Sprint Conditioning of Junior Soccer Players:Effects of Training Intensity and TechniqueSupervision
Haugen, Thomas Andre; Tønnessen, Espen; Øksenholt, Øyvind Øvrebø; Haugen, Fredrik Lie; Paulsen, Gøran; Enoksen, Eystein; Seiler, Stephen
Original version
10.1371/journal.pone.0121827Abstract
The aims of the present study were to compare the effects of 1) training at 90 and 100%
sprint velocity and 2) supervised versus unsupervised sprint training on soccer-specific
physical performance in junior soccer players. Young, male soccer players (17 ±1 yr,
71 ±10 kg, 180 ±6 cm) were randomly assigned to four different treatment conditions over a
7-week intervention period. A control group (CON, n=9) completed regular soccer training
according to their teams’ original training plans. Three training groups performed a weekly
repeated-sprint training session in addition to their regular soccer training sessions performed
at A) 100% intensity without supervision (100UNSUP, n=13), B) 90% of maximal
sprint velocity with supervision (90SUP, n=10) or C) 90% of maximal sprint velocity without
supervision (90UNSUP, n=13). Repetitions x distance for the sprint-training sessions were
15x20 m for 100UNSUP and 30x20 m for 90SUP and 90UNSUP. Single-sprint performance
(best time from 15x20 m sprints), repeated-sprint performance (mean time over 15x20 m
sprints), countermovement jump and Yo-Yo Intermittent Recovery Level 1 (Yo-Yo IR1)
were assessed during pre-training and post-training tests. No significant differences in performance
outcomes were observed across groups. 90SUP improved Yo-Yo IR1 by a moderate
margin compared to controls, while all other effect magnitudes were trivial or small. In
conclusion, neither weekly sprint training at 90 or 100% velocity, nor supervised sprint training
enhanced soccer-specific physical performance in junior soccer players.
Description
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