EDITORIAL article
Front. Psychol.
Sec. Sport Psychology
This article is part of the Research TopicExploring Diverse Personal and Social Challenges Impact on Athletes' Careers and Competition Preparation: Psychological Side EffectsView all 7 articles
Editorial: Exploring Diverse Personal and Social Challenges' Impact on Athletes' Careers and Competition Preparation: Psychological Side Effects
Provisionally accepted- 1Autonomous University of Madrid, Madrid, Spain
- 2Universidad de Murcia, Murcia, Spain
- 3Universite du Quebec a Montreal, Montreal, Canada
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Athletes' careers are characterized by continuous transitions and challenges that extend far beyond the boundaries of training and competition. The modern athlete is exposed not only to performance-related stress but also to a wide spectrum of social, cultural, and personal circumstances that shape psychological functioning and influence the capacity to perform under pressure. Situations such as migration, war, economic instability, or major personal life events introduce significant changes in daily routines, identity construction, and emotional regulation. Understanding how these challenges affect athletes' cognition, emotion, and behaviour has become a fundamental task in contemporary sport psychology.This Research Topic, "Exploring Diverse Personal and Social Challenges' Impact on Athletes' Careers and Competition Preparation: Psychological Side Effects," was conceived as an effort to integrate theoretical, empirical, and applied research addressing the psychological consequences of social and personal transitions in athletes. The aim was to provide a platform for international researchers to discuss how life circumstances intersect with performance preparation, how athletes manage uncertainty and stress, and how psychological interventions can mitigate negative outcomes. By focusing on cognitive, emotional, psycho-physiological, and behavioural dimensions, this collection offers a comprehensive exploration of the human side of high-level sport.The contributions gathered in this issue reflect a variety of approaches-from experimental studies and psychometric validation to systematic review and meta-analysis-and encompass athletes of different levels, from student-athletes to elite professionals.Together, they contribute to a growing body of evidence demonstrating that athletic performance cannot be understood in isolation from the broader social context and the internal psychological mechanisms that regulate adaptation to change. The studies included provide new perspectives on topics such as stress, resilience, mindfulness, attributional style, competitive orientation, self-control, and decision-making under pressure. The study by da Cruz et al. examined the psychological effects of social isolation on elite soccer players during the COVID-19 lockdown, with a specific focus on anxiety and sleep quality. Using a longitudinal design that compared data from pre-pandemic training to lockdown conditions, the researchers analyzed responses from seventy-six professional athletes from Brazilian clubs. Measures of anxiety, sleep quality, and daytime sleepiness revealed significant increases in anxiety during confinement, while sleep patterns and daytime sleepiness remained largely unaffected. These findings suggest that the abrupt disruption of daily training routines and social interactions amplified emotional distress, even among athletes accustomed to coping with stress.The authors emphasized that although sleep quality was relatively preserved, the emotional toll of isolation should not be underestimated. Anxiety was likely influenced by uncertainty about competition schedules, physical deconditioning, and the loss of team cohesion. The study adds valuable longitudinal evidence to the literature on psychological adaptation during crisis periods, highlighting the role of structured routines and psychological monitoring as protective factors. Importantly, it reinforces the need to include mental health assessment within standard performance-tracking systems in elite sport.Beyond the immediate implications for pandemic-related confinement, this research also underscores broader themes relevant to the Research Topic: How social isolation, whether due to injury, migration, or other disruptions, can affect athletes' psychological The results showed significant reductions in negative emotional variables and substantial improvements in confidence and perceived competence after the intervention.The findings provide compelling empirical support for the use of attributional retraining programs to prevent performance deterioration under pressure. Athletes who learned to attribute failure to controllable and unstable causes demonstrated improved coping and reduced avoidance behaviours. This aligns with the theoretical framework of achievement motivation, which posits that the interpretation of success and failure determines persistence and motivation (e.g. Nicholls, 1992;Roberts & Papaioannou, 2014;Stefanek & Peters, 2011). By fostering adaptive attributional patterns, athletes were able to reinterpret setbacks as opportunities for growth rather than threats to self-worth. This contribution also highlights the practical relevance of psychological education in The authors' work contributes significantly to the cross-cultural understanding of competition as both a cooperative and adversarial process. The 'partnership' orientation frames competition as mutual development and shared pursuit