Global Challenges of Being a Strength Athlete during a Pandemic: Impacts and Sports-Specific Training Considerations and Recommendations
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Impact of the Global Pandemic on Strength Sport Participation and Competitions
3. Training Cessation Effects on Muscle Strength, Power and Mass
3.1. Minimum Training Frequency to Attenuate Performance Loss
3.2. Can Strength Athletes Expect a Greater Rate of Re-Adaptation?
4. Overcoming Injury
5. Goal Setting and Planning
6. Psychological Considerations for the Competitive Strength Athlete
7. Where to Next: The Importance of the Return of Strength Sports
7.1. Awareness of Physical and Mental Benefits
7.2. Strength Sports as Communities
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Competitors: Year to Date (n) | ||
---|---|---|
Country | 2019 | 2020 |
USA | 26,945 | 20,620 |
Russia | 4276 | 118 |
United Kingdom | 3625 | 1750 |
Australia | 1951 | 951 |
Japan | 1200 | 167 |
Italy | 921 | 557 |
Norway | 766 | 371 |
Slovakia | 698 | 60 |
New Zealand | 466 | 78 |
Canada | 424 | 122 |
Sweden | 417 | 312 |
Austria | 360 | 38 |
Spain | 306 | 272 |
Netherlands | 235 | 203 |
Portugal | 180 | 126 |
Brazil | 160 | 33 |
Switzerland | 147 | 54 |
Belarus | 100 | 30 |
Belgium | 71 | 35 |
Finland | 60 | 7 |
Thailand | 52 | 31 |
Study | Participant Characteristics | Study Protocol | Summary of Main Findings |
---|---|---|---|
Training Cessation | |||
Ogasawara et al. [22] | Untrained men, 24.7 ± 2.5 y (n = 15) | Bench press training (3 days p/wk) 15 wk continuous OR 6 wk then 3 wks no-training followed by 6 wks retraining. | No significant decreases in muscle CSA and 1RM after 3 wks of training cessation. |
Tran et al. [23] | Competitive surfers, 14.1 ± 1.6 y (n = 19) | 4 wks strength training cessation but maintained surfing participation. | Decreased vertical jump height (−5.3%), vertical jump peak velocity (−3.7%), isometric strength (−5.5%), relative isometric strength (−7.3%) and sensorimotor ability (i.e., athletes took longer to stabilize from a dynamic landing task). |
McMaster et al. [24] | Elite rugby union, rugby league and American football athletes | Systematic review article. | Strength levels maintained for up to 3 wks after cessation, but rate of decline increases between 5–16 wks. |
Chtourou et al. [25] | Healthy male physical education students, 23.1 ± 1.9 y (n = 31) | 14 wks strength training (squat, leg press, leg extension, leg curl) 8–10 RM then 5 wks of no training. | Squat jump and maximal voluntary contraction partially retained after 3 wks, but lost after 5 wks. |
Izquierdo et al. [26] | Basque ball playing men, ~24 y(n = 46) | 16 wk periodized training followed by 4 wk training cessation or taper. | Decrease in maximal strength (−6 to −9%) and muscle power output (−17 to −14%) of the arm and leg extensor muscles. Greater decrease for power compared to strength. |
Kordi and Siahkohian [27] | Elite male weightlifters (n = 12) | 2 wks training cessation. | Decreased snatch (~12kg), lift and jerk (~12kg), back squat (~10kg), front squat (~9kg), power snatch (~7kg). |
Bosquet et al. [28] | Mixed training status, sex and age | Systematic review with meta-analysis. | Similar decrease in strength and power during initial weeks but greater decrease in strength with longer durations. Reductions greater in older people and inactive people for strength and power. |
Hakkinen et al. [29] | Strength trained males, 20–32 y (n = 11) | 24 wks strength training between 70 and 120% of maximum followed by 12 wks of training cessation. | Decrease in maximal strength which correlated with the decrease in maximum IEMGs of the leg extensors. Decreased mean muscle-fibre area (both fibre types). |
Hakkinen and Komi [30] | Strength trained males, 26.4 ± 0.6 y (n = 14) | Concentric and eccentric strength training of leg extensors (80–120% of concentric maximum), 3 × p/wk for 16 wks followed by 8 wks of training cessation. | 10.5% decrease in IEMG during first 4 wks of training cessation. Decrease in force of ~8.3% after 24 wks. |
