For many athletes today, whether it is an amateur athlete or a pro athlete, obsolescence of exercise and burnt-out syndrome are major problems. The benefits of this problem always result in complete physical and emotional exhaustion. Treatment can be done even when recognition becomes old and burned out too late. However, the best policy for old exercise and burnout is to prevent it first. There are three different models to explain the causes of athletes' burnout.
Athletes burnout syndrome is thought to be an increasing psychological problem and it is becoming a major factor affecting the performance of athletes in various sports disciplines. Burnout is a psychological-physiological response characterized by physical and emotional fatigue caused by excessive sustained stress (Silva, 1990; Dale and Weinberg, 1990). If you feel the athlete is overwhelmed and you can not meet continuous demand, performance will decline, the sense of accomplishment will decline and the participation rate will decrease (Silva, 1990; Dale and Weinberg, 1990; Gustafsson, 2007) . Owing to this internal response, athletes often try to overtrain excessive training or competing demands beyond ambitious and unrealistic goals (Silva, 1990).
Early specialization showed physical difficulties as well as mental difficulties. Burnout of exercise may be an unfortunate effect of early professionalism. It can be defined as "physical and physical fatigue caused by athletes' psychological and physical needs" (8). Burnout syndrome can be extremely bad and it can lead to withdrawal or withdrawal of previously enjoyed activities by athletes. From personal experiences, swimmers and divers specializing in childhood tend to decompose physically, resulting in a decline in performance. In addition, depression may lead to withdrawal and team activities as performance declines and injuries increase
In the sports psychology literature it has been reported that motor dysfunction is related to the perfectionistic beliefs of athletes' maladjustment and the voluntary grading environment created by the coach (see, eg, Hill et al. , 2008). As an international cricket player, for most people it may seem like a dream-like job at first - enjoy traveling all over the world and enjoy sports - but for some people it is a nightmare You may. Many players have a sense of guilt by balancing career and family's promises, stressing away from home for a long time, fulfilling the obligations of media and guarantors, and maintaining performance, We state the issue as international. Standard pressure is getting bigger