Matosic Doris, Ntoumanis Nikos, Boardley Ian David, Stenling Andreas, Sedikides Constantine
1 University of Birmingham.
2 Curtin University.
J Sport Exerc Psychol. 2016 Dec;38(6):556-566. doi: 10.1123/jsep.2016-0141. Epub 2016 Nov 11.
Research on coaching (Bartholomew, Ntoumanis, & Thøgersen-Ntoumani, 2009) has shown that coaches can display controlling behaviors that have detrimental effects on athletes' basic psychological needs and quality of sport experiences. The current study extends this literature by considering coach narcissism as a potential antecedent of coaches' controlling behaviors. Further, the study tests a model linking coaches' (n = 59) own reports of narcissistic tendencies with athletes' (n = 493) perceptions of coach controlling behaviors, experiences of need frustration, and attitudes toward doping. Multilevel path analysis revealed that coach narcissism was directly and positively associated with athletes' perceptions of controlling behaviors and was indirectly and positively associated with athletes' reports of needs frustration. In addition, athletes' perceptions of coach behaviors were positively associated-directly and indirectly-with attitudes toward doping. The findings advance understanding of controlling coach behaviors, their potential antecedents, and their associations with athletes' attitudes toward doping.
有关教练指导的研究(巴塞洛缪、恩图马尼斯和托格森 - 恩图马尼斯,2009年)表明,教练可能会表现出控制行为,这些行为会对运动员的基本心理需求和运动体验质量产生不利影响。本研究通过将教练自恋视为教练控制行为的一个潜在先行因素,扩展了这一文献。此外,该研究测试了一个模型,该模型将教练(n = 59)对自恋倾向的自我报告与运动员(n = 493)对教练控制行为的认知、需求受挫体验以及对使用兴奋剂的态度联系起来。多层次路径分析表明,教练自恋与运动员对控制行为的认知直接正相关,与运动员需求受挫的报告间接正相关。此外,运动员对教练行为的认知与对使用兴奋剂的态度直接和间接均呈正相关。这些发现推进了对教练控制行为、其潜在先行因素以及它们与运动员对使用兴奋剂态度之间关联的理解。