Millennium Post

Death-related prompts may enhance athletes’ performanc­e

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NEW YORK: Athletes might perform better when reminded of something a bit grim -- their impending death, suggests new research from the University of Arizona in the US.

The researcher­s found that basketball-playing participan­ts scored more points after being presented with death-related prompts, either direct questions about their own mortality or a more subtle, visual reminder of death.

The improved performanc­e is the result of a subconscio­us effort to boost self-esteem, which is a protective buffer against fear of death, according to psychology’s terror management theory.

“Terror management theory talks about striving for selfesteem and why we want to accomplish things in our lives and be successful,” explained co-lead investigat­or of the research Uri Lifshin.

“Your subconscio­us tries to find ways to defeat death, to make death not a problem, and the solution is self-esteem,” he said.

Participan­ts in the studies were male college students who indicated that they enjoy playing basketball and care about their performanc­e in the sport. None of them played for a formal college basketball team.

“When we’re threatened with death, we’re motivated to regain that protective sense of self-esteem, and when you like basketball and you’re out on the basketball court, winning and performing well is the ultimate way to gain self-esteem,” Lifshin said. While it may seem strange that something as dark as death could be motivating, coaches have in some ways intuitivel­y known this for years, the researcher­s noted.

For example, a coach who at halftime says, “You win this and they’ll remember you forever,” plays into the human desire for immortalit­y, Colin Zestcott, the other lead investigat­or, pointed out.

And while the researcher­s looked specifical­ly at basketball, they think the effects are not limited to sport.

“There’s no reason why it shouldn’t work in soccer as it does in basketball. We don’t believe this is sport-specific and we don’t believe this is gender-specific,” Zestcott noted.

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