The relationship between psychological skills and specialised role in cricket
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Date
Authors
Jooste, Julius
Toriola, Abel L.
Van Wyk, Johannes G.U.
Steyn, B.J.M. (Barend Johannes Marthinus)
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Africa Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, Sport and Dance
Abstract
Psychological skills related to positional play are evident in sport. It is believed that specific
demands associated with playing position or role within a team sport require a unique set of
psychological skills. This study examined the relationship between psychological skills and
specialised role amongst 127 South African cricket players. The subjects were divided into 4
primary role groupings namely batsman (n=30), bowler (n=32), all-rounder (n=61) and wicket
keeper (n=4). The wicket keeper group’s results were excluded from the analysis due to an
underrepresentation of wicketkeepers in the sample. Psychological skills were assessed by means
of the Athletic Coping Skills Inventory-28 (Smith et al., 1995) and Bull’s Mental Skills
Questionnaire (Bull et al., 1996). One-way analysis of variance (one-way ANOVA) indicated no
significant differences between the psychological skills of the various role groupings. However,
there were tendencies for all-rounders to be more psychologically skilled than bowlers and
batsmen. It was concluded that there is no distinctive psychological profile for classifying cricket
players into performing specialised roles in the sport.
Description
Keywords
Psychological skills, Cricket, Specialised role
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Jooste, J., Toriola, A.L., van Wyk, J.G.U. & Steyn, B.J.M. (2014). The relationship between psychological skills and specialised role in cricket. African Journal for Physical, Health Education, Recreation and Dance, 20(1), 106-117.