In the athletic world, every sportsperson undergoes sport training day after day, year after year. Besides the physical tests from this stringent process, athletes also face the psychological challenges from repetitive exercises. All these hard work are to fulfill athlete's true duty in the stadium-to compete. Training, competition, more training, and then more competition have already become the repetitious operating cycle in an athlete's career. After observing cultural rituals from various races in the early 20(superscript th) century, French anthropologist, Arnold Van Gennep had developed the "rite de passage" concept. The concept pointed out that in human cultural society, ceremonies performed at incidents, such as location alteration, changes in situation, social status shifts, and/or aging transformation, can be divided into three stages: 1. stage of separation, 2. stage of margin (a.k.a. liminality stage), and 3. stage of aggregation (Arnold Van Gennep, 1909). Van Gennep formed the basis of his research on the three conceptual stages and incorporated theory of "threshold stage" from anthropologist, Victor Turner, to further examine how athletes view the repetitive training and competition cycles as a ritual ceremony and the effect on the competition itself. Athletes endure the cycle of "training-competition-re-training" throughout their sporting career, as if they treat each contest like a ceremonial platform to self-improve. By participating in such ceremonies, trainers, as well as athletes can always reflect, surpass, transcend, and even create more meaningful cultural behavior; hence, when returning to the daily trainings, a different feeling derives comparing to before entering the competition.