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      Effects of Fatigue on Throwing Performance in Experienced Team Handball Players

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          Abstract

          The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of central and peripheral physiological fatigue on throwing accuracy and ball release velocity in team handball. Twenty male subjects (age 24.7 ± 3.9 yrs, body mass 88.5 ± 5.0 kg, body height 1.86 ± 0.05 m, training experience 12.7 ± 3.8 yrs) from one handball team participated in this study. The participants completed four sets of eight laps of a circuit that consisted of specific team handball drills/exercises, with decreasing recovery times between the laps in each set in order to induce physiological fatigue. Duration of the recovery intervals determined the description of the effort made in each set: “light" (80 s recovery between laps), “moderate" (40 s), “hard" (20 s) and “very hard" (10 s). A heart rate, concentration of lactate in blood and the rate of perceived exertion (RPE) were recorded. Ball velocity and accuracy were measured after each set and they both decreased during a fatigue protocol. However, accuracy only decreased significantly in the end of the protocol, while ball release was already affected after the first round of the protocol. The results substantiate the initial hypothesis and confirm that both throwing accuracy and ball release velocity decrease significantly as physiological fatigue increases. These variables began to decrease when the fatigue quantification values were high or very high. The findings can be used by coaches to develop training programs to teach players how to identify fatigue thresholds and combat the effects of fatigue through decision-making skills at critical game moments.

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          Most cited references36

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          Use of RPE-based training load in soccer.

          The ability to accurately control and monitor internal training load is an important aspect of effective coaching. The aim of this study was to apply in soccer the RPE-based method proposed by Foster et al. to quantify internal training load (session-RPE) and to assess its correlations with various methods used to determine internal training load based on the HR response to exercise. Nineteen young soccer players (mean +/- SD: age 17.6 +/- 0.7 yr, weight 70.2 +/- 4.7 kg, height 178.5 +/- 4.8 cm, body fat 7.5 +/- 2.2%, VO2max, 57.1 +/- 4.0 mL x kg x min) were involved in the study. All subjects performed an incremental treadmill test before and after the training period during which lactate threshold (1.5 mmol x L above baseline) and OBLA (4.0 mmol x L) were determined. The training loads completed during the seven training weeks were determined multiplying the session RPE (CR10-scale) by session duration in minutes. These session-RPE values were correlated with training load measures obtained from three different HR-based methods suggested by Edwards, Banister, and Lucia, respectively. Individual internal loads of 479 training sessions were collected. All individual correlations between various HR-based training load and session-RPE were statistically significant (from r = 0.50 to r = 0.85, P < 0.01). The results of this study show that the session-RPE can be considered a good indicator of global internal load of soccer training. This method does not require particular expensive equipment and can be very useful and practical for coaches and athletic trainer to monitor and control internal load, and to design periodization strategies.
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            The effect of pitch dimensions on heart rate responses and technical demands of small-sided soccer games in elite players.

            The aim of this study was to examine the impact of changes in pitch size on heart rate responses and technical requirements of small-sided soccer games. Eight male soccer players participated in the study (mean+/-S.D.; age 18+/-1 years, height 1.80+/-0.1 m, weight 73.3+/-6.2 kg, estimated VO2peak 50.0+/-3.2 ml kg(-1) min(-1)). All players participated in small-sided games on three different pitch sizes (SSG1, 30 m x 20 m; SSG2, 40 m x 30 m; SSG3, 50 m x 40 m). Games consisted of 4 x 4 min of game play, interspersed by 2 min of active recovery. Heart rate measurements were made using a team-based monitoring system. Each game was also filmed to evaluate the technical actions. These tapes were analysed using a hand notation system. Mean+/-S.D. heart rates for the three games were not significantly different between conditions (SSG1, 175+/-9; SSG2, 173+/-11; SSG3, 169+/-6). The technical actions that changed as a result of changes in pitch size were the number of tackles (SSG1, 45+/-10; SSG2, 15+/-4; P<0.05) and shots (SSG1, 85+/-15; SSG 2, 60+/-18; SSG3, 44+/-9; P<0.05). Comparisons between the four 4 min intervals of game play indicated significant differences for both heart rate responses and the technical demands. These results demonstrate that changes in pitch size do not alter heart rate or the majority of technical requirements observed within small-sided games.
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              Heart rate and blood lactate correlates of perceived exertion during small-sided soccer games.

              The rating of perceived exertion (RPE) could be a practical measure of global exercise intensity in team sports. The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between heart rate (%HR(peak)) and blood lactate ([BLa(-)]) measures of exercise intensity with each player's RPE during soccer-specific aerobic exercises. Mean individual %HR(peak), [BLa(-)] and RPE (Borg's CR 10-scale) were recorded from 20 amateur soccer players from 67 soccer-specific small-sided games training sessions over an entire competitive season. The small-sided games were performed in three 4min bouts separated with 3min recovery on various sized pitches and involved 3-, 4-, 5-, or 6-players on each side. A stepwise linear multiple regression was used to determine a predictive equation to estimate global RPE for small-sided games from [BLa(-)] and %HR(peak). Partial correlation coefficients were also calculated to assess the relationship between RPE, [BLa(-)] and %HR(peak). Stepwise multiple regression analysis revealed that 43.1% of the adjusted variance in RPE could be explained by HR alone. The addition of [BLa(-)] data to the prediction equation allowed for 57.8% of the adjusted variance in RPE to be predicted (Y=-9.49-0.152 %HR(peak)+1.82 [BLa(-)], p<0.001). These results show that the combination of [BLa(-)] and %HR(peak) measures during small-sided games is better related to RPE than either %HR(peak) or [BLa(-)] measures alone. These results provide further support the use of RPE as a measure of global exercise intensity in soccer.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                J Hum Kinet
                J Hum Kinet
                hukin
                raon
                Journal of Human Kinetics
                De Gruyter Open
                1640-5544
                1899-7562
                1 December 2016
                15 December 2016
                : 54
                : 103-113
                Affiliations
                [1] 1CTS 642 (IDAFISAD) Research Group. Department of Physical Education and Sport. University of Granada (Spain)
                [2] 2Department of Sport Science and Physical Education of Nord University, Levanger (Norway)
                [3] 3CTS 642 (IDAFISAD) Research Group. Department of Methodology of Behavioural Sciences. University of Granada (Spain)
                [4] 4Department of Nursing Science. University School of Healthcare Science. University of Granada (Spain)
                [5] 5CTS 642 (IDAFISAD) Research Group. Department of Physical Education and Sport. University of Leόn (Spain)
                Author notes
                Ignacio J. Chirosa Department of Physical Education and Sport, University of Granada (Spain) Carretera de Alfacar S/N 18011 Phone: +34 958246979 Fax: +34 958244369 ichirosa@ 123456ugr.es
                Article
                hukin-2016-0039
                10.1515/hukin-2016-0039
                5187964
                28031762
                883b0c15-9dc7-4468-8c61-b045c6a9cc55
                © 2016 Editorial Committee of Journal of Human Kinetics
                History
                Page count
                Pages: 11
                Categories
                Section III – Sports Training

                specific training,physiological fatigue,heart rate,blood lactate,rating of perceived exertion

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