112 research outputs found
The assessment of neuromuscular fatigue during 120 min of simulated soccer exercise
Purpose
This investigation examined the development of neuromuscular fatigue during a simulated soccer match incorporating a period of extra time (ET) and the reliability of these responses on repeated test occasions.
Methods
Ten male amateur football players completed a 120 min soccer match simulation (SMS). Before, at half time (HT), full time (FT), and following a period of ET, twitch responses to supramaximal femoral nerve and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) were obtained from the knee-extensors to measure neuromuscular fatigue. Within 7 days of the first SMS, a second 120 min SMS was performed by eight of the original ten participants to assess the reliability of the fatigue response.
Results
At HT, FT, and ET, reductions in maximal voluntary force (MVC; â11, â20 and â27%, respectively, Pââ€â0.01), potentiated twitch force (â15, â23 and â23%, respectively, Pâ<â0.05), voluntary activation (FT, â15 and ET, â18%, Pââ€â0.01), and voluntary activation measured with TMS (â11, â15 and â17%, respectively, Pââ€â0.01) were evident. The fatigue response was robust across both trials; the change in MVC at each time point demonstrated a good level of reliability (CV range 6â11%; ICC2,1 0.83â0.94), whilst the responses identified with motor nerve stimulation showed a moderate level of reliability (CV range 5â18%; ICC2,1 0.63â0.89) and the data obtained with motor cortex stimulation showed an excellent level of reliability (CV range 3â6%; ICC2,1 0.90â0.98).
Conclusion
Simulated soccer exercise induces a significant level of fatigue, which is consistent on repeat tests, and involves both central and peripheral mechanisms
Playing exposure does not affect movement characteristics or physiological responses of elite youth footballers during an intensified period of competition.
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Science and Medicine in Football on 08/05/18, available online: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/24733938.2018.1470664This study investigated the effect of playing time on physiological and perceptual responses to six, 60 min matches played over five days. Thirty youth football players (age = 14.1 ± 0.4 years; body mass = 57.4 ± 12.9 kg; stature 169.3 ± 7.7 cm) were grouped into low (<250 min; LPG, n = 18) and high (â„250 min; HPG, n = 12) match exposure groups and monitored daily for lower body power and perceived wellness. GPS technology was used to assess match running demands in total distance (mâąmin-1), low (<13 kmâąh-1) and high (â„13 kmâąh-1) speed running categories. Hypothesis based testing and effect sizes (ES) were used to analyse data. The HPG performed moderately more total distance (103.7 ± 10.4 cf. 90.2 ± 19.7 mâąmin-1, P = 0.03; ES=0.74 ± 0.63) and high speed running (26.7 ± 6.6 cf. 20.3 ± 6.5 mâąmin-1, P = 0.01; ES=0.87 ± 0.6) than the LPG across all six matches. Differences of a small magnitude were observed between groups for lower body power (P = 0.08; ES =0.59 ± 0.8) and perceived wellness (P = 0.09; ES=0.42 ± 0.4) which were both higher in the HPG. Youth football players appear well equipped to deal with intensified period of competition, such as those experienced in tournaments, irrespective of match exposure
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