Laaksonen Marko S, Jonsson Malin, Holmberg Hans-Christer
Swedish Winter Sports Research Centre, Department of Health Sciences, Mid Sweden University, Östersund, Sweden.
School of Sports Sciences, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Tromsø, Norway.
Front Physiol. 2018 Jul 2;9:796. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2018.00796. eCollection 2018.
The biathlon, combining cross-country ski skating with rifle marksmanship, has been an Olympic event since the Winter Games in Squaw Valley, United States, in 1960. As a consequence of replacing the classical with the skating technique in the 1980s, as well as considerable improvements in equipment and preparation of ski tracks and more effective training, the average biathlon skiing speed has increased substantially. Moreover, the mass-start, pursuit, and sprint races have been introduced. Indeed, two of the four current individual Olympic biathlon competitions involve mass-starts, where tactics play a major role and the outcome is often decided during the last round of shooting or final sprint. Biathlon is a demanding endurance sport requiring extensive aerobic capacity. The wide range of speeds and slopes involved requires biathletes to alternate continuously between and adapt different skating sub-techniques during races, a technical complexity that places a premium on efficiency. Although the relative amounts of endurance training at different levels of intensity have remained essentially constant during recent decades, today's biathletes perform more specific endurance training on roller skis on terrain similar to that used for competition, with more focus on the upper-body, systematic strength and power training and skiing at higher speeds. Success in the biathlon also requires accurate and rapid shooting while simultaneously recovering from high-intensity skiing. Many different factors, including body sway, triggering behavior, and even psychology, influence the shooting performance. Thus, the complexity of biathlon deserves a greater research focus on areas such as race tactics, skating techniques, or shooting process.
冬季两项运动将越野滑雪与步枪射击相结合,自1960年美国斯阔谷冬奥会以来一直是奥运会项目。由于在20世纪80年代用滑冰技术取代了传统技术,以及在装备、滑雪赛道准备和更有效的训练方面有了显著改进,冬季两项的平均滑雪速度大幅提高。此外,还引入了集体出发、追逐和短距离赛。事实上,目前四个个人奥运会冬季两项比赛项目中有两个涉及集体出发,在这种比赛中战术起着重要作用,结果往往在最后一轮射击或最后的冲刺中决定。冬季两项是一项要求很高的耐力运动,需要广泛的有氧能力。所涉及的速度和坡度范围很广,这就要求冬季两项运动员在比赛中不断交替并适应不同的滑冰子技术,这种技术复杂性对效率提出了很高的要求。尽管近几十年来不同强度水平的耐力训练相对量基本保持不变,但如今的冬季两项运动员在与比赛场地相似的地形上进行更多的滚轮滑雪专项耐力训练,更多地关注上身、系统的力量和功率训练以及更高速度的滑行。在冬季两项运动中取得成功还需要在高强度滑雪后迅速恢复的同时进行准确快速的射击。许多不同的因素,包括身体晃动、触发行为,甚至心理,都会影响射击表现。因此,冬季两项运动的复杂性值得在比赛战术、滑冰技术或射击过程等领域进行更多的研究。