School of Science, Technology and Health, York St John University, York, England.
School of Sport and Exercise, University of Gloucestershire, Gloucester, England.
Eur J Sport Sci. 2023 Aug;23(8):1490-1499. doi: 10.1080/17461391.2022.2117090. Epub 2022 Sep 12.
The individual response to load is multifactorial and complicated by transient temporal changes in biological maturation. The period surrounding peak height velocity exposes potentially "fragile" individuals to systematic, age-related increases in training loads. Bio-banding allows practitioners to manage the biological diversity and align training to the individual development needs . This study explores the acute impact of maturation on neuromuscular performance and perceived intensity through comparing both chronological and bio-banded training sessions. 55 male soccer players (mean ± SD; age 13.8 ± 1.4 years) were recruited from an EPPP academy. Following a warm-up and standardised sub-maximal run (30-15), players competed in five bouts of 5-min 6v6 small-sided games (SSGs) before repeating the standardised sub-maximal run. The sessions were repeated on three occasions with chronological SSGs and the same with bio-banded SSGs wearing foot-mounted inertial measurement units (PlayerMaker) with differential ratings of perceived exertion used to quantify internal loads. Mixed linear modelling indicated maturity-specific pre-post differences in neuromuscular response, stride length and cadence having contrasting responses pre- (reduced) and post-PHV (increased), and larger changes in post sessions stiffness for pre- (∼18.6 kN·m) and circa-PHV (∼12.1 kN·m) players. Secondly, there were small to large differences in neuromuscular response (RSI, stride length, stiffness, and contact time) and perceptions of intensity between conditions, with bio-banding generally reducing pre-post changes. Bio-banding may therefore offer a mechanism to prescribe maturity-specific training loads which may help to alleviate the impact of repeated exposure to high-intensity activity, thus reducing injury risk whilst promoting long-term player development. Utilising a sub-maximal running protocol (30-15) with foot mounted accelerometers can detect maturity specific responses to football specific training activity, which aligns with subjective perceptions of intensity.Chronologically derived small-sided games elicit different acute responses between players of varying maturity status, which is somewhat negated when bio-banded small-sided games are used instead.Bio-banding training sessions may offer practitioners a practical way of managing maturity-specific trainings load to reduce injury risk and promote long-term players development.
个体对负荷的反应是多因素的,并且受到生物成熟的短暂时间变化的影响。在身高增长高峰期前后,潜在的“脆弱”个体暴露于系统的、与年龄相关的训练负荷增加中。生物分组允许从业者管理生物多样性,并根据个体发展需求调整训练。本研究通过比较传统分组和生物分组训练,探讨了成熟度对神经肌肉表现和感知强度的急性影响。从 EPPP 学院招募了 55 名男性足球运动员(平均值±标准差;年龄 13.8±1.4 岁)。在热身和标准的 30-15 次最大摄氧量测试后,运动员进行了五轮 5 分钟 6v6 小场比赛(SSG),然后重复标准的最大摄氧量测试。该研究在三个时间点重复了这两个测试,一个是传统的 SSG,另一个是穿着脚底惯性测量单元(PlayerMaker)的生物分组 SSG,使用不同的感知用力等级来量化内部负荷。混合线性模型表明,神经肌肉反应、步长和步频的成熟特异性前后差异具有相反的反应,在 PHV 前(减少)和 PHV 后(增加),并且在 PHV 前(约 18.6 kN·m)和 PHV 后(约 12.1 kN·m)运动员的后测中,刚度变化更大。其次,在神经肌肉反应(RSI、步长、刚度和触地时间)和强度感知方面,条件之间存在小到中等的差异,生物分组通常会减少前后变化。因此,生物分组可能提供了一种规定成熟特异性训练负荷的机制,这可能有助于减轻反复高强度活动的影响,从而降低受伤风险,同时促进运动员的长期发展。利用脚底加速度计的亚最大跑步协议(30-15)可以检测到足球特定训练活动中与成熟度相关的反应,这与强度的主观感知一致。根据年龄分组的小场比赛会引起不同成熟度运动员之间的不同急性反应,而使用生物分组的小场比赛时,这种反应会有所减轻。生物分组训练可能为从业者提供一种实用的方法来管理成熟特异性训练负荷,以降低受伤风险并促进长期运动员发展。