Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the mediating effects of exercise performance strategies on the relationship between player leader behavioral mismatches and perceived competitiveness based on empirical, game performance, physiological and psychological characteristics. Data collected through a survey of 293 secondary schools, universities, unemployed, national representatives and national players registered with the Korean Tennis Association for research purposes were collected from the SPSS 22.0 and AMOS 22.0 statistical packages. Descriptive statistics, navigation factor analysis, verification factor analysis, reliability analysis, correlation analysis, and structural equation model analysis were used. The findings are as follows: First, discrepancies in athlete leader behavior by gender, athletic group and country-specific presence had a positive impact on exercise performance strategies. Second, exercise performance strategies by gender, exercise group, and country representative had a positive effect on perceived exercise performance. Third, the mediating effects of athletic performance strategies were validated in the relationship between athlete leader behavioral mismatch and perceived competitiveness based on gender, athletic group, and national representative. Fourth, task-oriented interaction effects were verified in the structural relationship of tennis player-leader behavioral matching, athletic performance strategy, and perceived competitiveness.

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