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Journal of strength and conditioning research. 2020 Dec;34(12):3538-3545. doi: 10.1519/JSC.0000000000002362 Q13.02025

Soccer-Specific Reactive Repeated-Sprint Ability in Elite Youth Soccer Players: Maturation Trends and Association With Various Physical Performance Tests

精英青年足球运动员的专项反应式反复冲刺能力:成熟趋势及其与各种体能测试成绩的关系 翻译改进

Michele Di Mascio  1, Jack Ade  2  3, Craig Musham  4, Olivier Girard  5  6, Paul S Bradley  3

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作者单位

  • 1 Education and Welfare Department, Sunderland Association Football Club, Sunderland, United Kingdom.
  • 2 Medical and Sports Science Department, Liverpool Football Club, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
  • 3 Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
  • 4 Medical Department, Newcastle United Football Club, Newcastle, United Kingdom.
  • 5 Murdoch University, School of Psychology and Exercise Science, Perth, Australia.
  • 6 Institute of Sports Sciences, Lausanne University, Lausanne, Switzerland.
  • DOI: 10.1519/JSC.0000000000002362 PMID: 33237700

    摘要 Ai翻译

    Di Mascio, M, Ade, J, Musham, C, Girard, O, and Bradley, PS. Soccer-specific reactive repeated-sprint ability in elite youth soccer players: maturation trends and association with various physical performance tests. J Strength Cond Res 34(12): 3538-3545, 2020-Repeated-sprint ability is an important physical prerequisite for competitive soccer and deviates for players in various stages of growth and development. Thus, this study investigated reactive repeated-sprint ability in elite youth soccer players in relation to maturation (age at peak height velocity) and its association with performance of other physical tests. Elite male youth players from an English Premier League academy (U12, n = 8; U13, n = 11; U14, n = 15; U15, n = 6; U16, n = 10; and U18, n = 13) completed the reactive repeated-sprint test (RRST; 8 × 30-m sprints with 30-second active recovery), and other physical tests including the Yo-Yo intermittent recovery test level 2 (Yo-Yo IR2), arrowhead agility test, countermovement jump test with arms (CMJA), in addition to 10- and 20-m straight-line sprints. Reactive repeated-sprint test (RRST) performance (total time across 8 sprints) progressively improved from U12 to U16 (p < 0.01; effect size [ES]: 1.0-1.9), yet with no differences found between U16 and U18. No between-group differences in RRST performance were evident after accounting for age at peak height velocity (p > 0.05; ES: <0.3). Correlation magnitudes between performance on the RRST and other tests were trivial to moderate for the Yo-Yo IR2 (r = -0.15 to 0.42), moderate to very large for the arrowhead agility test (r = 0.48-0.90), moderate to large for CMJA (r = -0.43 to 0.66), and trivial to large for 10- and 20-m sprints (r = 0.05-0.61). The RRST was sensitive at tracking maturation trends in elite youth players, although performance improvements were not as marked from 15 to 16 years of age. RRST performance correlates with several physical qualities decisive for competitive soccer (agility, speed, power, and aerobic endurance).

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    期刊名:Journal of strength and conditioning research

    缩写:J STRENGTH COND RES

    ISSN:1064-8011

    e-ISSN:1533-4287

    IF/分区:3.0/Q1

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    Soccer-Specific Reactive Repeated-Sprint Ability in Elite Youth Soccer Players: Maturation Trends and Association With Various Physical Performance Tests