Abstract

The recent global outspread of the COVID-19 pandemic has influenced the lives of people across multiple countries including athletes, coaches, and supporting staff. Along with everybody else, coaches found themselves constrained to an at-home self-isolation, which limited their ability to normally engage with their profession and to interact with their athletes. This situation may also have impacted their own psychological well-being. With this study, we explored coaches’ perceptions of stress in relation to their emotion regulation strategies depending upon their gender and competitive level (elite vs. non-elite). A sample of 2272 Italian coaches were surveyed during the period of lockdown. Mean values for perceived stress and emotion regulation strategies were compared to normative data of the two instruments as reported in the original studies. Furthermore, two Multivariate analyses of variance (MANOVAs) were completed to observe the potential differences in the coaches’ emotion regulation strategies and perception of stress. Finally, a blockwise regression analysis was run to assess how coaches’ emotion regulation strategies impacted upon their perception of stress. Both women and men reported higher levels of perceived stress than those reported in the normative data. Similarly, average scores for emotion regulation strategies were significantly different from those reported for normative data, in particular, coaches reported slightly higher use of emotion regulation strategies than participants in the original study. Significant gender-based differences emerged in terms of emotional regulations, with men adopting more suppression than women. No differences by competitive level were found. In terms of perceived stress, male coaches and elite coaches showed to be more in control of the situation (positive stress) than female coaches and non-elite coaches, respectively, while women experienced more negative stress than men. The blockwise regression evidenced how reappraisal resulted to be predictive in helping coaches to reduce their perception of stress, while suppression predicted higher stress perceptions.

Highlights

  • In the last months of 2019 and in the early months of 2020, the surge of the new severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) affected the whole globe

  • A sample of 2272 Italian coaches was surveyed between April and early May 2020, period during which they were confined at home due to COVID-19 related forced lockdown

  • They were asked about their gender, age, and they were asked to report the typology of sport they were coaching at the time of the survey and their competitive level

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Summary

Introduction

In the last months of 2019 and in the early months of 2020, the surge of the new severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) affected the whole globe. The spread of the virus led the World Health Organization to declare the COVID-19 a “Global Pandemic” (WHO, 2020). In late February 2020 the Italian government declared a mandatory home isolation, initially for specific regional areas, which was extended to the entire national territory on the 9th of March (Gazzetta Ufficiale, 2020). This mandatory period of national lockdown (56 days of home isolation) limited any possibility of outdoor and in person social activities, with exceptions for essential workers, or for health-related and other essential reasons (e.g., weekly grocery). We used the expression “COVID-19 lockdown” to refer to this situation, as this led to the development of chronic stressors, with negative effects for mental and physical well-being (Cao et al, 2020; Flesia et al, 2020; Fuzéki et al, 2020)

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