Book Chapter

The Nature and Conceptualisation of Career Transitions in Sport

Details

Citation

Alfermann D, Bardaxoglou N, Chamalidis P, Lavallee D, Stambulova N, Menkehorst H, Petitpas AJ, Salmela JH, Schilling G, van den Berg FJ & Wylleman P (1999) The Nature and Conceptualisation of Career Transitions in Sport. In: Wylleman P, Lavallee D & Alfermann D (eds.) Career transitions in competitive sports. FEPSAC Monograph Series, 1. Biel, Switzerland: European Federation of Sports Psychology. pp. 6-29. http://www.fepsac.com/index.php/download_file/-/view/31

Abstract
First paragraph: While an athlete’s sports career may seem to develop in a smooth and continuous way from beginning to end, it is in fact characterized by specific phases and transitions. Asked to describe its development, athletes highlight their athletic career, for example, in terms of specific moments or situations which occurred throughout their career (Wylleman & De Knop, 1997a,b). These moments or situations do not only require athletes to cope with specific changes, but are also perceived by the athletes to influence the quality of their participation at their current competitive level. The occurrence of phases and transitions in the athletic career can also be illustrated by chronologically pin-pointing athletes’ sport achievements (e.g., a first national championship title) and selections (e.g., selection for the national team). Comparison of such developmental data has revealed many similarities in (elite) athletes’ athletic careers (Stambulova, 1998; Wylleman & De Knop, 1998): athletes start out in their sport at the ages of approximately 8 to 12 years-of-age; one or two years later athletes start competing at club level, and go, some three to four years later on to national level; a first selection for a national team occurs somewhere between 17-19 years-of-age, while a first Olympic selection is achieved during their early twenties; and finally, athletes do end their involvement in highlevel competitive sport at approximately 30 years-of-age (3). In fact, researchers have been able to identify a sequence of career developmental phases, not only with elite level athletes, but with talented performers in general, namely an initiation, a development, a mastery, and a post-career phase (e.g., Bloom, 1985; Salmela; 1994).

StatusPublished
Title of seriesFEPSAC Monograph Series
Number in series1
Publication date31/12/1999
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/22409
PublisherEuropean Federation of Sports Psychology.
Publisher URLhttp://www.fepsac.com/index.php/download_file/-/view/31
Place of publicationBiel, Switzerland
ISSN of series1562-1278

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