Reprint

Fitness Assessment, Athlete’s Monitoring Cycle and Training Interventions in Team Sports

Edited by
February 2022
302 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-3297-4 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-3298-1 (PDF)

This is a Reprint of the Special Issue Fitness Assessment, Athlete’s Monitoring Cycle and Training Interventions in Team Sports that was published in

Environmental & Earth Sciences
Medicine & Pharmacology
Public Health & Healthcare
Summary

Team sports training are progressively growing, and thus challenging strength and conditioning coaches and head coaches. As part of a well-prepared training strategy, it is important to establish a functional relationship among fitness assessment, load, and well-being monitoring and readiness analysis to identify the consequences of training stimulus for players. Each of these topics has already been isolated in research; however, it is important to bridge the gap between them and establish a greater and more comprehensive approach among fitness adaptations, training monitoring, and specific interventions performed. This may help us to achieve a clearer view of the big picture in terms of the consequences for players, such as, considering their exposure to successful biological adaptations or less successful cases, including illness or injuries.

As it is clear that more research should be performed on the relationship among these dimensions and topics, the aim of the Special Issue on "Fitness Assessment, Athlete’s Monitoring Cycle and Training Interventions in Team Sports" was to publish high-quality original investigations, systematic reviews, and meta-analysis in the research field of team sports.

We have published 22 articles that cover the topics of performance assessment and relationships between fitness measures; training load monitoring, well-being, and readiness in team sports;training interventions; complementary strategies for performance (e.g., nutrition, supplementation, psychology, injury preventions, and recovery); and determinants of illness and injuries in players.

Format
  • Hardback
License and Copyright
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
football; load monitoring; situational variables; GPS; sports science; youth handball players′ characteristics; RSA test; anaerobic performance; playing position characteristics; asymmetry; soccer; strength; youth; muscles; acceleration; deceleration; in-season; non-starters; pre-season; soccer; starters; training monotony; training strain; ball throwing; hand size; arm span; motor performance; stretch-shortening cycle; additional weight; ability-to-change-direction; speed; balance; repeated change of direction; autonomic nervous system; cardiac autonomic; vagal tone; adolescents; training load; soccer; match analysis; team sports performance; exercise training; velocity; team sport performance; injury risk screening; athletes assessment; landing error score system; counter movement jump; team sports; statistical analysis; correlation; monitoring; RPE; heart rate; beach handball; training load; youth athletes; training interventions; fitness assessment; strength and conditioning; football; female; association football; performance; GPS; external load; load monitoring; sports science; isoinertial training; strength training; vertical jump; change of direction ability; association football; performance; load monitoring; high-speed running; match; match result; soccer; performance analysis; heart rate; technology; inertial measurement units; neuromuscular; repeated jump; max speed; soccer; football; Loughborough Intermittent Shuttle Test; muscle soreness; maximal isometric contraction strength; countermovement jump; Yo-Yo Intermittent Recovery Test level 1; monitoring; soccer constraints; small-sided games; training interventions; training load; football; performance; athletic performance; sports training; internal load; external load; body symmetry; ski jumpers; segmental phase angle; visceral fat area; BIA; winter sports; nutritional status; soccer training; s-RPE; Hooper index; GPS; match day; match location; physiology; youth; heart rate; time motion; notational analysis