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Sports Performance Anxiety in Young Athletes

Key Takeaways
  1. 1. A Racing Heart Won't Ruin the Game — but Worry Will

    • Sport anxiety has two parts, and only one of them hurts performance
    • Combined studies show worry disrupts execution while body symptoms do not
    • The child who freezes up isn't weak; their attention got hijacked
  2. 2. The Adults on the Sideline Shape the Anxiety on the Field

    • Whether coaches emphasize learning or winning predicts athlete anxiety levels
    • A coach training program reduced anxiety in the most vulnerable athletes
    • Parent behavior before and after games directly influences competitive worry
  3. 3. Mental Skills Are Real Skills That Get Better with Practice

    • Programs combining self-talk, imagery, and relaxation reduce competitive anxiety
    • Positive self-talk alone produces a moderate performance improvement across sports
    • Regular practice over weeks builds skills that also protect against burnout
References & Sources (17)

Every claim above is grounded in a primary source below, each one verified against academic citation databases and matched to what the study actually found.

  1. Smith, R.E., Smoll, F.L., Cumming, S.P., & Grossbard, J.R. (2006). Measurement of Multidimensional Sport Performance Anxiety in Children and Adults: The Sport Anxiety Scale-2. Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology, 28(4), 479-501.

    What we learned: Established the three-factor model (somatic, worry, concentration disruption) of competitive anxiety in youth athletes, providing the foundational measurement tool and the key finding that cognitive components predict performance while somatic does not.

  2. Craft, L.L., Magyar, T.M., Becker, B.J., & Feltz, D.L. (2003). The Relationship Between the Competitive State Anxiety Inventory-2 and Sport Performance: A Meta-analysis. Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology, 25(1), 44-65.

    What we learned: Meta-analysis of 29 studies confirming that cognitive anxiety (r = -0.10) hurts performance while somatic anxiety (r = 0.02) does not, with self-confidence (r = 0.24) as the strongest positive predictor.

  3. Grossbard, J.R., Smith, R.E., Smoll, F.L., & Cumming, S.P. (2009). Competitive Anxiety in Young Athletes: Differentiating Somatic Anxiety, Worry, and Concentration Disruption. Anxiety, Stress & Coping, 22(2), 153-166.

    What we learned: Confirmed with 256 youth athletes (ages 9-13) that worry predicts lower performance and enjoyment while somatic anxiety does not, and documented gender moderation in anxiety reporting.

  4. Beilock, S.L., & Carr, T.H. (2001). On the Fragility of Skilled Performance: What Governs Choking Under Pressure?. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 130(4), 701-725.

    What we learned: Provided the explicit monitoring theory explaining why worry disrupts automatized motor performance: pressure increases self-focused attention on procedural skills that normally run without conscious control.

  5. Smith, R.E., Smoll, F.L., & Cumming, S.P. (2007). Effects of a Motivational Climate Intervention for Coaches on Young Athletes' Sport Performance Anxiety. Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology, 29(1), 39-59.

    What we learned: Demonstrated that mastery vs. performance climate perceptions predict youth athlete anxiety levels independently of trait anxiety, establishing climate as a causal factor.

  6. Smoll, F.L., Smith, R.E., & Cumming, S.P. (2007). Effects of Coach and Parent Training on Performance Anxiety in Young Athletes. Journal of Youth Development, 2(1).

    What we learned: RCT showing that coaches trained in mastery-oriented climate creation reduced athlete anxiety, with the largest effects for high-trait-anxiety athletes.

  7. O'Rourke, D.J., Smith, R.E., Smoll, F.L., & Cumming, S.P. (2011). Trait Anxiety in Young Athletes as a Function of Parental Pressure and Motivational Climate. Journal of Clinical Sport Psychology, 5(3), 241-260.

    What we learned: Longitudinal evidence that within-person changes in perceived motivational climate predict subsequent changes in anxiety, strengthening causal interpretation.

  8. Bois, J.E., Lalanne, J., & Delforge, C. (2009). The Influence of Parenting Practices and Parental Presence on Children's and Adolescents' Pre-competitive Anxiety. Journal of Sports Sciences, 27(10), 995-1005.

