Why do we play sport?

5 01 2012

Why do we play sport?

New year is a great time to start or increase our sports participation. For a start there’s safety in numbers, as “do more exercise” and “get fit” are high on the list of annual new year’s resolutions.

But to create a new habit out of these resolutions, personal trainers will tell us we need some extra steps. To succeed we need to set a goal & get a “gym buddy” to help keep us going. We also need to understand and identify our motivation for doing it. Asking ourselves why isn’t something many of us do enough, but only through really questioning ourselves can we understand why we want to keep doing something.

Goals are good, but what happens once you’ve ticked off the race? Buddies are helpful, until they get injured or too busy at work. So if we don’t have a personal reason we connect with, then the new behaviour is unlikely to stick when the snow comes!

So why do we play sport? And do we play all sports for the same reason? There’s plenty of research around, telling us the reasons why people drop-out of sport or won’t start. But what about the millions that do play? What gets us out of cozy beds or (hopefully) wind-free houses to swim, ride or kick balls around? What drives our love affair for playing, not just watching, sport?

Digging beneath the responses of SportEngland’s satisfaction survey shows that we can participate in the same sport for a multitude of personal yet common reasons. For some it’s about the competition & progression, for some it’s about improving their health or fitness and for others it’s purely social & not about the sport at all.

This becomes relevant when we think about the competing activities. Those motivated by specific competition will be less inclined to play a range of sports than those driven to improve their general well being. Equally for those motivated by the social opportunity, social media or a coffee shop may be a competitor on a wet & windy day!

As for me, I play football because it’s been baked into my DNA since I could walk. I no longer dream of playing for Fulham or Wales, but I still get excited when a tricky pass or move comes off! They remind me of why I had the dreams as a child – dreams that I don’t remember involving rain or mud.

I ride my bike to explore places while getting fit, I run to remind myself I used to be fit, and I swim because achieving a big goal like a sub-3hr triathlon is impossible if I don’t. I no longer have a good reason why I would spend 4 hours looking for a golf ball.

So why do you play sport? Would you be lost without your regular fix, or do other work or leisure activities quickly replace it?

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