Is hockey just a game? Contesting meanings of the ice hockey life projects through a career-threatening injury

This study is situated within an existential-narrative theoretical framework to examine the impact of career-threatening injury on professional ice hockey players` well-being and career construction. Professional ice hockey culture is construed as a privileged space characterised by hegemonic masculinity, fierce competition as well as high-risk behaviours often resulting in sports injuries. In this paper, we analyse two players` life stories with a particular focus on injury as a boundary situation involving social and temporal breakdown and re-evaluation of meaning of sporting life projects. Emergent narratives surrounding existential themes of loss of meaning and loneliness in the face of injury were analysed in connection with players` search for authenticity and realignment with self-concept. Each player developed resistant narratives to the dominant ethos of professional sport in order to restore well-being and sense of self. The relational aspects of injury are highlighted in practical recommendations.
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Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:social sciences sport games
Tagging:Karriereende Karriereverlauf
Published in:Journal of Sports Sciences
Language:English
Published: 2017
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1080/02640414.2016.1201211
Volume:35
Issue:10
Pages:923-928
Document types:article
Level:advanced