dc.description.abstract | Current mental toughness literature built on Jones et al. (2002) study by constructing
definitions (Thelwell et al., 2005; Gucciardi et al., 2008) and identifying attributes
essential to a mentally tough performer (Thelwell et al., 2005; Jones et al., 2007;
Gucciardi et al., 2008; Coulter et al., 2010). However, research into which attributes are
the most effective in injury rehabilitation has not been completed. The purpose of this
study was to: a) Identify which mental toughness characteristics are most effective in
aiding male cricketer’s rehabilitation and b) determine how these characteristics aided
their recovery. Thirty-seven cricketer’s (33 club/4university: 23.54±8.26) completed a
Ranking scale, which incorporated all mental toughness characteristics which were
related to recovery allowing the most effective characteristics to emerge. With these
characteristics plus relevant literature an interview guide was developed helping to
establish how these specific characteristics had aided five cricketers (1 university/4 highlevel
club: 20.6±0.55). Results highlighted that many of the characteristics essential to
injury rehabilitation came from similar 'core' categories crucial to performance
excellence; however some key differences in the order of importance were evident (for
example, Jones et al., 2002 concluded 'self-belief' as the most important characteristic
leading performance excellence while this study concluded 'maintaining a positive
attitude' as most important when rehabilitating from injury). There were key findings in
how the most effective characteristics aided all three stages (emotional response to
injury, adherence to rehabilitation, returning to sport) of recovery for cricketers which
should lead to tailored environments and psychological skills training being created to
develop or enhance the most effective characteristics, so athlete’s acquire them before
injury occurs. This provides the athlete with the skills to best overcome an injury before
suffering one. Future research directions were identified in elite/super-elite participants,
in other sports and in female athletes as it is identified in the literature that mental
toughness characteristics can differ among these populations. | en_US |