What Are We Doing Wrong When Athletes Report Higher Levels of Fatigue From Traveling Than From Training or Competition? (CROSBI ID 285354)
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Podaci o odgovornosti
Calleja-Gonzalez, Julio ; Marques-Jimenez, Diego ; Jones, Margaret ; Huyghe, Thomas ; Navarro, Fernando ; Delextrat, Anne ; Jukic, Igor ; Ostojic, Sergej M. ; Sampaio, Jaime E. ; Schelling, Xavi ; Alcaraz, Pedro E. ; Sanchez-Bañuelos, Fernando ; Leibar, Xavier ; Mielgo-Ayuso, Juan ; Terrados, Nicolas
engleski
What Are We Doing Wrong When Athletes Report Higher Levels of Fatigue From Traveling Than From Training or Competition?
Performance at the elite level in running-based team sports requires outlining the cyclical nature in which physiological and biomechanical loads lead to adaptation of the biological system as a whole (Vanrenterghem et al., 2017). Very commonly, there are congested fixture periods that seem to have no effect on physical activity, technical performance, and injury incidence (Dellal et al., 2015) injury rates or patterns (Carling et al., 2016), but do seem to decrease tactical performance, as measured by levels of movement synchronization (Folgado et al., 2015). A very high traveling frequency is required to compete in elite professional sport. For example, the National Basketball Association’s regular season consists of 82 games (41 home, 41 away) played over a 6-month period (Sampaio et al., 2015). This can have consequences for both physiological and psychological status and has the potential to impair performance,
fatigue, competition, sport, TRIP, training, travel, recovery
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Podaci o izdanju
Povezanost rada
Edukacijsko-rehabilitacijske znanosti, Interdisciplinarne društvene znanosti, Kineziologija, Psihologija