logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Was it a clutch performance? A qualitative exploration of the definitional boundaries of clutch performance

Psychology

Was it a clutch performance? A qualitative exploration of the definitional boundaries of clutch performance

M. J. Schweickle, S. A. Vella, et al.

Athletes describe clutch performance as achieving self-referenced goals under pressure, judged against personal benchmarks and past performances rather than a single statistical jump. The study reveals clutch exists on a performance spectrum and is situational — research conducted by Matthew J. Schweickle, Stewart A. Vella, and Christian Swann.

00:00
00:00
~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Objectives: Clutch performance refers to positive performance under pressure. Definitions of clutch performance, however, differ on the performance level required to constitute this phenomenon. This definitional divergence centres on whether clutch performance requires increased, or maintained, performance. Further, it is unclear what performance benchmark (e.g., season average) clutch performances should be compared against. Accordingly, this study aimed to explore athletes' perceptions of what performance level is required for clutch performance, and what performance benchmarks clutch performances are compared against. Method: Twenty-four athletes (M = 27.13 years) participated in event-focused, semi-structured interviews soon after a positive performance under pressure (M = 93 h later). Data were analysed utilising reflexive thematic analysis. Results: Three themes were generated: (1) clutch performance is assessed against goal achievement, suggesting that the achievement of self-referenced goals is the primary indicator athletes' use to assess clutch performance; (2) clutch performance exists on a performance spectrum, suggesting that the performance level required for clutch performance differs due to the appraisal of pressure and the athletes' own goals; and (3) different benchmarks are used to assess clutch performance, suggesting that athletes' may draw on both previous performances, and the performance itself, to assess clutch performance. Conclusions: This study suggested that clutch performance is a situational and context-dependent phenomenon. Specifically, athletes assessed clutch performance on the extent to which they perceived achievement of self-referenced goals. Defining clutch performance in this manner may resolve tensions between existing definitions, and further, may facilitate development of a measure of clutch performance.
Publisher
Psychology of Sport & Exercise
Published On
Jun 10, 2022
Authors
Matthew J. Schweickle, Stewart A. Vella, Christian Swann
Tags
clutch performance
performance under pressure
self-referenced goals
performance benchmarks
athlete perceptions
reflexive thematic analysis
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny