Effects of Wrestling Training on Psychological Well-Being, Anxiety, and Resilience in Adolescent Sedanter Boys
NCT ID: NCT07193121
Last Updated: 2025-12-09
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
15 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2025-04-15
2025-06-10
Brief Summary
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The wrestling group showed significant improvements in well-being and psychological resilience, along with marked reductions in total sport anxiety and its subcomponents (worry, somatic anxiety, concentration disruption). All changes demonstrated large effect sizes, while the control group exhibited no meaningful positive changes.
Overall, the findings suggest that even short-term, structured wrestling training can enhance emotional well-being, reduce anxiety, and strengthen resilience in adolescent boys. The study highlights wrestling as a promising physical activity for supporting youth mental health.
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Detailed Description
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Study Design and Participants
The research employed a randomized controlled pretest-posttest design involving 30 sedentary male adolescents aged 12-15 years. Participants were divided into:
Wrestling Group (n = 15) Control Group (n = 15) Inclusion criteria ensured no prior experience with wrestling or other combat sports and minimal physical activity in the preceding six months. The study was ethically approved and conducted following the Declaration of Helsinki.
Intervention The wrestling group completed a six-week structured wrestling program with sessions three times per week, each lasting 60 minutes. The program progressed through foundational stances, entries, defensive techniques, agility, strength drills, and integrated combined training sessions. Warm-ups, dynamic stretching, and wrestling-specific drills formed each session's core. All sessions were supervised by certified coaches, with 100% adherence and no injuries.
The control group maintained their daily routines without added exercise.
Measurements
Three validated psychological scales were used:
WHO-5 Well-Being Index Measures positive mood and general well-being.
Sport Anxiety Scale-2 (SAS-2)
Includes subscales for:
Worry Somatic Anxiety Concentration Disruption Brief Psychological Resilience Scale (BPRS) Evaluates ability to recover from stress. Assessments were conducted at baseline and post-intervention under standardized laboratory conditions.
Statistical Analysis Data normality was examined with the Shapiro-Wilk test. A two-way repeated-measures ANOVA evaluated group × time interactions, with Bonferroni post-hoc tests where necessary. Partial eta squared (ηp²) quantified effect sizes, interpreted based on established benchmarks.
Key Findings
1. Psychological Well-Being The wrestling group showed a significant increase in WHO-5 well-being scores. The control group showed no significant change. The effect size was large (ηp² = 0.717).
2. Sport Anxiety
Overall sport anxiety and all its subcomponents exhibited significant changes:
Worry Wrestling group: significant decrease Control group: significant increase Somatic Anxiety Significant decreases in both groups, though greater in the wrestling group. Concentration Disruption Wrestling group: significant decrease Control group: significant increase Total Sport Anxiety Wrestling group: strong reduction Control group: strong increase Effect size extremely large (ηp² = 0.938)
3. Psychological Resilience Wrestling group: significant improvement Control group: no change Effect size: ηp² = 0.519 Interpretation of Results
The data indicate that structured, non-competitive wrestling training:
Enhances emotional well-being Reduces both cognitive and physical symptoms of anxiety Supports the development of resilience and stress recovery abilities Helps maintain concentration and reduce performance-related worry These findings align with prior research showing psychological benefits of combat sports, such as improved self-control, emotional regulation, and coping strategies.
The simultaneous increase in anxiety in the control group suggests that adolescence alone may contribute to rising stress levels-highlighting the protective role of physical activity.
Practical Implications
The study provides evidence that wrestling, even at a beginner level, can serve as:
A preventive mental health intervention A structured environment that promotes emotional stability A method to build psychological resilience in adolescent boys A supportive physical activity option for school and community programs The influence appears beneficial even within six weeks, without competitive pressures.
Limitations Small sample size (n = 30) Only male adolescents Conducted within a single cultural context Short intervention duration No long-term follow-up Future studies should investigate long-term effects, gender differences, hormonal or neurophysiological mechanisms (e.g., cortisol, HRV), and comparisons with other sports.
Conclusion The study demonstrates that a six-week wrestling training program significantly improves psychological well-being and resilience while reducing sport-related anxiety in adolescent boys. These findings support the potential of wrestling as a valuable tool for promoting youth mental health in structured, safe, non-competitive environments.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
Model Structure
The analytic model included:
Within-subject factor:
Time (2 levels: Pre-test, Post-test)
Between-subject factor:
Group (2 levels: Wrestling Group, Control Group)
This produced a 2 × 2 mixed-model design, allowing the evaluation of:
Main effect of Time Indicates whether psychological variables changed across the entire sample from pre- to post-test.
Main effect of Group Tests whether the groups differed overall, independent of time. Group × Time interaction The primary parameter of interest, indicating whether the pattern of change over time differed between groups.
Model Assumptions
The repeated-measures ANOVA relied on the following assumptions:
Normality:Shapiro-Wilk test. Homogeneity of Variance; Spherici
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
SINGLE
Study Groups
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wrestling training Group
Both groups underwent baseline assessments before the intervention and post-tests after six weeks. The Wrestling Group participated in a structured wrestling training program, while the Control Group maintained their usual daily routines without additional exercise.
Wrestling Group
Both groups underwent baseline assessments before the intervention and post-tests after six weeks. The Wrestling Group participated in a structured wrestling training program, while the Control Group maintained their usual daily routines without additional exercise.
Control
No intervention
CONTROL
Control
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Wrestling Group
Both groups underwent baseline assessments before the intervention and post-tests after six weeks. The Wrestling Group participated in a structured wrestling training program, while the Control Group maintained their usual daily routines without additional exercise.
Control
No intervention
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Sedentary lifestyle, defined as engaging in less than 60 minutes of regular physical training per week during the previous six months
* No prior experience in wrestling or any other organized combat sports
* Healthy with no known medical conditions that could interfere with participation
Exclusion Criteria
* Musculoskeletal injuries that could impede training participation
* Chronic illnesses requiring ongoing medical treatment
* Diagnosed psychological disorders that could affect their ability to safely engage in physical activity
12 Years
15 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Gümüşhane Universıty
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Coşkun YILMAZ
ASSOC. PROF.
Principal Investigators
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coşkun yılmaz, associate professor
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Gümüşhane Universıty
Locations
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Gumushane Univetsity
Gümüşhane, Kelkit, Turkey (Türkiye)
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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2025/06
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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