Abstract

For the past half-century, the Paralympic Games has continued to grow, evident through increased participation, media recognition, and rising research focus in Para sport. While the competitive pool of athletes has increased, athlete development models have stayed relatively the same. Currently, coaches rely mainly on experiential knowledge, informal communication with colleagues, and theory transferred from able-bodied contexts as main resources to support development for themselves and their athletes. The purpose of this paper was to introduce Newell’s constraint-led model and its multidimensional spectrum and practical scope to address the complexities of athlete development. The model consists of three overarching constraint categories (i.e., individual, task, and environment) along with proposed additional sub-categories to capture nuances associated in Para sport in order to provide additional context to coaches regarding athlete development. Utilizing this theoretical framework, we present a holistic approach for coaches and practitioners to consider while addressing athletes’ short- and long-term developmental plans. This approach highlights the interactions among factors from a wide range of categories that indirectly and directly impact one another and ultimately influence athletes’ developmental processes. It is important to consider the dynamic interaction of constraints over various timescales during development and identify underlying issues to improve athlete experience and maximize developmental opportunities. Coaches and practitioners can use the proposed framework as a guide to key factors to consider for their cohort of athletes. This approach provides a context-specific approach that considers unique factors associated with athletes and their environment.

Highlights

  • The Paralympic Games and the Para sport community have seen tremendous growth with 2.15 million spectators watching 4,328 athletes from 159 countries compete in 22 sports in the most recent Summer Paralympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (Paralympics, 2019)

  • The purpose of this paper is not to suggest another model, similar to what is currently being applied across the globe [e.g., Long-Term Athlete Development model (LTAD); Balyi and Hamilton, 2004 or Foundation, Talent, Expertise, Mastery model (FTEM); Gulbin et al, 2013], nor is it to propose specific guidelines to change policy [e.g., SPLISS (Patatas et al, 2020)]

  • Newell’s model and the suggested extended categories noted above reflect numerous factors that influence the development of Para athletes, highlighting the need to utilize frameworks that identify and acknowledge the complexities associated with athlete development

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Summary

Introduction

The Paralympic Games and the Para sport community have seen tremendous growth with 2.15 million spectators watching 4,328 athletes from 159 countries compete in 22 sports in the most recent Summer Paralympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (Paralympics, 2019). Media recognition along with research in this area, has increased in pace (Houlihan and Chapman, 2017) Given this growing popularity, contextualizing the existing research on athlete development may provide a broader understanding of the factors that influence participation, development, and expertise in Para sport. A notable issue with current models is the aim and need to generalize and condense all athletes into one developmental pathway. Such models are considered to be necessary to understanding development; they provide direction and identify specific roles for individuals within the complex sporting structure while providing a framework that organizations can utilize to evaluate and allocate resources and funding. The larger issues underlying all models are: classification of athletes into categories, the generalization of the pathway, and time-related (biologically referenced) assumptions to development (Lloyd and Oliver, 2012; MacNamara et al, 2014)

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