Pre-game expected mental states in men's mini-football teams: a comparative analysis

The aim of the paper is to present empirical research on pre-game expected mental states of mini-football players by means of valid psycho-diagnostic instruments before and after a competition; to compare the empirical results of the winners and losers (n=448). The research methods: content-analysis...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Physical Education and Sport 2021-03, Vol.21 (2), p.772-782
Hauptverfasser: Popovych, Ihor, Pavliuk, Mariia, Hrys, Antonina, Sydorenko, Olga, Fedorenko, Alla, Khanetska, Tetiana
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container_issue 2
container_start_page 772
container_title Journal of Physical Education and Sport
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creator Popovych, Ihor
Pavliuk, Mariia
Hrys, Antonina
Sydorenko, Olga
Fedorenko, Alla
Khanetska, Tetiana
description The aim of the paper is to present empirical research on pre-game expected mental states of mini-football players by means of valid psycho-diagnostic instruments before and after a competition; to compare the empirical results of the winners and losers (n=448). The research methods: content-analysis, tests with standardized questionnaires, factor analysis ANOVA with Varimax rotation. Factor analysis was used to determine pre-game expected mental states of the mini-football players who won (n=178) and mental states of those athletes who lost the game (n=176), the empirical data on the drawn games were not processed (n=94). The structure of pre-game expected mental states of the winners was created. The main state in this structure is F1 "Value-sense self-regulation" (23.51%), related to F2 "Pragmatic self-regulation" (rs=.398; p=.01) and F3 "Convergent self-regulation" (rs=.352; p=.01). The structure of pre-game expected mental states of the athletes who lost the game was also created. The main mental state in this structure is F1 "Pragmatic-moderate self-regulation" (15.05%), related to F2 "Distant self-regulation" (rs=.394; p=.01) and F3 "Sense-internal self-regulation" (rs=.322; p=.01).We determined that the most stable correlations in the factor structure of pre-gameexpected mental states of the mini-football players who lost the game are F2 "Distant self-regulation" (F1, F3, F4, F5, F6 and F8). We maintain that this mental state is the biggest danger for an athlete and a team game. The study substantiates the importance of training staff's ability to identify pre-game mental states of athletes and make efficient corrections before and in the course of a game. It describes content features of a regulatory function of athletes' mental states in competition activities. There search proves that training staff's ability to take into consideration pre-game expected mental states of mini-football players and construct probable scenarios of the course of events allows reacting in time and change the course of a competition positively. The obtained results can be useful for training staff, sports managers, and everyone who is engaged in training and managing mini-football and football clubs, and also for researchers in psychology of physical education and sport.
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The research methods: content-analysis, tests with standardized questionnaires, factor analysis ANOVA with Varimax rotation. Factor analysis was used to determine pre-game expected mental states of the mini-football players who won (n=178) and mental states of those athletes who lost the game (n=176), the empirical data on the drawn games were not processed (n=94). The structure of pre-game expected mental states of the winners was created. The main state in this structure is F1 "Value-sense self-regulation" (23.51%), related to F2 "Pragmatic self-regulation" (rs=.398; p=.01) and F3 "Convergent self-regulation" (rs=.352; p=.01). The structure of pre-game expected mental states of the athletes who lost the game was also created. The main mental state in this structure is F1 "Pragmatic-moderate self-regulation" (15.05%), related to F2 "Distant self-regulation" (rs=.394; p=.01) and F3 "Sense-internal self-regulation" (rs=.322; p=.01).We determined that the most stable correlations in the factor structure of pre-gameexpected mental states of the mini-football players who lost the game are F2 "Distant self-regulation" (F1, F3, F4, F5, F6 and F8). We maintain that this mental state is the biggest danger for an athlete and a team game. The study substantiates the importance of training staff's ability to identify pre-game mental states of athletes and make efficient corrections before and in the course of a game. It describes content features of a regulatory function of athletes' mental states in competition activities. 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There search proves that training staff's ability to take into consideration pre-game expected mental states of mini-football players and construct probable scenarios of the course of events allows reacting in time and change the course of a competition positively. The obtained results can be useful for training staff, sports managers, and everyone who is engaged in training and managing mini-football and football clubs, and also for researchers in psychology of physical education and sport.</abstract><cop>Pitesti</cop><pub>Universitatea din Pitesti</pub><doi>10.7752/jpes.2021.02096</doi><tpages>11</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Academic Achievement
Athletes
Comparative analysis
Competition
Content analysis
Factor Analysis
Factor Structure
Individual Characteristics
Males
Pedagogy
Personality
Personality traits
Physical Education
Pragmatics
Professional football
Psychological Characteristics
Research methodology
Resistance (Psychology)
Semiotics
Team sports
Technical Education
title Pre-game expected mental states in men's mini-football teams: a comparative analysis
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