Sitko Sebastian, Legaz-Arrese Alejandro, Reverter-Masia Joaquín, Moliner-Urdiales Diego, Hernández-González Vicenç, Aixa-Requena Saül, Conesa-Milian Enric, Mayolas-Pi Carmen
Faculty of Health and Sport Sciences, University of Zaragoza, 50009 Zaragoza, Spain.
Human Movement Sports Research Group, University of Zaragoza, 50009 Zaragoza, Spain.
Sports (Basel). 2025 Jun 6;13(6):178. doi: 10.3390/sports13060178.
Organized sports are assumed to boost overall physical activity, but evidence suggests structured training does not always increase general activity outside formal sessions. This study explores the link between physical activity levels and weekly training hours in adolescent athletes across sports and competition levels. A total of 10,196 participants aged 11 to 19 were included in the analyses. Participants were classified into seven groups: inactive, somewhat active, non-competitive athletes, and athletes competing at the local, regional, national, or international level. They completed the Spanish version of the Physical Activity Questionnaire and answered questions regarding their performance level, training volume, and socioeconomic status. Girls exhibited lower physical activity levels than boys, even at higher competition levels where both sexes had comparable training hours. Competitive athletes reported the highest physical activity levels. In competitive athletes, physical activity levels decreased with age despite a substantial increase in weekly training hours. They were similar across athletes competing in different sports and at different levels, despite significant differences in training hours. Many athletes, including those at the national and international levels, displayed low physical activity levels, and no clear relationship was found between physical activity level and weekly training hours. The current study provides valuable insights into adolescent physical activity patterns by sex, age, sport, and competition level. Girls showed lower physical activity than boys, even with similar training hours. Physical activity levels declined with age despite increasing training volumes, and no strong association was observed between physical activity and weekly training hours. These results reveal a discrepancy between structured training and overall activity levels, challenging assumptions about the impact of sports participation on daily physical activity.
有组织的体育运动被认为能促进总体身体活动,但有证据表明,结构化训练并不总能增加正式训练课程之外的日常活动。本研究探讨了不同运动项目和竞赛水平的青少年运动员的身体活动水平与每周训练时长之间的联系。分析共纳入了10196名年龄在11至19岁之间的参与者。参与者被分为七组:不活跃组、 somewhat active组、非竞技运动员组,以及参加地方、地区、国家或国际级比赛的运动员组。他们完成了西班牙语版的身体活动问卷,并回答了有关其表现水平、训练量和社会经济地位的问题。女孩的身体活动水平低于男孩,即使在男女训练时长相当的较高竞赛水平也是如此。竞技运动员报告的身体活动水平最高。在竞技运动员中,尽管每周训练时长大幅增加,但身体活动水平却随年龄下降。尽管训练时长存在显著差异,但不同运动项目和不同水平的运动员的身体活动水平相似。许多运动员,包括那些参加国家级和国际级比赛的运动员,身体活动水平较低,且未发现身体活动水平与每周训练时长之间存在明确关系。本研究为按性别、年龄、运动项目和竞赛水平划分的青少年身体活动模式提供了有价值的见解。即使训练时长相似,女孩的身体活动也比男孩少。尽管训练量增加,但身体活动水平随年龄下降,且未观察到身体活动与每周训练时长之间存在强关联。这些结果揭示了结构化训练与总体活动水平之间的差异,对关于体育参与对日常身体活动影响的假设提出了挑战。