

Autogenic training or mindfulness?

I have found that young psychologists do not know about Schultz’s autogenic training. They all know, today, that mindfulness exists, which has nothing negative about it, but they don’t know the history. They don’t know how mindfulness was arrived at.

I consider this reduced awareness a limitation, because we are, if you will allow me, at the invention of how to cut the broth.

Let me explain. Schultz, about 120 years ago, devised a system to improve self-control and learn to relax that he named autogenic training. It means that through a process of training you can learn to relax.

His purpose was to free people from the dependence of hypnotics, today we would say make them autonomous through learning a psychological skill.

Most young psychologists ignore this approach, whereas they should be making this mindfulness their own and then using it with the adaptations that 120 years later we are now able to propose.

Instead we have moved to mindfulness, which is certainly useful, but we have thrown away the knowledge of the past, probably because it is not fashionable and certainly not because it is useless.

What do you think?

A great modeling experience

In 2020 Tiger Woods made his debut in the PNC Championship at Ritz-Carlton Golf Club, Orlando, Grande Lakes alongside 11-year-old son Charlie, where the pair fired two consecutive rounds of 62 to reach 20 under, solo seventh, five back of the winning margin from Justin Thomas and his father, Mike.

Tiger Wood: a great modeling experience for his son. Let’s watch this outstanding video to understand what it means to have learned by observing someone better than us. As you will see the modeling is not only about technique but also about the mindset of approaching shots.

Tiger Woods will return to golf at PNC Championship

European Conference on Integrity in Sport

The European Conference on Integrity in Sport took place on 6 and 7 December, organized by ‘EPAS-Enlarged Partial Agreement on Sport, and the Italian Department for Sport, within the framework of the Italian Presidency of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe. Theme of the meeting: integrity, intrinsically linked to the question of ethics in sport. Among the objectives, the elaboration of guidelines for integrity in sport; the fight against the manipulation of sports competitions, as reiterated in the Convention of Macolin; the guarantee of good governance in sport. The event was opened by the Secretary of State for Sport, Valentina Vezzali, and the Deputy Secretary General of the Council of Europe, Bjørn Berge.

The conference discussed how to implement integrity guidelines, combat manipulation of sports competitions and ensure good governance in sport. Sessions over the two days reiterated the need for a comprehensive response to the various issues that threaten integrity in sport, such as doping, fraud, disruption in procurement, and illegal practices that affect the values of sport. In light of these issues, it seems essential to promote good governance in sport, focusing on transparency and a holistic approach. Sport, in fact, is not only competition, but reflects society and its problems.

The conference primarily targeted government authorities from a wide range of sectors, including sports ministries, anti-corruption authorities, foreign affairs departments, law enforcement agencies, national data protection offices, sports integrity agencies, betting regulators, the justice sector.

“When we talk about sports and integrity we should also talk about the principle of non-discrimination in access to sports. On the contrary, we still detect a lot of institutional discrimination, as is the case with the participation of foreigners in various sports leagues at all levels, including amateur, and even more so of refugees and asylum seekers … Unscrupulous individuals seek out talent in the poorest areas of Africa and Latin America and then bring them to Europe for success and money. If they do not obtain results, they abandon them on the street. Over time, the various solutions designed to curb this phenomenon have ended up penalizing only the athletes, who have had to present complex documentation related to residency, having to prove that they have a job and have not previously been registered in another state. It would be necessary to promote welcoming policies to prevent abuses and criminal operations right in the folds of these situations of non-inclusion,” said Daniela Conti on the sidelines of the meeting (UISP).

The mindset of “All is well”

There are athletes who have no difficulty understanding that mental training is a daily commitment. They often say, “All is well.”

When I was young, Everything is fine was the phrase I used to write to my mother when I sent her postcards in the summer, it was a way to reassure her. Of course she thought I didn’t really want to say how I was doing and she was right.

How did the training go: “All right.” Do we learn anything from this sentence about how that session went? Yes, that the athlete is not aware of what they did or more trivially that they don’t want to talk about it.

When the response refers to psychological aspects of training it is meant to mean: “I did what the coach told me and I committed to doing my best.” This seemingly positive response excludes any information regarding how I did the exercises, how I dealt with mistakes, how I corrected myself, and so on. In other words, the athlete’s response is global but does not provide specific information about the performance of the training. We don’t know, for example, if there were drops in concentration or if the activity was carried out with the necessary level of intensity.

We learn, first of all ourselves, not to use these two terms “All right” and teach athletes to be specific and not to take refuge in this reassuring approach.

Manchester United hired one sport psychologist

MANCHESTER UNITED HIRE SPORTS PSYCHOLOGIST SASCHA LENSE AND ASSISTANT COACH CHRIS ARMAS TO HELP RALF RANGNICK

Ralf Rangnick has played a major role in bringing in a sports phychologist and an assistant coach to help him at Manchester United. Rangnick has a six-month interim contract in charge of United and a further two-year consultancy role which will begin at the end of the season. Rangnick says he needed to bring in “an expert for the brain”.