Sakugawa et al. [31] | Elderly men and women, 64.0 ± 2.3 y (n = 10) | 12 wks of strength training, 16 wks of training cessation and 8 wks of retraining. | Maximum strength remained above baseline after 16 wks. Retraining recovered maximum strength gains, RTD and functional capacity. |
Lo et al. [32] | Health men, 20.4 ± 1.4 y (n = 10 per group) | 24 wks of strength or endurance training, followed by 24 wks training cessation. | Strength and LM greater than the baseline values after 24 wks of training cessation. |
Ivey et al. [33] | Young men, 25 ± 3 y (n = 11); young women, 26 ± 2 y (n = 9); older men, 69 ± 3 y (n = 11) and older women, 68 ± 3 y (n = 11). | 9 wks of strength training followed by 31 wks of training cessation. | Muscle quality remained elevated above baseline in all groups except for older women. |
Staron et al. [34] | Females, 21.4 ± 1.4 y(n = 6) | 20 wks lower-limb strength training followed by 30–32 wks of training cessation then 6 wks retraining. | Small effect on fibre cross-sectional area but increased percentage of type IIb fibres and concomitant decrease in IIa fibres. Maximal dynamic strength decreased but remained above baseline. |
Melynk et al. [35] | Young males, 25 ± 3 y (n = 11); older males, 69 ± 3 y (n = 11); young females, 26 ± 2 y (n = 10); and older females, 68 ± 3 y (n = 11) | 9 wks unilateral knee extension strength training followed by 31 wks of training cessation. | Muscle CSA was not different to baseline in older males and young and older females but remained above baseline in young males. |
Training frequency | |||
Ronnestad et al. [37] | Professional male soccer players, 22–26 ± 2 y, (n = 14) | 10 wk strength training (2 × p/wk) followed by one group performed 1 session p/wk, another group performed 1 session p/fortnight. | 1 × p/wk training maintaining strength, sprint and jump performance. 1 × p/fortnight strength training reduced leg strength and 40 m sprint performance. |
Tavares et al. [38] | Untrained males, 24.7 ± 3.9 y (n = 33) | 8 wks of strength training (3–4 sets of 6–12 RM, three sessions/week in half-squat and knee extension exercises) followed by 8 wks reduced training, i.e., strength training 1× p/wk, 2 × p/wk or complete cessation. | No significant decrease in 1 RM and CSA with reduced training frequencies. However, a decrease in half-squat 1 RM (22.6%) and CSA (5.4%) was observed with complete training cessation. |
Androulakis-Korakakis et al. [39] | Healthy men, ≥ 1 year of strength training experience | Systematic review with meta-analysis. | Minimum of 1 set 1 × p/wk may improve strength. Unclear if similar effect in highly trained strength athletes. |
Tucci et al. [40] | Trained males, 34 ± 11 y (n = 34); and females 33 ± 11 y (n = 16) | 10–12 wks of lumbar extension strength exercise 1, 2 or 3 × p/wk followed by reduced training, i.e., 1 × p/fortnight (n = 18) or 1 × p/month (n = 22) for 12 wks. | Training 1 × p/fortnight and 1 × p/month showed no significant reduction in lumbar extension strength. Training cessation resulted in significant ~55% strength loss. |
Focus Area | Summary, Suggestions and Recommendations |
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Physical performance capacity |
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Injury |
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Goal setting and planning |
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Psychological considerations |
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Latella, C.; Haff, G.G. Global Challenges of Being a Strength Athlete during a Pandemic: Impacts and Sports-Specific Training Considerations and Recommendations. Sports 2020, 8, 100. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports8070100
Latella C, Haff GG. Global Challenges of Being a Strength Athlete during a Pandemic: Impacts and Sports-Specific Training Considerations and Recommendations. Sports. 2020; 8(7):100. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports8070100
Chicago/Turabian StyleLatella, Christopher, and G. Gregory Haff. 2020. "Global Challenges of Being a Strength Athlete during a Pandemic: Impacts and Sports-Specific Training Considerations and Recommendations" Sports 8, no. 7: 100. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports8070100