Monitoring Cardiorespiratory Fitness in Professional Soccer Players: Is It Worth the Prick?
cost benefit
heart rate
lactate
player monitoring
Journal
International journal of sports physiology and performance
ISSN: 1555-0273
Titre abrégé: Int J Sports Physiol Perform
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101276430
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
01 Oct 2020
01 Oct 2020
Historique:
received:
09
11
2019
revised:
28
01
2020
accepted:
31
01
2020
pubmed:
3
10
2020
medline:
25
5
2021
entrez:
2
10
2020
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
To compare between-tests changes in submaximal exercise heart rate (HRex, 3 min, 12 km/h) and the speed associated with 4 mmol/L of blood lactate (V4mmol) in soccer players to get insight into their level of agreement and respective sensitivity to changes in players' fitness. A total of 19 elite professional players (23 [3] y) performed 2 to 3 graded incremental treadmill tests (3-min stages interspersed with 1 min of passive recovery, starting speed 8 km/h, increment 2 km/h until exhaustion or 18 km/h if exhaustion was not reached before) over 1.5 seasons. The correlation between the changes in HRex and V4mmol was examined. Individual changes in the 2 variables were compared (>2 × typical error considered "clear"). The changes in HRex and V4mmol were largely correlated (r = .82; 90% confidence interval, .65-.91). In more than 90% of the cases, when a clear individual change in HRex was observed, it was associated with a similar clear change in V4mmol (the same direction, improvement, or impairment of fitness) and conversely. When it comes to testing players submaximally, the present results suggest that practitioners can use HRex or V4mmol interchangeably with confidence. However, in comparison with a field-based standardized warm-up run (3-4 min, all players together), the value of a multistage incremental test with repeated blood lactate samplings is questionable for a monitoring purpose given its time, labor, cost, and poorer player buy-in.
Identifiants
pubmed: 33004681
doi: 10.1123/ijspp.2019-0911
pii: ijspp.2019-0911
doi:
pii:
Substances chimiques
Lactic Acid
33X04XA5AT
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM