Wells Fargo:
Wells Fargo is more than just a 14,000 seating arena packed
with legacies and history of previous student-athletes, but it is used for
multiple uses throughout the year such as graduation ceremonies and freshmen
welcome assemblies and concerts. It is where student-athletes who play the
sports, volleyball, basketball, wrestling and gymnastics can prove their
success as Sun Devils. The aspects of evaluation present in this space are
evident every week. During volleyball games the basketball, baseball, swim, and
other teams are there supporting their fellow family members simply because it
creates a support system for not only the competing team, but for the
supporters as well. How? Because what is done for one team occurs for the
other, if the basketball team supports the volleyball team, then the volleyball
team will support the basketball team in Wells Fargo. It serves to
student-athletes to help play their roles as a Sun Devil, by showing off the
amount of hard work they invest in their sport through practice during game
days. They prove to the community the winning tradition at ASU by gaining
success in each performance. It becomes
a safe haven and familiar place to compete against other PAC 12 teams, where
the Sun Devils have a home court advantage and can be supported by other
student-athletes and students at ASU. Having big sporting events in Wells Fargo
creates the opportunities for student-athletes to be a supportive family member
in the Sun Devil family by wearing maroon and gold and cheering on their
brothers and sisters. The goal of performing at home for Sun Devils in to get
that advantage of being comfortable and having the crowd cheer for your
successes. Pressures come along with playing at home, the athletes carry the
weight of having to win and therefore become emotionally engaged in their
competition. This is what makes a good student-athlete, it is being emotionally
invested during practice and games. “Results showed that there is a positive
correlation between sport orientation and emotional intelligence and a positive
correlation between competitiveness and goal setting with emotional intelligence among team and individuals
athletes”. (Ilyasi, Gasem, Parisa Sedagati, and Mir Hamid Salehian,
2011) The way a student-athlete chooses to respond to the pressures of playing
at home and in front of peers determines the mental game which greatly
contributes to their performance and final result. Successes and failures will
both happen; the student-athletes who are successful are the ones whose
successes outweigh failures.
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| [Sun Devil Volleyball at Wells Fargo Arena; Photo credit: Whitney Follette (2011)] |