Abstract

The modern-day landscape of Olympic and Professional sport is arguably more competitive than ever. One consequence of this is the increased focus on identifying and developing early athletic talent. In this paper, we highlight key challenges associated with talent (athlete) identification and development and propose possible solutions that could be considered by research and practice. The first challenge focuses on clarifying the purposes of talent identification initiatives such as defining what talent is and how its meaning might evolve over time. Challenge two centers on ways to best identify, select and develop talent, including issues with different approaches to identification, the need to understand the impact of development and the need to have appropriate resourcing in the system to support continued development of knowledge. Finally, we discuss two challenges in relation to the ‘healthiness’ of talent identification and development. The first examines whether a talent identification and development system is ‘healthy’ for athletes while the second focuses on how sport stakeholders could discourage the apparent trend toward early specialization in youth sport settings. Whilst this paper discusses the research in relation to these challenges, we propose multiple possible solutions that researchers and practitioners could consider for optimizing their approach to talent identification and development. In summary, talent is a complex and largely misunderstood phenomenon lacking robust research evidence, and given concerns that it is potentially unhealthy, talent identification and selection at younger ages is not recommended.

Highlights

  • The modern-day landscape of Olympic and Professional sport is arguably more competitive than ever

  • We highlight three key challenges associated with talent identification and development and propose multiple [possible] solutions that researchers and practitioners could consider for optimizing Talent Identification and Development System (TIDS) according to each challenge

  • Talent Identification and Development System have been questioned for their appropriateness and healthiness in the academic literature (Baxter-Jones and Helms, 1996; Lang, 2010; Rongen et al, 2014, 2018) and popular media

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

The modern-day landscape of Olympic and Professional sport is arguably more competitive than ever. The past few decades have seen a considerable increase in academic reviews summarizing issues related to the identification, selection and development of sporting talent (e.g., Vaeyens et al, 2008; Bailey and Collins, 2013; Baker et al, 2018a,b) This is substantiated by further reviews (e.g., Rees et al, 2016; Johnston et al, 2017; Bergkamp et al, 2019) suggesting the quality of evidence being generated for talent is limited. We feel these challenges have implications for the efficient management of the resources within TIDS and, more importantly, for optimizing opportunities, skill acquisition and health in developing young athletes. We have focused upon the key challenges and solutions based on our experiences of researching and working within and outside TIDS collectively over a period of 15–20 years, respectively

Part A: Clarifying Definitions – What Is Talent?
Part B: Understanding Sport and Predicting the Future
Part A: Identifying Talent
Part C: Efficient Use of Resources in the System
Part A: Are TIDS Appropriate and Healthy?
Part B: How Do We Discourage Early Specialization?
CONCLUSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call