Pacing Strategy, Muscle Fatigue, and Technique in 1500-m Speed-Skating and Cycling Time Trials

in International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance

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Inge K. Stoter
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Brian R. MacIntosh
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Jared R. Fletcher
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Spencer Pootz
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Inge Zijdewind
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Florentina J. Hettinga
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Purpose:

To evaluate pacing behavior and peripheral and central contributions to muscle fatigue in 1500-m speed-skating and cycling time trials when a faster or slower start is instructed.

Methods:

Nine speed skaters and 9 cyclists, all competing at regional or national level, performed two 1500-m time trials in their sport. Athletes were instructed to start faster than usual in 1 trial and slower in the other. Mean velocity was measured per 100 m. Blood lactate concentrations were measured. Maximal voluntary contraction (MVC), voluntary activation (VA), and potentiated twitch (PT) of the quadriceps muscles were measured to estimate central and peripheral contributions to muscle fatigue. In speed skating, knee, hip, and trunk angles were measured to evaluate technique.

Results:

Cyclists showed a more explosive start than speed skaters in the fast-start time trial (cyclists performed first 300 m in 24.70 ± 1.73 s, speed skaters in 26.18 ± 0.79 s). Both trials resulted in reduced MVC (12.0% ± 14.5%), VA (2.4% ± 5.0%), and PT (25.4% ± 15.2%). Blood lactate concentrations after the time trial and the decrease in PT were greater in the fast-start than in the slow-start trial. Speed skaters showed higher trunk angles in the fast-start than in the slow-start trial, while knee angles remained similar.

Conclusions:

Despite similar instructions, behavioral adaptations in pacing differed between the 2 sports, resulting in equal central and peripheral contributions to muscle fatigue in both sports. This provides evidence for the importance of neurophysiological aspects in the regulation of pacing. It also stresses the notion that optimal pacing needs to be studied sport specifically, and coaches should be aware of this.

Stoter is with the Center of Human Movement Sciences, and Zijdewind, the Dept. of Neuroscience, University Medical Center of the University of Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands. MacIntosh, Fletcher, and Pootz are with the Faculty of Kinesiology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada. Hettinga is with the Centre of Sport and Exercise Sciences, University of Essex, Colchester, UK.

Address author correspondence to Florentina Hettinga at fjhett@essex.ac.uk.
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