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22: Self-Control in Sports

  • Page ID
    112117
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    Imagine yourself walking to the gym in the rain after a long hard day at work. Picture yourself lifting heavy weights, even though you would prefer sitting on the sofa watching your favorite baseball team win a playoff match. This is just one sports-related example during which self-control processes enable us to keep striving for a desirable goal and suppress potentially tempting action alternatives. In general, “self-control refers to the capacity for altering one’s own responses, especially to bring them into line with standards such as ideals, values, morals, and social expectations, and to support the pur-suit of long-term goals” (Baumeister et al., 2007, p. 351). However, self-control is not always applied ef-fectively as, for instance, evidenced by the large number of gym dropouts every year (e.g., Englert & Rummel, 2016).

    In this chapter, we will discuss empirical findings that highlight the importance of self-control for sports-related performance and we will introduce the theoretical accounts that try to explain why self-control sometimes appears to fail. Finally, we will discuss open research questions in order to improve our understanding of how self-control operates and why it cannot be applied at all times and at all costs.


    This page titled 22: Self-Control in Sports is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Chris Englert (Society for Transparency, Openness, and Replication in Kinesiology) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.