Purpose: Present study explores whether soccer players have attentional bias to threat stimuli in different scenarios. Methods: A total of 52 college soccer players in University were selected to fill in Pain Anxiety Scale in Chinese version, and high-pain-anxiety group and low-pain-anxiety group were selected by sorting out the scale scores. Result shows that athletes had more attention bias to pictures related to soccer, especially, the attention bias to threaten information was more obvious. Results also show that the athletes with higher pain-anxiety made more attention to pictures related to soccer than low-pain-anxiety athletes.