Kelly Adam L, Till Kevin, Jackson Daniel, Barrell Donald, Burke Kate, Turnnidge Jennifer
Department of Sport and Exercise, Research Centre for Life and Sport Sciences (CLaSS), School of Health Sciences, Birmingham City University, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
Carnegie School of Sport, Leeds Beckett University, Leeds, United Kingdom.
Front Sports Act Living. 2021 Feb 19;3:640607. doi: 10.3389/fspor.2021.640607. eCollection 2021.
A common practice in youth rugby union is to group players based on (bi)annual age with fixed cut-off dates. The overrepresentation of players born at the start of the cut-off date and the underrepresentation of players born toward the end of the cut-off date are termed relative age effects (RAEs). The aim of this study was to examine RAEs during entry into professional and international rugby union pathways in England, as well as comparing them to their respective senior cohort: U15 Regional Academy Player ( = 1,114) vs. Senior Professional Player ( = 281) and U16-23 England Academy Player ( = 849) vs. Senior International Player ( = 48). Chi-square (χ) analysis compared birth quarter (BQ) distributions against expected distributions. Odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals compared the likelihood of a BQ being selected. Findings revealed a significant overrepresentation of relatively older players compared with their relatively younger peers within both youth cohorts ( < 0.001; BQ1 = 42.5% vs. BQ4 = 9.6%; BQ1 = 36.5% vs. BQ4 = 15.2%). In comparison, there was no significant difference in the BQ distributions within both senior cohorts. Further, BQ4s were 3.86 and 3.9 times more likely to achieve senior professional and international levels than BQ1s and BQ2s, respectively. It is suggested that relatively younger players may have a greater likelihood of achieving expertise following entry into a rugby union talent pathway due to benefitting from more competitive play against relatively older counterparts during their development (e.g., reversal effects; the underdog hypothesis). Moreover, possible solutions (e.g., age and anthropometric banding; playing-up and playing-down) are discussed to encourage practitioners and policy makers to create the most appropriate learning environment for every player.
青年英式橄榄球联盟的一个常见做法是根据(每)两年的年龄对球员进行分组,并设定固定的截止日期。截止日期开始时出生的球员人数过多,而截止日期接近尾声时出生的球员人数过少,这被称为相对年龄效应(RAEs)。本研究的目的是调查在英格兰进入职业和国际英式橄榄球联盟通道期间的相对年龄效应,并将其与各自的成年组进行比较:15岁以下地区学院球员(n = 1114)与成年职业球员(n = 281),以及16 - 23岁英格兰学院球员(n = 849)与成年国际球员(n = 48)。卡方(χ)分析将出生季度(BQ)分布与预期分布进行比较。优势比和95%置信区间比较了被选中的BQ的可能性。研究结果显示,在两个青年组中,相对年长的球员与相对年轻的同龄人相比人数显著过多(p < 0.001;第一季度 = 42.5%,第四季度 = 9.6%;第一季度 = 36.5%,第四季度 = 15.2%)。相比之下,两个成年组的BQ分布没有显著差异。此外,第四季度出生的球员达到成年职业和国际水平的可能性分别是第一季度和第二季度出生球员的3.86倍和3.9倍。研究表明,相对年轻的球员在进入英式橄榄球联盟人才培养通道后,由于在发展过程中受益于与相对年长的对手进行更具竞争力的比赛(例如,反转效应;弱者假设),可能有更大的机会成为专家。此外,还讨论了可能的解决方案(例如,年龄和人体测量分组;向上和向下比赛),以鼓励从业者和政策制定者为每个球员创造最合适的学习环境。