Chasing an Olympic dream: a holistic approach to how youth athletes narrate injuries, performance, and the value of being seen

This article explores how athletes experience injuries and performance pressures when striving for an "Olympic dream", and focuses on how ten young women, aged 19-22, understand present and past experiences with injuries. Through a narrative analysis, we found that female players striving to become elite athletes often talk about injuries as something that made them feel invisible in a culture where visibility is key. "Being seen" emerged as a parallel narrative to that of injuries and the elite athlete as the players often looked back with regrets about how young and naïve they had been. This holistic take on injuries as a cultural construct is important for any coach to consider when working with young aspiring athletes. We conclude that this process is contingent on social processes and is a matter of when, how, and on what or whose terms young athletes are seen.
© Copyright 2024 Sports Coaching Review. Taylor & Francis. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:junior sports social sciences
Tagging:Karriereverlauf Trainer-Sportler-Beziehung
Published in:Sports Coaching Review
Language:English
Published: 2024
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1080/21640629.2024.2343576
Document types:article
Level:advanced