of excellence, while the 'war' orientation reflects a more zero-sum, antagonistic mindset. By quantifying these orientations, the scale enables more precise analyses of how cultural norms and moral frameworks influence competitive behaviour and interpersonal dynamics in sport.Beyond psychometrics, the study raises profound conceptual questions about how athletes internalize the meaning of competition. Recognizing the coexistence of cooperative and conflictual motives provides a richer theoretical basis for understanding motivation, ethics, and sportsmanship. Future research could explore how these orientations evolve across career stages and how they relate to outcomes such as resilience, empathy, and long-term engagement in sport.Yan et al. conducted a systematic meta-analysis to quantify the effects of ego depletion on sports performance. Drawing from eleven articles and twelve experimental studies, the authors calculated an overall moderate negative effect size, indicating that ego depletion significantly reduces athletic performance. Subgroup analyses revealed that the Stroop task generated stronger depletion effects than transcription tasks, and that precision-based skills were more affected than endurance-based activities.The review synthesizes a decade of research on self-control and performance, offering quantitative evidence that supports the self-control strength model. The findings emphasize that self-regulatory resources are limited and that their depletion can compromise motor execution, focus, and decision-making in competitive contexts. The differentiation across task types provides new insights into the situational vulnerability of athletes to cognitive fatigue and highlights the importance of recovery protocols (Skala & Zemkova, 2022).The implications of this meta-analysis extend to applied sport psychology and coaching.Training programs should not only target physical conditioning, but also the management of self-control resources. Interventions such as mental recovery sessions, attentional training, and deliberate rest may buffer the effects of ego depletion, fostering sustainable high performance. The review thus bridges experimental psychology and applied practice, positioning ego depletion as a central variable in performance science.The study by Shangguan and Shangguan investigated the combined effects of framing, competitive state, and time pressure on risk-taking behaviour in tennis players across different skill levels. Using an experimental design involving 120 players categorized as novice, skilled, and expert, the authors examined how decision-making was shaped by contextual framing (gain vs. loss), competitive situation (leading vs. trailing), and temporal constraints.The results revealed distinct patterns of decision-making across expertise levels. Novices were most influenced by framing effects, showing greater susceptibility to emotional and contextual cues. Skilled players demonstrated transitional behaviour-sensitive to framing under low pressure but conservative under time constraints-while experts exhibited stable decision strategies, modulated primarily by the competitive state rather than by framing or time pressure. Dual theories of thinking (e.g. Wason & Evans, 1975;Evans, 2008;Evans & Stanovich, 2013;Kahneman, 2011) offer a framework to interpret Shangguan and Shangguan' results, illustrating the need for further research for understanding how type 1 (automatic, based often on intuition) and type 2 ways of processing interact in sports performance.These findings deepen understanding of cognitive adaptability in sport. The progression from context-dependent to context-independent decision-making reflects the development of expertise as athletes learn to prioritize task-relevant cues over emotional bias. This study provides valuable evidence to the literature on cognitive control, risk assessment, and performance consistency, with direct implications for training decision-making skills in sport environments. Collectively, the articles in this Research Topic illuminate the complex interplay between psychological, cognitive, and social dimensions of sport. From the effects of social isolation and emotional regulation to decision-making and self-control, these studies illustrate how personal and environmental challenges shape athletes' preparation and performance. They reaffirm the necessity of adopting an integrative approach that accounts for emotional, motivational, and cultural variables in understanding sport behaviour.Across methodologies, the convergence of findings points toward a shared conclusion: psychological resilience and adaptability are not static traits, but dynamic processes shaped by experience, context, and intervention. Interventions such as attributional retraining, mindfulness practice, and structured recovery strategies offer promising pathways to strengthen these processes. Moreover, the inclusion of psychometric and meta-analytic studies underscores the field's movement toward methodological rigor and cross-cultural generalization.
Keywords: Athletes' careers development, Athletes social challenges' impact, Athletes' performance under pressure, Athletes' career transitions, Athletes' challenges psychological side effects
Received: 12 Nov 2025; Accepted: 24 Nov 2025.
Copyright: © 2025 De La Vega, Limon, Olmedilla and Garzon. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
* Correspondence:
Ricardo De La Vega
Margarita Limon
Aurelio Olmedilla
Mauricio Garzon
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