Career barriers in the National Hockey League: An inductive thematic analysis of first-hand data from Canadian professional ice-hockey players

The objectives of the study were: (a) to examine the Canadian National Hockey League (NHL) players` internal and external barriers associated with the demands at each NHL career stage and status together with across-career barriers, and (b) to feature the Canadian NHL players` barriers in the empirical career model. Five rookies, five veterans, and 13 retirees agreed to participate in conversational interviews before their transcripts underwent an interpretive thematic analysis (Braun & Clarke, 2012). Prospects face draft year pressure and team camp anxiety. Rookies and sophomores deal with insecurity with teammates and roster spot uncertainty. Prime veterans have to manage ruminating over missed chances while seasoned veterans struggled with social connections. Across career stages and statuses, NHL players deal with career threatening injuries and conflicts with head coach. After discussing how these results contribute to the empirical career model of Canadian NHL players and also extend the career transition and maladaptation literatures, delimitations and future directions are proposed for sport psychology researchers.
© Copyright 2019 International Journal of Sport Psychology. University of Tor Vergata. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:training science social sciences sport games
Tagging:Karriereverlauf Karriereplanung
Published in:International Journal of Sport Psychology
Language:English
Published: Rom 2019
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.7352/IJSP.2019.50.448
Volume:50
Issue:5
Pages:448-468
Document types:article
Level:advanced