Journal article 922 views 453 downloads
Neuromuscular, physiological and perceptual responses to an elite netball tournament
Laurence P. Birdsey,
Matthew Weston,
Mark Russell,
Michael Johnston,
Christian J. Cook,
Liam Kilduff
Journal of Sports Sciences, Pages: 1 - 6
Swansea University Author: Liam Kilduff
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DOI (Published version): 10.1080/02640414.2019.1625613
Abstract
To examine responses to an International netball tournament, female athletes (n= 11) played three matches over consecutive days. External (accelerometry) and internal (heart rate; HR, session; sRPE, and differential; dRPE, rating of perceived exertion) load measures quantified match intensity. On ma...
Published in: | Journal of Sports Sciences |
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ISSN: | 0264-0414 1466-447X |
Published: |
2019
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa50479 |
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2019-07-18T21:35:34Z |
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2019-07-18T15:40:46.9522612 v2 50479 2019-05-22 Neuromuscular, physiological and perceptual responses to an elite netball tournament 972ed9a1dda7a0de20581a0f8350be98 0000-0001-9449-2293 Liam Kilduff Liam Kilduff true false 2019-05-22 EAAS To examine responses to an International netball tournament, female athletes (n= 11) played three matches over consecutive days. External (accelerometry) and internal (heart rate; HR, session; sRPE, and differential; dRPE, rating of perceived exertion) load measures quantified match intensity. On match-day mornings, and three days after match 3, well-being (brief assessment of mood; BAM+), biochemical (creatine kinase concentration; CK), neuromuscular (jump height; JH, peak power output; PPO) and endocrine function (salivary cortisol; C, testosterone; T, concentrations) were assessed. External load was similar between matches whereas dRPE and sRPE were greatest for match 3. Following match 1, CK increased, whereas BAM+, JH, C and T decreased. Following two matches, BAM+, PPO, and T decreased with CK increasing versus baseline. Following consecutive matches, CK (likely moderate; 27.9% ± 19.5%) and C (possibly moderate; 43.3% ± 46.8%) increased, whilst BAM+ (possibly moderate; −20.6% ± 24.4%) decreased. Three days post-tournament BAM+, T, PPO, and JH decreased. Mid-court elicited higher mean HR (possibly moderate; 3.7% ± 3.8%), internal and external intensities (possibly very large; 85.7% ± 49.6%) compared with goal-based positions. Consecutive matches revealed a dose–response relationship for well-being and physiological function; a response evident three days post-tournament. Journal Article Journal of Sports Sciences 1 6 0264-0414 1466-447X Recovery, monitoring, load, team sport, readiness to train 31 12 2019 2019-12-31 10.1080/02640414.2019.1625613 COLLEGE NANME Engineering and Applied Sciences School COLLEGE CODE EAAS Swansea University 2019-07-18T15:40:46.9522612 2019-05-22T09:46:12.3181477 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Aerospace, Civil, Electrical, General and Mechanical Engineering - Sport and Exercise Sciences Laurence P. Birdsey 1 Matthew Weston 2 Mark Russell 3 Michael Johnston 4 Christian J. Cook 5 Liam Kilduff 0000-0001-9449-2293 6 0050479-22052019094921.pdf birdsey2019.pdf 2019-05-22T09:49:21.8330000 Output 278213 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2020-06-03T00:00:00.0000000 true eng |
title |
Neuromuscular, physiological and perceptual responses to an elite netball tournament |
spellingShingle |
Neuromuscular, physiological and perceptual responses to an elite netball tournament Liam Kilduff |
title_short |
Neuromuscular, physiological and perceptual responses to an elite netball tournament |
title_full |
Neuromuscular, physiological and perceptual responses to an elite netball tournament |
title_fullStr |
Neuromuscular, physiological and perceptual responses to an elite netball tournament |
title_full_unstemmed |
Neuromuscular, physiological and perceptual responses to an elite netball tournament |
title_sort |
Neuromuscular, physiological and perceptual responses to an elite netball tournament |
author_id_str_mv |
972ed9a1dda7a0de20581a0f8350be98 |
author_id_fullname_str_mv |
972ed9a1dda7a0de20581a0f8350be98_***_Liam Kilduff |
author |
Liam Kilduff |
author2 |
Laurence P. Birdsey Matthew Weston Mark Russell Michael Johnston Christian J. Cook Liam Kilduff |
format |
Journal article |
container_title |
Journal of Sports Sciences |
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publishDate |
2019 |
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Swansea University |
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0264-0414 1466-447X |
doi_str_mv |
10.1080/02640414.2019.1625613 |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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facultyofscienceandengineering |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
department_str |
School of Aerospace, Civil, Electrical, General and Mechanical Engineering - Sport and Exercise Sciences{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Science and Engineering{{{_:::_}}}School of Aerospace, Civil, Electrical, General and Mechanical Engineering - Sport and Exercise Sciences |
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description |
To examine responses to an International netball tournament, female athletes (n= 11) played three matches over consecutive days. External (accelerometry) and internal (heart rate; HR, session; sRPE, and differential; dRPE, rating of perceived exertion) load measures quantified match intensity. On match-day mornings, and three days after match 3, well-being (brief assessment of mood; BAM+), biochemical (creatine kinase concentration; CK), neuromuscular (jump height; JH, peak power output; PPO) and endocrine function (salivary cortisol; C, testosterone; T, concentrations) were assessed. External load was similar between matches whereas dRPE and sRPE were greatest for match 3. Following match 1, CK increased, whereas BAM+, JH, C and T decreased. Following two matches, BAM+, PPO, and T decreased with CK increasing versus baseline. Following consecutive matches, CK (likely moderate; 27.9% ± 19.5%) and C (possibly moderate; 43.3% ± 46.8%) increased, whilst BAM+ (possibly moderate; −20.6% ± 24.4%) decreased. Three days post-tournament BAM+, T, PPO, and JH decreased. Mid-court elicited higher mean HR (possibly moderate; 3.7% ± 3.8%), internal and external intensities (possibly very large; 85.7% ± 49.6%) compared with goal-based positions. Consecutive matches revealed a dose–response relationship for well-being and physiological function; a response evident three days post-tournament. |
published_date |
2019-12-31T19:44:17Z |
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1821345324293160960 |
score |
11.04748 |