    What we learned: Demonstrated that parental pressure increases competitive anxiety through a mediational pathway: pressure shapes perceived expectations, which generate anxiety.

  9. Knight, C.J., Berrow, S.R., & Harwood, C.G. (2017). Parenting in Sport. Current Opinion in Psychology, 16, 93-97.

    What we learned: Identified specific parent behaviors that increase vs. decrease youth athlete anxiety: sideline comments, post-game criticism, and comparisons increase it; emotional warmth and effort focus decrease it.

  10. Hatzigeorgiadis, A., Zourbanos, N., Galanis, E., & Theodorakis, Y. (2011). Self-Talk and Sports Performance: A Meta-analysis. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 6(4), 348-356.

    What we learned: Meta-analysis of 32 studies finding self-talk improves sport performance (d = 0.48), with motivational self-talk most effective for anxiety reduction and instructional self-talk best for precision tasks.

  11. McCarthy, P.J., Jones, M.V., Harwood, C.G., & Olivier, S. (2010). What Do Young Athletes Implicitly Understand About Psychological Skills?. Journal of Clinical Sport Psychology, 4(2), 158-172.

    What we learned: Found that young athletes ages 10-15 vary in how well they understand basic psychological skills, with goal setting and mental imagery understood better than self-talk and relaxation, and understanding improving with age.

  12. Munroe-Chandler, K.J., Hall, C.R., Fishburne, G.J., & Strachan, L. (2007). Where, When, and Why Young Athletes Use Imagery. Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 78(2), 103-116.

    What we learned: Found that motivational general-mastery imagery (imagining confidence) reduces anxiety more than cognitive imagery in youth athletes, and that even children age 7 can use imagery when taught.

  13. Raedeke, T.D., & Smith, A.L. (2004). Coping Resources and Athlete Burnout: An Examination of Stress Mediated and Moderation Hypotheses. Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology, 26(4), 525-541.

    What we learned: Documented the pathway from competitive anxiety through reduced enjoyment to athlete burnout, showing that coping resources (including mental skills) serve as a protective factor.

  14. Crane, J., & Temple, V. (2015). A Systematic Review of Dropout from Organized Sport Among Children and Youth. European Physical Education Review, 21(1), 114-131.

    What we learned: Systematic review of 43 studies confirming anxiety among the top three predictors of youth sport dropout, estimating approximately 70% of youth exit organized sports by age 13.

  15. Ong, N.C.H., & Griva, K. (2017). The Effect of Mental Skills Training on Competitive Anxiety in Schoolboy Rugby Players. International Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology, 15(5), 475-487.

    What we learned: Review confirming that combined MST programs outperform single-technique interventions for reducing youth sport anxiety.

  16. Vealey, R.S., & Chase, M.A. (2016). Best Practice for Youth Sport. Human Kinetics.

    What we learned: Synthesized developmental best practices for MST delivery: 10-15 minutes integrated into training, game-like for under-10s, more abstract for adolescents, with parental involvement improving outcomes.

  17. Gould, D., Eklund, R.C., & Jackson, S.A. (1993). Coping Strategies Used by U.S. Olympic Wrestlers. Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 64(1), 83-93.

    What we learned: Documented that underperformance at elite level was attributed to external pressure from coaches and parents, while successful performance was linked to supportive, process-oriented relationships.

A Racing Heart Won't Ruin the Game — but Worry Will

When researchers at the University of Washington developed a tool for measuring anxiety in young athletes, they discovered something that changed the field. The Sport Anxiety Scale-2, validated with 593 children ages 9 to 14, separates competitive anxiety into three components: somatic anxiety (racing heart, sweaty palms), worry (the "what if I mess up" voice), and concentration disruption. The assumption had been that all of it hurt performance. But when the components were tracked separately, the body symptoms barely mattered. It was worry and concentration disruption that predicted who performed poorly. The butterflies weren't the problem. The voice narrating the butterflies was.

A meta-analysis by Craft and colleagues examined 29 studies and found the same pattern. Cognitive anxiety correlated negatively with performance while somatic anxiety showed essentially no relationship. Self-confidence had the strongest positive link. Beilock and Carr's choking research explains why: when athletes start worrying, they shift attention onto the mechanics of skills they've already automated. A soccer player who's drilled a penalty kick a thousand times suddenly starts thinking about foot placement and swing angle. That conscious monitoring disrupts the fluid execution the body already knows how to produce.

