کلیدواژهها
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experiential knowledge, elite coaches and athletes, vault and long jump, penalty kick,
ecological dynamics
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چکیده
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Introduction: Understanding athletes’ performance in competitive
environments helps practitioners design practice environments to improve
athletes’ skills. This study investigated the experiential knowledge of 30 elite
coaches and athletes from track and field, gymnastics, and soccer, aimed at
increasing understanding of individual, environmental, and task constraints on
expert athletes’ performance.
Methods: The interviews were conducted in a semi-structured manner and
based on ecological dynamics.
Results: Results show that while some constraints on run-up performance are
common across all three sports, others are sport-specific. Focus, readiness,
self-confidence, speed, and decision-making were identified as individual
constraints. Environmental constraints included spectators, coach role, practice
facilities, and competition stakes. Task constraints comprised performance
order, markers, significant others in the competition, and competition timing
and results.
Discussion: The findings support the ecological dynamics perspective that athlete
performance emerges from the interaction of environmental, task, and personal
constraints. Athletes must maintain focus during run-up while managing various
pressures, including crowd noise and competition stress. Coaches provide crucial
technical and psychological support that enhances confidence and focus. Quality
practice facilities and consistent training environments aid athletes’ spatial awareness
and situational resilience. Task-specific constraints, such as performance order and
timing, present unique challenges that athletes must navigate through dynamic
adjustments based on real-time changes in conditions. The results contribute to
the design of training environments and consequently to athletes’ performance
improvement. The study suggests that coaches should design training environments
that simulate real-world competitive constraints to help athletes develop adaptive
skills under pressure. These findings have prac
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