The impact of psychological pressure and psychological traits on performance - An experimental evidence of penalties in handball

Our handball penalty field experiment analyses the influence of psychological traits and pressure on individual performance in sequential tournaments. We use a short ABBA-sequence with four throws for each subject and observe an average score rate of 60% in our sample of amateur league players. On game level, we find a weak and insignificant first-mover advantage that becomes stronger and significant if we control for psychological traits and pressure. On shot level, we also find no significant first-mover advantage on average. However, confident individuals have a higher scoring rate in the role of player A and less confident individuals in the role of player B. Moreover, ceteris paribus, player A scores more goals than player B under tournament incentives. Whereas self-esteem increases the probability to throw a goal in our experiment, risk-taking reduces it.
© Copyright 2020 MAGKS Papers on Economics. Published by Philipps-University Marburg. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:social sciences sport games
Tagging:Torwart
Published in:MAGKS Papers on Economics
Language:English
Published: Marburg Philipps-University Marburg 2020
Online Access:https://ideas.repec.org/p/mar/magkse/202043.html
Pages:202043
Document types:research paper
Level:advanced