Woodward James, Jones Ben, Phillips Gemma, Till Kevin, Hendricks Sharief, Tucker Ross, Bleakley Chris, Tierney Gregory
Sport and Exercise Sciences Research Institute, Ulster University, Belfast, UK.
Carnegie Applied Rugby Research (CARR) Centre, Carnegie School of Sport, Leeds Beckett University, Leeds, UK.
Eur J Sport Sci. 2025 Mar;25(3):e12270. doi: 10.1002/ejsc.12270.
Contact with the head should be avoided during a rugby league tackle, given the inherent risks of head injuries. This study aimed to characterise a sample of tackles, retrospectively identified as resulting in a potential head injury by the Rugby Football League (RFL) match review panel.
Retrospective video analysis study.
746 tackles, identified by the RFL match review panel from the men's 2018 and 2019 Super League seasons, were analysed. Video clips were coded using an adapted analysis framework, characterising tackle stage, head contact, affected player, offending player/surface, offending body part/surface and tackle sanctioning. Data were reported as frequencies and percentages.
The majority of tackles resulting in a potential head injury occurred in the initial tackle contact stage (n = 590, 79.2%). The ball-carrier was most frequently affected (n = 372, 49.9%) compared to initial tacklers (n = 213, 28.6%). The initial tackler was the most frequently impacting player (n = 268, 36.0%), with the majority of potential head injuries occurring from direct head contact by the arm (n = 230, 34.1%), shoulder (n = 170, 25.2%) and head/neck (n = 145, 21.5%) of the impacting player. Head contact was present in 90.6% (n = 675) of the tackles resulting in a potential head injury. Of the sample of tackles, 16.1% (n = 109) of direct head contact events received a sanction from on-field match officials.
The initial tackle contact between the ball-carrier and initial tackler remains the area of focus for research into potential head injuries in elite-level men's rugby league, to improve awareness and understanding of the mechanisms of injury.
鉴于头部受伤的固有风险,在橄榄球联盟的擒抱动作中应避免头部接触。本研究旨在对被橄榄球联盟(RFL)比赛审查小组追溯认定为可能导致头部受伤的擒抱样本进行特征描述。
回顾性视频分析研究。
分析了RFL比赛审查小组从2018年和2019年男子超级联赛赛季中识别出的746次擒抱动作。使用经过调整的分析框架对视频片段进行编码,描述擒抱阶段、头部接触、受影响球员、犯规球员/地面、犯规身体部位/地面以及擒抱判罚情况。数据以频率和百分比形式呈现。
大多数可能导致头部受伤的擒抱动作发生在初始擒抱接触阶段(n = 590,79.2%)。与初始擒抱者(n = 213,28.6%)相比,持球者受影响最为频繁(n = 372,49.9%)。初始擒抱者是最常产生撞击的球员(n = 268,36.0%),大多数可能的头部受伤是由撞击球员的手臂(n = 230,34.1%)、肩部(n = 170,25.2%)和头部/颈部(n = 145,21.5%)直接接触头部所致。在可能导致头部受伤的擒抱动作中,90.6%(n = 675)存在头部接触。在擒抱样本中,16.1%(n = 109)的直接头部接触事件受到了场上比赛官员的判罚。
持球者与初始擒抱者之间的初始擒抱接触仍是精英男子橄榄球联盟中潜在头部受伤研究的重点领域,以提高对损伤机制的认识和理解。