Effects of Combined vs. Single-Source Supportive Communication from Parents and Coaches on Mental Health and Self-Regulation in Adolescent Football Players
Ameni Essid, Mohamed Mansour Bouzourraa, Hajer Sahli, Wissem Dhahbi, Achraf Ammar, Khaled Trabelsi, Mohamed Jarraya, Makram Zghibi

TL;DR
This study shows that combining support from both parents and coaches improves mental health and self-regulation in adolescent football players more than support from either source alone.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel multi-component psychosocial program combining support from parents and coaches for adolescent athletes.
Findings
Combined support from parents and coaches led to significant reductions in anxiety, depression, and stress.
Self-regulation improved significantly, particularly in planning abilities.
The control and single-source support groups showed less improvement compared to the combined support group.
Abstract
Background: Adolescent football players are exposed to substantial psychological demands, and psychosocial support within family and sport environments has been shown to influence motivational climate, stress responses, and emotional well-being. However, the comparative effects of coordinated multi-source psychosocial support from parents and coaches versus single-source support on psychological outcomes remain insufficiently examined. Aims: to examine the effects of a multi-component psychosocial program involving parents and coaches on depression, anxiety, stress, and self-regulation in adolescent football players. Methods: A total of 60 male adolescent soccer players were recruited and randomly assigned to four groups: combined supportive communication from both parents and coaches (SCCP; n = 15), supportive communication from coaches only (SCC; n = 15), supportive communication from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSport Psychology and Performance · Motivation and Self-Concept in Sports · Perfectionism, Procrastination, Anxiety Studies
