Abstract

In adaptive sports (also known as Para sports, disability sports, or Paralympic sports), athletes are assigned to classes that indicate their functional potential, regardless of talent, training, or experience. The aim of the present study among wheelchair basketball athletes (n = 141) was to explore the role of functional classification as a potential stressor. Specifically, we looked into the anecdotal relationship between classification and athletes’ concern about “performing in accordance with one’s class.” Based on a serial mediation research model, we examined the links between functional classification and three outcome variables (i.e., cognitive worry, somatic arousal, and game performance) through the mediator variables of perceived competitive demands and sport-specific self-efficacy. Unexpectedly, we did not find any evidence of a classification effect on either the mediator variables or competitive anxiety. However, we did find positive correlations between functional classification and athletes’ contribution to their team’s score, which align with research supporting the proportionality and the validity of the functional classification system. Moreover, regardless of classification, mediation analyses revealed an indirect link between perceived competitive demands and cognitive worry through sport-specific self-efficacy. These findings suggest that, regardless of classification, athletes’ self-efficacy may be increased by managing their appraisals of competitive demands and that their cognitive worries may be reduced by self-efficacy interventions.

Highlights

  • Classification is a well-known concept in the world of sports in general, and sports played by persons with a disability in particular

  • If we look at the volume of action, for example, we see that athletes in the 1.0 class have no controlled trunk movement in any direction whatsoever, whereas athletes in the 2.0 class do have partially controlled trunk movement, but only in the forward and vertical direction

  • The participants of the study consisted of wheelchair basketball athletes from teams that competed in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW), which is one of the five regions of the German wheelchair basketball competition

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Summary

Introduction

Classification is a well-known concept in the world of sports in general, and sports played by persons with a disability in particular. In order to achieve this aim, classification systems are designed to group athletes according to a unit of classification so as to minimize the impact of that unit on the outcome of competition. This approach is taken, for example, to separate male from female athletes, or to create weight classes or age groups. The handicap system used in amateur golf is an example of this form of classification: an amateur golfer’s playing handicap is based on their previous performances, which means that they can influence their classification through effective training and performing well on the course (Tweedy and Vanlandewijck, 2011)

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