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Neuromuscular, physiological and perceptual responses to an elite netball tournament

Laurence P. Birdsey, Matthew Weston, Mark Russell, Michael Johnston, Christian J. Cook, Liam Kilduff Orcid Logo

Journal of Sports Sciences, Pages: 1 - 6

Swansea University Author: Liam Kilduff Orcid Logo

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...

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Published in: Journal of Sports Sciences
ISSN: 0264-0414 1466-447X
Published: 2019
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa50479
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first_indexed 2019-05-22T15:49:10Z
last_indexed 2019-07-18T21:35:34Z
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spelling 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 STSC 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 Sport and Exercise Sciences COLLEGE CODE STSC 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
container_start_page 1
publishDate 2019
institution Swansea University
issn 0264-0414
1466-447X
doi_str_mv 10.1080/02640414.2019.1625613
college_str Faculty of Science and Engineering
hierarchytype
hierarchy_top_id facultyofscienceandengineering
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Science and Engineering
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofscienceandengineering
hierarchy_parent_title 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
document_store_str 1
active_str 0
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 2019-12-31T04:01:57Z
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score 10.997456