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National identity and sports performance: Should England have their own national anthem?

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The question as to whether the English should have a national anthem of their own has been debated over the years. Whereas the Welsh and the Scots have laid claim to their own anthems, the English retain the British national anthem for sporting events. This gives the bizarre circumstances where, if England plays against either Wales or Scotland, they are effectively playing their opponent’s national anthem twice. When this issue has been addressed in the past, the emphasis tends to have been on the political ramifications of giving England their own national anthem. The psychological implications of playing ‘God Save the Queen’ however are usually neglected in the debate. There are a number of factors that contribute to the psychology of a sports performer during competition; belief, confidence, a sense of worth, being prepared, the ability to relax and perform under pressure are just some of these. One factor that has a huge impact on a performer is a sense of identity. A sense of identity will impact on our values, which in turn will affect our motivation levels. It will also impact on our sense of purpose or our will to go the extra mile for the greater good. Many supporters may despair at the antics of some of our leading football coaches, who seem to spend an extraordinary amount of effort picking fights. They will pick fights with other coaches, the press, officials, members of the FA, even club owners and members of their own board. In the case of Jose Mourinho, he has been known to pick a fight with all of the above and many more. You may wonder what there is to gain from this seemingly childish and pointless behaviour. There is however method in their madness. What these coaches are aiming to achieve is to create an ‘identity’ among their players. This is achieved by establishing a common enemy to give the players the motivation and sense of unity to work together as a team, to achieve their aims. So what has this got to do with the national anthem? Well, the national anthem is supposed to promote a sense of identity within a sports team. For that to happen, the national anthem should be appropriate to the team that is playing. ‘God Save the Queen’ is appropriate for the ‘British’ team during the Olympics in the same way that the European anthem is appropriate during the Ryder Cup. It isn’t appropriate for England (or Northern Ireland for that matter). The Scots and the Welsh don’t get fired up by ‘God Save the Queen’ so why should the English? Who can forget the Scotland v England rugby match of 1990 when ‘Flower of Scotland’ set in motion the impetus for an unlikely Scottish victory? Surely, it isn’t coincidence that some of England’s greatest performances in competitions have been accompanied by alternative anthems; New Order’s ‘World in Motion’ at Italia ’90, ‘Three Lions’ in Euro ’96, as well as ‘Swing Low’ at the 2003 Rugby World Cup. There are two songs that tend to be favoured if there was to be an English anthem, ‘Jerusalem’ or ‘Land of Hope and Glory’. Either one of these would be more appropriate for England and could give the vital edge that makes the difference between success and disappointment. So why deprive the English of what is their right – a sense of national identity? Andy Barton Wider Vision Ltd - Specialists in Mental Performance Training for Sport
Tags: identity, jose mourinho, motivation, national identity, sports performance
Posted June 1, 2009 at 1:13 PM by andybarton | Permalink | Comments(4)

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I'm a Scot who has been in England for most of the last 14 years. I've watched the English national identity come much more into people's consciousness and would support an English national anthem. At the Commonwealth Games you use Land of Hope and Glory, which is an awful lot more rousing than the limp, subservient God Save the Queen.

This is also an interesting topic for its timing, in the week that the home countries agreed that England would represent Team GB in the London Olympics. I've followed a lot of the arguments (which have actually been around for decades) and it seems apparent that many English fans can't really get their heads around the fears that the other home nations have that they will lose their national team and, therefore, their independent national (footballing) identity. Putting aside any argument of whether that would happen or not, it is as much as a risk for England as it is for any other home nation, but it doesn't bother the majority of fans. Is this an indication that the English national identity isn't that different to a UK identity, or do they actually believe that if there was only one UK team in world football that it would play their games at Wembley, have 3 lions on the shirt and call itself England?

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Rob Robson
Co-founder, iStadia.com
Rob Robson on Twitter
Posted by robrobson | June 2, 2009 at 2:09 AM
Hi Andy, Many thanks for the blog. I agree that the use of music can have a big impact on the players and on the fans which in turn can impact on the players further. One point where I disagree is around managers having outbursts and how there is method in their madness and that they consciously think that this will enhance team identity. In my recent blog http://www.istadia.com/blog/TotalPerformance/490 I write about the opposite effect and have been demonstrated to be right on this occasion. I made this prediction based on a sound theoretical grounding. What is your theoretical grounding for your statement? I ask as I am not familiar with anything that says this. One last point, you mention that you are a mental performance coach. What is a mental performance coach? All good stuff and I look forward to your considered opinion.

James Beale C.Psychol
07985414942

Total Performance Consulting - Sport Psychologists
Posted by TotalPerformance | June 2, 2009 at 5:41 AM
Hmm.. Same behaviour, perhaps with different motivation and impact depending on the context which may include the external situation and the coach's normal style, among other things. I think what Mourinho (and Ferguson) would do is deliberately create a 'siege mentality' or "no-one like us and we don't care", and people get used to them having their rant. However, I'd suggest that when Benitez does it, it is a little out of character and therefore has a different impact...

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Rob Robson
Co-founder, iStadia.com
Rob Robson on Twitter
Posted by robrobson | June 2, 2009 at 6:43 AM
Andy, Whilst I also agree about the impact of music upon performance, I have a couple of questions about the national anthem issue. I see that you have quoted the instances of @world in motion' and 'Three Lions' in football competitions, and 'Swing Low' during the RWC 2003. However, it must be remembered that these were reocrds made for the fans (in the football cases), and as far as the England rugby side are concerned, Fans have been singing Swing Low since the 80's according to my quick research. What I feel has been forgotten there, is that despite there being these songs around the teams in these (and other) compettions, the England teams in question, both football and rugby, still sang 'God Save the Queen' before taking to the field, and performed well anyway. I feel that the identity of a team needs to be formed before singing the national anthem, as if the team has not bonded and formulated an identity by this point, then there is little effect to be had from the national anthem.
Posted by danoverend | June 5, 2009 at 9:41 AM

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