Keerthana Swaminathan

Importance of Coaches in Athlete Development

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Coaches greatly influence the growth and career of an athlete. They assist players in forming a tough mindset early on, enabling them to reach their full mental and physical potential. It can be challenging to groom challenging athletes and show them support. Students who participate in athletics rely heavily on their coaches for development and success in both individual and team sports.

Along with the expertise and technical skills, a good coach should also have strong interpersonal skills. They must be able to properly communicate with and explain what they are attempting to teach their athletes while also being patient and understanding. 

A coach who displays great qualities and is also aware of how to make his/her students feel psychologically safe, can act as great allies for sports psychologists.


Let’s see some qualities of a good coach:

Qualities of a Good Coach

  • Right knowledge of the sport
  • Ability to share their knowledge
  • Excellent motivational skills
  • Understanding the athlete
  • Communication skills
  • Listening skills
  • Discipline
  • Commitment and passion

Qualities that a coach needs to avoid

Never should a coach show disdain or pass judgment. Everyone experiences something in their life. Additionally, it might be challenging to handle pressure in the realm of athletics. Athletes have their coaches as a source of support. To own the ground, they instruct and mentor them.

It will be difficult for the athlete to handle the pressure if the coach continually criticizes and is disrespectful. An athlete needs a knowledgeable coach who can work out solutions.

Importance of a coach

The importance of not simply feeling pressure in sports must be emphasized to athletes by their coaches all the time. The tasks are made simpler by the coaches to aid in stress relief. This can improve an athlete’s performance by allowing them to unwind and recall how much pleasure playing their sport is.

Coaches are accountable for the welfare of their players and the upkeep of facilities used for sports. Athletes must master exact technical motions when coaches teach them sports skills. Coaches must be excellent communicators with their athletes and build up a good rapport with them.

Numerous research in sports psychology has found that the leadership traits exhibited by coaches have an impact on athletes’ satisfaction, performance, self-esteem, confidence, and anxiety (Smith, Zane, Smoll, & Coppel, 1983; Riemer & Toon, 2001). (Kenow & Williams, 1992). The interaction between the perceived overwhelming motivational milieu the coach creates and the interpersonal interactions between coaches and athletes have, however, gotten little consideration. This connection is crucial because it can provide information about the interpersonal circumstances that support adaptive or impaired motivated action. Understanding how the dominant motivational climate on a team manifests at the level of coach-athlete interactions is also impacted by the correlation between interpersonal dynamics and motivational climate.

It’s crucial to have a positive coach-player relationship. Coaches should be enthusiastic in instructing their athletes in sports skills. To adequately prepare their athletes for top performance, coaches must be lifelong students of the sport. Many coaches have learned that sports contain both physical and mental training as the field of sports coaching has developed and sport has grown to be a multi-billion dollar industry. As a result, in the modern sports world, the science and art of training athletes now incorporate several disciplines, including mental toughness training and performance based coaching.

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