Overtraining Athletes: Personal Journeys in SportOvertraining Athletes: Personal Journeys in Sport seeks to communicate the complex subject of overtraining to help athletes, coaches, parents, and sport science professionals understand the dangers of overtraining and take steps toward prevention. Using history and research, current experts' perspectives, and athletes' personal experiences, Overtraining Athletes identifies forces that push athletes to overtrain by sharing the struggles of those athletes and the sport professionals who seek to help them. The text employs a nonlinear structure, allowing the flexibility to sample chapters from each of its four parts based on interest and level of knowledge about the topic. By presenting the phenomenon of overtraining from a variety of perspectives and with varying degrees of technicality, the book engages a wide range of readers while presenting significant research and studies in the area. Each of the four parts of the text displays a distinct method for discovering how overtraining affects athletes, coaches, parents, and professionals. Part I begins with a review of research examining aspects of overtraining, including prevalence, physiological and psychological manifestations, and outcomes. It concludes by discussing risk factors that increase the probability of overtraining. In part II coaches' and sport scientists' views on overtraining risk factors are presented. The authors interviewed 14 experts from major sport organizations in Australia to glean their perspectives on the possible variables associated with overtraining. With the perspectives of these experts, readers may identify the characteristics, behaviors, and experiences of susceptible athletes, as well as the situations, factors, sport cultures, and people that both pressure athletes to increase their training and affect athletes' needs for recovery. In part III the focus turns to the experiences of the athletes. Drawing on interviews from 13 athletes with identified histories of chronic overtraining, the authors present three aggregate case studies: -A professional footballer influenced by economic forces, internalized clich "d slogans, tough sport cultures, and traditional abusive practices -A triathlete obsessed with the pursuit of the Olympic gold -A young gymnast-turned-cyclist pressured by abusive coaches and an overinvolved parent In part IV, the authors introduce a comprehensive model of overtraining risks and outcomes. This model is examined in relation to other overtraining models, thus accentuating its importance as a useful, fluid tool for identifying athletes who might be at risk as well as environments and cultures that increase vulnerability to overtraining. Part IV concludes with a discussion of future directions for research and professional practice and suggestions for further study. |
Contents
INTRODUCTION TO RESEARCH AND TERMINOLOGY OVERTRAINING Introduction to Overtraining | 3 |
SORTING OUT THE TERMINOLOGY OF OVERTRAINING | 5 |
WHY LANGUAGE IS IMPORTANT | 11 |
CONCLUSIONS | 12 |
HOW BIG IS IT? The Prevalence and Manifestation of Overtraining | 15 |
PREVALENCE RESEARCH AND DATA FOR OVERTRAINING | 16 |
MARKERS OF OVERTRAINING | 18 |
OTHER OVERTRAINING OUTCOMES | 27 |
