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Dying or getting well

Doing Sport Psychology: Mark B. Andersen (ed.). Human Kinetics 2000. 294 pages paperback, large format, £19.50. ISBN 9-780736-000864

During the last 15 years sport psychology has been the growth area in sport and exercise science. No surprise, then, that books have proliferated, both theoretical and applied, in the usual hierarchy: books designed to help competitors become better competitors; books aimed at helping coaches to help the competitors; books for the people training the coaches; and books for those training the people who will train the coaches. Aimed at graduate students, this book falls into the last category.

It's a big book, nearly A4 in size, 300 pages in double columns, so there's a lot here. This is because all but one of the papers, from 24 hands, are based on extensive transcripts of tape-recorded sessions between sport psychologists and athletes, players and coaches. The aim is to show how the 'sport psychology service' is delivered to the client. And in a book of this size you can cover most of the field: goal-setting, self-concept, coping with injury and personal difficulties (even attempted suicide), handling the really big occasion (here the Winter Olympics).

Graduate students will presumably mine it for their own theses and dissertations. But it's a mine with more coal than diamonds – not that coal isn't a valuable commodity, of course, and there are valuable insights, such as the importance of instilling doubt in the athlete's doubts. But some of the dialogue is pretty pointless – an interviewee takes half a dozen lines excusing himself to go to the toilet, for instance, and other passages are really just chat. Surely a bit more editing would have been permissible? The psychologists themselves often seem over-earnest, a bit humourless, somehow always putting themselves at the centre. In one conversation, in which a graduate student and his tutor stroke each other's egos and deeply enhance their own self-esteem, a revealing comment emerges: 'It makes you think this whole bloody profession is deeply and hopelessly narcissistic.' What can you say?

There's no doubt that there's a lot of good stuff here, and the right audience in college and university departments will get a lot from it.

Of course, it's impossible to know what the sportspeople would do if the psychologists weren't there. Much the same as people in the Old West did without doctors, one suspects: die or get well.

Ramin Minovi

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