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Journal Article

Citation

Rainey DW, Hardy L. J. Sports Sci. 1999; 17(10): 797-806.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, John Carroll University, University Heights, OH 44118, USA. rainey@jcu.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 1999, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/026404199365515

PMID

10573333

Abstract

We examined sources of stress, burnout and intention to terminate among rugby union referees. Questionnaires were returned by 682 of 1175 referees (58%) from Wales, Scotland and England. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses revealed four correlated sources of stress factors (performance concerns, time pressure, interpersonal conflict and fear of physical harm), which accounted for 49.6% of the variance. Referees believed the first three factors to be mildly related to their stress. They believed fear of physical harm to be unrelated to their stress. A structural model hypothesizing that time pressure and interpersonal conflict predict burnout, and that age and burnout predict intention to terminate refereeing, fit the observed data. The goodness-of-fit index for this model was 0.96. Our results and those of other studies indicate that interpersonal conflict and time pressure are common sources of stress for sport officials and are frequently related to their burnout experiences. Also, age and burnout are frequently, although only marginally, related to intention to terminate.


Language: en

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