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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Moral Attitudes Predict Cheating and Gamesmanship Behaviors Among Competitive Tennis Players
Giampaolo NicolaisLambros LazurasLambros LazurasArnaldo ZelliMartin S. HaggerMartin S. HaggerMartin S. HaggerFabio LucidiLuca Malliasubject
tennis playersCheatingmorals050109 social psychologyCompetitive athletestenniksenpelaajatcheatingBasic Behavioral and Social Sciencegamesmanship03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemoral attitudesvilppiBehavioral and Social SciencePsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencescheating; gamesmanship; moral attitudes; sport values; task and ego orientation; tennismoraalipsykologiata315Competence (human resources)General Psychologyta515Original Researchsport values05 social sciencestennis030229 sport sciencesathletesProsocial behaviormoraalimoral psychologyMatch playcheatCognitive Sciencestask and ego orientationPsychologySocial psychologyurheilijatdescription
Background: The present study tested Lee et al.’s (2008) model of moral attitudes and cheating behavior in sports in an Italian sample of young tennis players and extended it to predict behavior in actual match play. In the first phase of the study we proposed that moral, competence and status values would predict prosocial and antisocial moral attitudes directly, and indirectly through athletes’ goal orientations. In the second phase, we hypothesized that moral attitudes would directly predict actual cheating behavior observed during match play.\ud \ud Method: Adolescent competitive tennis players (N = 314, 76.75% males, M age = 14.36 years, SD = 1.50) completed measures of values, goal orientations, and moral attitudes. A sub-sample (n = 90) was observed in 45 competitive tennis matches by trained observers who recorded their cheating and gamesmanship behaviors on a validated checklist.\ud \ud Results: Consistent with hypotheses, athletes’ values predicted their moral attitudes through the effects of goal orientations. Anti-social attitudes directly predicted cheating behavior in actual match play providing support for a direct link between moral attitude and actual behavior.\ud \ud Conclusion: The present study findings support key propositions of Lee and colleagues’ model, and extended its application to competitive athletes in actual match play.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-04-12 | Frontiers in Psychology |