Article

Coping with retirement from sport: The influence of athletic identity

Details

Citation

Grove JR, Lavallee D & Gordon S (1997) Coping with retirement from sport: The influence of athletic identity. Journal of Applied Sport Psychology, 9 (2), pp. 191-203. https://doi.org/10.1080/10413209708406481

Abstract
Competitive athletes are confronted with a number of adjustments during the career ambition process. In the present study, 48 former elite-level athletes sup plied information about their financial, occupational, emotional, and social adjustment to retirement from sport. Athletic identity at the time of retirement was also assessed, along with self-reported use of various coping strategies and the perceived quality of adjustment to retirement. Results indicated that acceptance, positive reinterpretation, planning, and active coping were the most frequently used coping strategies during the career transition process. At the same time, athletic identity at the time of retirement exhibited significant relationships to coping processes, emotional and social adjustment, pre-retirement planning, and anxiety about career decision-making. Implications for career transition programs are discussed. along with suggestions for future research.

Journal
Journal of Applied Sport Psychology: Volume 9, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date30/09/1997
PublisherThe Association for Applied Sport Psychology/ Taylor and Francis
ISSN1041-3200