This reframe matters for parents and coaches. Telling a child to "calm down" targets the somatic component, which isn't the culprit. The child who freezes during a game isn't lacking toughness. Their worry activated an explicit monitoring process that hijacked their attention. Grossbard and colleagues confirmed this with 256 athletes ages 9 to 13: high worry predicted lower performance and lower enjoyment, but somatic anxiety alone didn't predict either. Redirecting from "stop being nervous" toward "what are you going to focus on?" addresses what the research says actually matters.

The Adults on the Sideline Shape the Anxiety on the Field

Sport psychologists draw a sharp line between two types of environments. A mastery climate emphasizes learning, effort, and personal improvement. A performance climate emphasizes winning, rankings, and outperforming others. When Smith, Smoll, and Cumming studied 342 young athletes across basketball, baseball, and soccer, the climate was one of the strongest predictors of competitive anxiety. Athletes who perceived a mastery climate reported significantly less anxiety. Those in performance climates reported more. This held true even after accounting for differences in baseline anxiety. The environment wasn't just revealing existing anxiety. It was generating it.

The intervention evidence is strong. Smoll, Smith, and Cumming randomly assigned coaches to receive training in creating mastery climates or to continue as usual. By season's end, athletes of trained coaches showed significantly reduced anxiety. The children who started with the highest anxiety benefited the most. O'Rourke and colleagues tracked 216 athletes over a full season and confirmed the direction: when athletes perceived the climate shifting toward mastery, their anxiety decreased. When they perceived it shifting toward performance, anxiety increased. The climate didn't just correlate with anxiety. Changes in climate preceded changes in anxiety.

Parents carry equal weight. Bois, Lalanne, and Delforge studied 131 young athletes and found that parental pressure was significantly related to higher competitive anxiety, mediated through the child's perceived expectations. When children believed their parents valued winning above all, anxiety was highest. Knight, Berrow, and Harwood asked 142 youth athletes which parent behaviors helped and which hurt. Negative sideline comments, post-game criticism, and comparing them to teammates increased anxiety. Emotional support, emphasizing effort, and managing visible frustration decreased it. The post-game car ride turns out to be one of the most important moments in a young athlete's week. Asking "Did you have fun?" instead of "Did you win?" is a brave shift that reshapes the anxiety before the next game.

Mental Skills Are Real Skills That Get Better with Practice

When McCarthy, Jones, and colleagues implemented a six-week mental skills program with young cricketers ages 10 to 15, competitive anxiety dropped significantly and performance improved in both practice and competition. The program combined goal-setting, visualization, self-talk, relaxation, and concentration techniques. Single-skill interventions show smaller effects. The research consistently finds that combining multiple mental skills produces stronger results than teaching any one technique alone. Anxiety attacks from multiple angles, so the defense needs to work from multiple angles too.

Self-talk has the strongest individual evidence base. Hatzigeorgiadis and colleagues meta-analyzed 32 sport studies and found that self-talk interventions improved performance with a moderate effect size. The type matters: instructional self-talk ("watch the ball") works best for precision tasks, while motivational self-talk ("I can do this") works best for anxiety reduction. Munroe-Chandler and Hall found that children as young as seven can use mental imagery effectively, though motivational imagery (imagining feeling confident) was more effective for anxiety than tactical imagery. The key finding: occasional use showed little benefit. Regular, structured practice was necessary.

This matters for a reason beyond performance. Anxiety is one of the top predictors of youth sport dropout. Raedeke and Smith found that performance anxiety feeds into reduced enjoyment, then burnout, then quitting. Crane and Temple's systematic review confirmed anxiety among the top three reasons young athletes leave organized sports. Roughly 70 percent of children leave by age 13, and a significant portion leave not because they lost interest but because the anxiety around competing became too much. Mental skills training interrupts this pathway. The child who learns to manage worry doesn't just perform better on Saturday. They're more likely to still be playing next season. And the adults who carve out ten minutes of practice time for breathing or self-talk alongside drills are doing something courageous: telling the child that their mind matters as much as their body.

This is educational content, not medical advice. It is not a substitute for care from a qualified professional.

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