Department of Sport Exercise Sciences, School of Social Sciences Law, Teesside University, Middlesbrough, UK.
Sports Med. 2012 Jul 1;42(7):615-31. doi: 10.2165/11632360-000000000-00000.
Soccer referees are required to keep up with play at all times to ensure optimal positioning in making key decisions. While the physiological aspects of soccer refereeing have been extensively reviewed, other key areas of preparation and performance have yet to be considered in detail. We present a contemporary examination of methodological considerations for the interpretation of referees' match activities, the validation of fitness testing and training protocols, match and training injury profiles, and the understanding and development of perceptual-cognitive expertise. A referee covers approximately 11 km during a match, with ∼900 m of high-speed running and, consequently, the demands of match play represent a significant physical challenge. The analyses of within-match activity profiles have attempted to assess the possible occurrence of referee fatigue, with equivocal findings. However, researchers have demonstrated that referees' physical performances are interrelated with those of the players during the same match. Therefore, the evaluation of referees' match activity profiles should be made in the context of the players' performances. High match-to-match variability in key variables, namely, high-speed running and sprinting, along with age-related reductions in match running are other factors that require due consideration when interpreting physical performances. Fitness testing is used by national and international referee governing bodies as part of their match selection criteria. Therefore, the tests need to reflect the physical task of refereeing, yet for the recent fitness tests introduced by the Fédération Internationale de Football Association--a 20 × 150 m high-intensity and 6 × 40 m repeated-sprint test - only the repeated-sprint test possesses the appropriate construct validity for assessment of match-related running capacity. Also, the performance standards of the tests have not been validated. Consequently, the scientific rationale behind the tests and their associated standards is not clear. Soccer referees dedicate a large proportion of their overall training to the development of physical capacity and researchers have demonstrated that high-intensity (>85% maximal heart rate) training protocols are effective for improving fitness and match running performance. These high training loads combined with increasing age could, in part, explain an incidence of non-contact match injuries (18 injuries per 1000 match hours) similar to players, with lower leg muscle strains being the most common type of non-contact injuries in referees. The implementation of injury prevention programmes along with the careful monitoring of training and match loads may help minimize referee's injury incidence. The perceptual-cognitive demands of soccer refereeing are significant, yet there remains limited research examining the perceptual and cognitive processes informing referees' decisions. As such, a three-step approach for the study of expertise in soccer referees is proposed. First, objective and reliable markers of decision making should be established, with due consideration to the development of naturalistic test situations while maintaining experimental control. Second, process-tracing measures can be used to identify the perceptual and cognitive mechanisms involved in accurate decision making. Finally, research is required to help understand the acquisition of superior decision making and whether such expertise can be developed via training programmes.
足球裁判需要时刻关注比赛,以确保在做出关键决策时处于最佳位置。虽然足球裁判的生理方面已经得到了广泛的研究,但其他关键的准备和表现方面尚未详细考虑。我们提出了一种对裁判比赛活动解释的方法学考虑的现代审视,对体能测试和训练方案的验证,比赛和训练损伤概况,以及对感知认知专业知识的理解和发展。裁判员在一场比赛中大约要跑 11 公里,其中包括 900 米的高速跑,因此比赛的要求对他们来说是一个巨大的体能挑战。对比赛中活动情况的分析试图评估裁判疲劳的可能性,但结果尚无定论。然而,研究人员已经证明,裁判员的身体表现与同一比赛中的球员的表现密切相关。因此,裁判员的比赛活动情况的评估应该在球员表现的背景下进行。关键变量(即高速跑和冲刺跑)的比赛间高度可变性,以及与年龄相关的比赛跑动减少,是解释身体表现时需要考虑的其他因素。体能测试是由国家和国际裁判管理机构作为其比赛选拔标准的一部分使用的。因此,测试需要反映裁判的体能任务,但对于国际足球联合会最近引入的体能测试——20 次×150 米高强度和 6 次×40 米重复冲刺测试——只有重复冲刺测试具有适当的结构有效性,可用于评估与比赛相关的跑动能力。此外,测试的性能标准尚未得到验证。因此,测试背后的科学原理及其相关标准并不清楚。足球裁判将大量的整体训练时间用于发展体能,研究人员已经证明,高强度(大于 85%最大心率)的训练方案对于提高体能和比赛跑动表现非常有效。这些高训练负荷加上年龄的增长,在一定程度上可以解释与球员相似的非接触性比赛损伤发生率(每 1000 小时比赛 18 次损伤),小腿肌肉拉伤是裁判中最常见的非接触性损伤类型。实施伤病预防计划以及仔细监测训练和比赛负荷,可以帮助降低裁判的伤病发生率。足球裁判的感知认知需求非常大,但对裁判决策所依据的感知和认知过程的研究仍然有限。因此,提出了一种三步法来研究足球裁判的专业知识。首先,应该建立客观可靠的决策制定指标,并在保持实验控制的同时,适当考虑自然主义测试情境的发展。其次,可以使用过程跟踪措施来确定准确决策所涉及的感知和认知机制。最后,需要研究来帮助理解卓越决策的获取,以及这种专业知识是否可以通过训练计划来发展。