What Can We Learn From Athletes? | 99 |
THE PATHOGENIC WORLD OF PROFESSIONAL SPORT Steves Tale | 101 |
LOVE OF THE GAME AND REGRET | 102 |
PLAYING FOR PAY | 103 |
INJURY MISMANAGEMENT | 104 |
COACH AND MEDICAL STAFF PRESSURES | 105 |
GOING THE EXTRA MILE | 107 |
LESSONS LEARNED EARLY | 108 |
CONCLUSIONS | 30 |
WHAT BRINGS IT ON? Risk Factors for Overtraining | 33 |
RISK FACTORS FOR OVERTRAINING | 34 |
DIRECTIONS FOR RESEARCH ON OVERTRAINING PHENOMENA | 44 |
WHAT THE EXPERTS HAVE TO SAY | 47 |
COACHES AND SPORT SCIENTISTS VIEWS ON RISK FACTORS | 49 |
PEOPLE FACTORS AND SITUATIONS THAT PRESSURE ATHLETES TO INCREASE TRAINING | 52 |
PEOPLE FACTORS AND SITUATIONS THAT AFFECT ATHLETES NEEDS FOR RECOVERY | 56 |
CONCLUSIONS | 58 |
BURNT COOKIES Conversations With an Exercise Physiologist | 61 |
TRAINING AS AN EXERCISE PHYSIOLOGIST | 62 |
CONNECTING DAVES STORY WITH HIS ATHLETES | 64 |
COACHES AND OVERTRAINING | 66 |
STORIES OF PROFESSIONAL ELITISM | 68 |
EXERCISE PHYSIOLOGIST AS LAY PSYCHOLOGIST | 69 |
BURNT COOKIES | 70 |
FURTHER CONVERSATION WITH DAVID MARTIN | 71 |
WHY DOES OVERTRAINING KEEP HAPPENING? | 72 |
THE EXERCISE PHYSIOLOGIST ATHLETE RELATIONSHIP | 73 |
WHEN SERVICE GOES PEARSHAPED | 74 |
WHY DO I DO WHAT I DO? | 75 |
REFLECTIONS ON DAVID | 76 |
SPORT SYSTEMS CAN DAMAGE Coversations With a Sport Psychologist | 79 |
OVERTRAINING ABUSE AND TRAUMA | 80 |
ARE YOU UNCOMFORTABLE NOW? | 81 |
EXPLORING PERCEIVED RISKS | 82 |
THE SYSTEM IS THE PROBLEM | 84 |
PSYCHOSOCIAL AND FAMILY DYNAMICS | 85 |
HARASSMENT IN SPORT | 86 |
SILENCING MENS VOICES IN SPORT | 87 |
OVERTRAINING AND TRAUMA REVISITED | 88 |
DUTY OF CARE AND PROFESSIONAL BYSTANDING | 89 |
CULTURAL VALUES THAT JUSTIFY ABUSE | 92 |
THE POWER OF EARLY EXPERIENCES | 94 |
PERFECTIONISM AND IDEALISM | 95 |
REFLECTIONS ON TRISHA | 96 |
A CLOSING STORY FOR PART II | 97 |
THE CULTURE OF FOOTY | 109 |
LIVING AND PERFORMING FOR OTHERS | 112 |
A CASE OF OLYMPIC SEDUCTION Johns Tale | 115 |
EARLY SUCCESSES | 117 |
KNOWLEDGE VERSUS THE HUMAN HEART | 118 |
THE DEVASTATION OF SHATTERED DREAMS | 120 |
REPEATING PATTERNS | 121 |
STRUGGLING TO UNDERSTAND | 124 |
INTERPERSONAL INFLUENCES DRIVING OVERTRAINING | 126 |
REFLECTIONS ON JOHN | 130 |
THE PERFECT GIRL Janes Tale | 133 |
I AM AN OVERTRAINER | 134 |
NO ONE CAN STOP ME | 135 |
PARENTAL INFLUENCES | 136 |
HIDING WEAKNESSES AND BATTLING ANXIETIES | 139 |
EARLY SPORT AND PERFORMANCE LESSONS LEARNED | 141 |
INSTITUTIONAL ABUSE | 145 |
THE GOOD COACH CANT FIX HER | 146 |
INTERNAL AND CULTURAL DRIVERS OF OVERTRAINING | 148 |
REFLECTIONS ON JANE | 151 |
THE PERFECT BOY The Authors Tale | 153 |
ALL OUR STORIES | 160 |
ATHLETES STORIES COMPARED WITH ATHLETES EXPERIENCES FROM THE LITERATURE | 162 |
CONCLUSIONS | 165 |
PAST MODELS AND CURRENT CONCEPTIONS | 167 |
MODELS OF OVERTRAINING Then and Now | 169 |
THE OT RISKS AND OUTCOMES MODEL | 170 |
OT RISKS AND OUTCOMES MODEL COMPARED WITH OTHER MODELS | 176 |
CONCLUSIONS | 181 |
AFTERWORD Where to From Here? | 183 |
FUTURE DIRECTIONS | 184 |
PIPE DREAMS | 187 |
Suggested Further Readings | 189 |
191 | |
198 | |
About the Authors | 204 |
Other editions - View all
Overtraining Athletes: Personal Journeys in Sport Sean O. Richardson,Mark B. Andersen,Tony Morris No preview available - 2008 |