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USA Cheer has partnered with TrueSport, to provide new educational tools to equip coaches, parents and young athletes with the resources to build life skills and core values for success in sports and in life. TrueSport, a movement by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, inspires athletes, coaches, parents, and administrators to change the culture of youth sport through active engagement and thoughtful curriculum based on cornerstone lessons of sportsmanship, character-building, and clean and healthy performance, while also creating leaders across communities through sport.

6 Reasons Performance Anxiety is Higher than Ever in Youth Sport

Kevin Chapman, PhD

Now more than ever, young athletes are feeling pressure: Pressure to perform in sport, to have a certain image on social media, to get good grades, to do extracurricular activities, and to get into a certain school on a scholarship. These pressures often lead to performance anxiety, which can decrease performance.

“The irony is that the more anxiety we’re putting on these kids, the worse they’re going to play,โ€ says TrueSport Expert Kevin Chapman, PhD, clinical psychologist and founder of The Kentucky Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders. “So when weโ€™re intentionally or unintentionally adding pressure, we’re actually making things much worse.”

Remember, as a parent or a coach, this is not necessarily about intentionally creating a pressure-filled environment for an athlete by saying things like, โ€˜You need to win the championships or youโ€™ll never get into college.โ€™ But you may be doing things that cause an athlete to perceive a significant need to do well in order to get a certain scholarship. And thanks to technology, perceived pressure from seeing others succeeding on social media has caused performance anxiety to spike even more.

Here, weโ€™re looking at the most common sources of perceived pressure that cause an athleteโ€™s performance anxiety to increase.

1. Perceived pressure from social media

โ€œThe advent of social media and the rise in usage for teens and preteens has led to a huge amount of pressure on athletes,โ€ says Chapman. โ€œWhen you’re posting on multiple social media platforms, that increases the likelihood of scrutiny. Youโ€™re also seeing more competition than you ever would have seen prior to social media. Because of that, social media has become one of the main impetus for performance anxiety in younger athletes.โ€

2. Perceived pressure from an increase in metrics for comparison

While technology has allowed for a huge amount of improvement in sport thanks to everything from sleep tracking to heart rate data, this influx of information can be a double-edged sword for athletes who can now quantify nearly every piece of their athletic life. And they can also see how they compare to their teammates and competitors. โ€œNot only are athletes seeing other athletes from around the country playing on social media, they can compare detailed metrics on other apps,โ€ says Chapman. โ€œYou can quickly see how fast you are compared to any athlete around the country, not just your teammates.”

3. Perceived pressure to play more

The structure of youth sport itself has changed in recent years as well, and itโ€™s caused a huge amount of performance anxiety for young athletes. Now, with school and club and travel teams, athletes can be competing multiple times per week, training multiple times per day, and dealing with pressure to perform not just from one coach or one team, but from multiple coaches and teams. โ€œAthletes are also now encouraged to spend money on private lessons with experts, working on individual skills,โ€ adds Chapman. โ€œFor athletes who can afford it, this can actually increase performance anxiety because now thereโ€™s an expectation to perform. Meanwhile, athletes who canโ€™t afford extra lessons with a professional feel anxiety that theyโ€™re missing an important step in their development.โ€

4. Perceived pressure to fit a coachโ€™s mold

Coaches may have the best intentions, but many unintentionally set expectations for conformity on their teams. Coaches tend to have an โ€˜ideal athleteโ€™ in mind who has a certain set of qualities and skills, both athletic and interpersonal, and if an athlete doesnโ€™t conform to that set of standards, the coach may subtly exert pressure on them to fit that mold. โ€œCoaches can mistakenly view athletes as a homogenous group, but thatโ€™s a trap,โ€ says Chapman. โ€œMany of these athletes come from different racial and ethnic backgrounds, and they have distinct cultural identities. But in most sports environments, we have this perception that athletes all share one identity.โ€

5. Perceived pressure for the future

Parents can unintentionally or intentionally pressure young athletes in many ways. From the more obvious examples like shouting on the sidelines at practices and games to discussing how helpful it would be if a young athlete could get an athletic scholarship, pressure from parents is a large part of what causes performance anxiety in athletes. This happens most often when a parent is living vicariously through their child, says Chapman. โ€œParents are one of the primary causes of anxiety for youth because athletes donโ€™t just feel that pressure in what you say to them, but in how you act,โ€ he adds. “Anxiety is transmitted from parent to child via observational learning and informational transmission. Even well-intentioned mentions of how much a scholarship would help can communicate distress to a child.โ€

6. Perceived pressure to perform, rather than progress

In every part of an athleteโ€™s life, there is pressure to perform, to win, to achieve a certain outcome. This pressure comes from how we are all raised in society today: We are in a culture where achievements are considered much more important than making progress towards a goal. โ€œWe live in an outcome driven society,โ€ says Chapman. โ€œWe are motivated by high achievement in this country. Because there’s so much pressure to perform in an outcome-based society, a lot of athletes end up believing that they have to do everything it takes to achieve so that they can go to the next level.โ€ While you wonโ€™t be able to change society at large for your athlete, you can help them focus on their process, rather than their outcome.

Takeaway

Perceived pressures come from every angle for young athletes: from coaches, peers, parents, social media, and society at large. These pressures can lead to an increase in performance anxiety, which can ironically lead to a decrease in performance. Understanding the pressures that an athlete feels can help you as a parent or coach ensure that athletes feel supported rather than pressured.

TrueSport/USA Cheer Home

The TrueSport Champion Network is a community of coaches, parents, program directors, and athletes who believe in the power of youth sport to build life skills and core values for success both on and off the field. Join TrueSport Champion Network to help promote the positive values of cheer, dance, and STUNT!

The TrueSport Coaching Education Program empowers coachesโ€”the most significant influencers in young athletesโ€™ livesโ€”with a transformative learning opportunity to obtain the knowledge and resources to cultivate, champion, and uphold the rich promise and highest potential of sport.

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USA Cheer is proud to partner with USADAโ€™sย TrueSportยฎย to bring relevant educational content to the Cheer and STUNT community in order to promote a positive youth sport experience. We are excited to provide access to TrueSportโ€™s experts that take coaching beyond skills and help truly develop the overall athlete by building life skills and core values for success on and off the mat, sideline, field, and court.

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About TrueSport

TrueSportยฎ, a movement powered by the experience and values of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, champions the positive values and life lessons learned through youth sport. TrueSport inspires athletes, coaches, parents, and administrators to change the culture of youth sport through active engagement and thoughtful curriculum based on cornerstone lessons of sportsmanship, character-building, and clean and healthy performance, while also creating leaders across communities through sport.

For more expert-driven articles and materials, visit TrueSportโ€™s comprehensive library of resources.

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