1st Edition

The Athlete and Their Mechanisms of Defense A Psychoanalytic Approach to Sport Psychology

By Tom Ferraro Copyright 2025
    210 Pages
    by Routledge

    210 Pages
    by Routledge

    This important book explores the way athletes use defense mechanisms and coping skills to manage both the internal and external stress faced in competitive sport. Covering a range of case studies across various sports, the text showcases a taxonomy of immature, neurotic and mature defences available to the athlete and describes the benefits and drawbacks of each.

    A clear introductory section defines what defense mechanisms are and how they impact performance such as shame, anxiety, despair, memories of previous losses or fantasies about winning. Applying a psychoanalytic approach in line with the ideas of Sigmund Freud, Anna Freud, Fenichel, Leo Rangel, George Valliant and many others, the author uses each case study to connect the defense mechanism under investigation with the world of the athlete. Focused on delivering research-based evidence, the book helps readers deepen their understanding of the different types of defense mechanisms used by athletes across the globe, as the author explains what causes them, and recommends techniques for developing effective coping skills. Each chapter of the book also includes a reflective section that challenges the reader to think about how they can help athletes to grow and develop healthy defense mechanisms in any stage of their career.

    This invaluable text is geared towards the practitioners, researchers, psychoanalysts and students in sport psychology who wish to look more deeply into why athletes struggle. It is also an ideal resource for athletes interested in understanding ways to cope with the unrelenting, exciting and at times overwhelming pressure of competitive sports.

    Introduction

    1. Defense Mechanisms Used by Athletes
    2. Why Defenses Mechanisms Must be Addressed Prior to Teaching Coping Skills
    3. Emotional Breakdowns in Athletes: Why They Happen and What to do About Them

    Part 1. The Immature Defenses

    4. Denial Mechanisms in an Aging Athlete
    5. Acting Out, Impulsivity and Drug Use in Athletes
    6. Grandiosity, Self-Idealization and Narcissism in the Athlete
    7. Depersonalization in a Golfer
    8. Autistic Fantasies in a Long-Distance Swimmer
    9. Perfectionism or the Splitting Defense in Athletes
    10. Superstitious Behavior Used by the Regressed Athlete
    11. Regression in a Professional Soccer Team
    12. Somatization in Athletes
    13. Scapegoating and Splitting in Professional Teams
    14. Identification with the Aggressor as a Tool to Suppress Anxiety

    Part 2. The Neurotic Defenses

    15. Displacement of Anger into a Spouse
    16. Repression and Reaction Formation in Asian Athletes
    17. Overcompensation: Turning Inferiority into Superiority in a LPGA Golfer
    18. Doubting in Athletes and the Intellectualization Defense
    19. The Undoing Defense: Why Athletes Choke
    20. Isolation of Affect Defense in Athletes
    21. Dissociation in Sports
    22. Reaction Formation: The Problem of Being Mr. Nice Guy
    23. The Yips in Golf as an Example of Repression

    Part 3. The Mature Defenses

    24. Counterphobia or Why Athletes Compete
    25. The Value of Self-Observation for Athletes
    26. Altruistic Surrender in Sports or Why Athletes Give Away Leads
    27. The Anticipation Defense as the Definitive Pre-Game Routine
    28. Asceticism and the Renunciation of Pleasure in a Long-Distance Cyclist
    29. How Athletes Use Humor to Cope with Stress
    30. Suppression Used to Manage Competitive Anxiety
    31. Sublimation, Aggression and Winning
    32. Sublimation of the Sexual Impulse in Sports

    Part 4. Odds and Ends

    33. The Weakening of Defense Mechanisms with Age
    34. Meditation and Prayer as a Way to Find the Zone
    35. Using a ‘Higher Power’ as a Coping Mechanism in Sports
    36. Mental Health Versus Mental Illness in Athletes
    37. The Problem of Prescription Drug Use in Athletes
    38. Depression Used as a Defense by Athletes Who Fear Failure
    39. Cultural Differences in the Use of Defenses
    40. Concluding Remarks on Ways To Identify Defenses in Athletes

    Biography

    Dr. Tom Ferraro is a psychoanalyst in private practice who works with both amateur and professional athletes and teams. Working in the New York metropolitan area, he is also an author, award-winning syndicated columnist and has been featured in the New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and the London Times.