Anyadike-Danes Kechi, Donath Lars, Kiely John
Department of Intervention Research in Exercise Training, German Sport University Cologne, Cologne, Germany.
Faculty of Education and Health Sciences, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland.
Sports Med Open. 2023 Nov 21;9(1):109. doi: 10.1186/s40798-023-00657-6.
The planning of training is a popular yet controversial topic among coaches and sports scientists. Periodisation is often presented in the literature as the most efficacious approach to planning training. While historically surveys of coaches appeared to support this a key failing was that no unified definition of periodisation exists. Recent surveys offering a periodisation definition and an alternative planning methodology found many choosing the alternative therefore questioning periodisation's wide acceptance. The current survey looked to explore how coaches perceived specific concepts, drawn from the literature, that relate to the planning of training.
106 coaches [age range: 18-65+ years, 31% 15+ years coaching, 58% individual-events/sports and 32% international level] from across the world completed a novel cross-sectional online survey on the planning of training and the training process. Topics included use of periodisation, division of time into discrete periods, assignment of goals and training to pre-determined periods and the adaptability of pre-established plans.
The majority described their planning approach as training periodisation (71%). Similarly, there was strong agreement with the necessity to determining a goal for the season (85%) and divide the season into distinct manageable periods of time (73%). When examining whether physical adaptations are achievable within specific and fixed timeframes only a minority (33%) agreed, a similar result was found for training physical capacities in a sequential order (37%). Finally, there was limited support for training targets remaining fixed over a training period (10%).
As a tool for the planning of athlete's training, periodisation is often presented as the best and most popular approach. Recent research however has highlighted possible discrepancies in its usage among practitioners. The results of this survey echo this and question the acceptance of periodisation concepts even among periodisation users. In part this may be due to key tenets of periodisation no longer being supported by research or practice. A lingering question then is whether the beliefs of coaches, developed through experience and supported by research, will continue to be marginalized. If sports scientists wish to aid coaches then they need to be engaged in future research initiatives as co-collaborators.
训练计划是教练和体育科学家们热议却颇具争议的话题。在文献中,周期化训练常被视为规划训练最有效的方法。虽然历史上对教练的调查似乎支持这一点,但一个关键缺陷是不存在周期化训练的统一界定。最近的调查给出了周期化训练的定义及一种替代规划方法,结果发现很多人选择了替代方法,因此对周期化训练被广泛接受提出了质疑。本次调查旨在探究教练如何看待从文献中提取的与训练规划相关的特定概念。
来自世界各地的106名教练[年龄范围:18 - 65岁以上,31%有15年以上执教经验,58%从事个人项目/运动,32%达到国际水平]完成了一项关于训练规划和训练过程的新型横断面在线调查。主题包括周期化训练的使用、将时间划分为离散阶段、为预定阶段分配目标和训练内容以及既定计划的适应性。
大多数人将他们的规划方法描述为训练周期化(71%)。同样,对于确定赛季目标的必要性(85%)以及将赛季划分为不同的可管理时间段(73%),也有强烈的共识。在考察身体适应能力是否能在特定且固定的时间框架内实现时,只有少数人(33%)表示认同,按顺序训练身体能力的情况也类似(37%)。最后,对于训练目标在整个训练期间保持不变,支持率有限(10%)。
作为一种规划运动员训练的工具,周期化训练常被视为最佳且最受欢迎的方法。然而,最近研究突出了其在从业者中的使用可能存在差异。本次调查结果也印证了这一点,并对周期化训练概念在周期化训练使用者中的接受度提出质疑。部分原因可能是周期化训练的关键原则不再得到研究或实践的支持。随之而来的一个问题是,教练们基于经验并得到研究支持的信念是否会继续被边缘化。如果体育科学家希望帮助教练,那么他们需要作为合作研究者参与未来的研究项目。