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Effect of Ischemic Preconditioning on Land-Based Sprinting in Team-Sport Athletes

Neil Gibson, James White, Mhari Neish, and Andrew Murray

Purpose:

The study aimed to assess whether exposure to ischemic preconditioning (IPC) in a trained population would affect land-based maximal sprinting performance over 30 m.

Methods:

Twenty-five well-trained participants regularly involved in invasion-type team-sport events were recruited to take part in a randomized crossover study design. Participants underwent both an IPC and a placebo treatment involving 3 periods of 5-min occlusion applied unilaterally (3 × 5-min occlusion to each leg) at either 220 mmHg or 50 mmHg, respectively. Each period of occlusion was followed by 5 min of reperfusion. After treatment, 3 maximal sprints over a distance of 30 m were undertaken from a standing start interspersed with 1-min recovery. Split times were recorded at 10, 20, and 30 m.

Results:

No significant effects of the IPC treatment were observed on sprint speed (P < .05) at any of the split timings; however, a small and negative effect was observed in female participants. Calculated effect sizes of the treatment were found to be trivial (<0.2).

Conclusions:

Results from the current study suggest there to be no benefit to team-sport players in using IPC as a means of enhancing sprint performance over a distance of 30 m. While IPC has been shown to be beneficial to sprint activities in other sports such as swimming, further research is required to elucidate whether this is the case over distances associated with land-based events in track and field or in events reliant on repeated-sprint ability.

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Interference Effects of Different Resistance-Training Protocols on Rowing Ergometer Performance: A Study on Semiprofessional Rowers

Danica Janicijevic, Mauricio Elías Leandro Quidel-Catrilelbún, Andrés Baena-Raya, and Amador García-Ramos

Rowing is a highly demanding Olympic sport that requires exceptional strength and endurance. 1 A typical rowing competition involves covering a straight 2000-m course in the shortest time possible, with rowers performing over 200 strokes during a 5- to 7-minute race. 2 , 3 The sport relies

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Test Validation in Sport Physiology: Lessons Learned From Clinimetrics

Franco M. Impellizzeri and Samuele M. Marcora

We propose that physiological and performance tests used in sport science research and professional practice should be developed following a rigorous validation process, as is done in other scientific fields, such as clinimetrics, an area of research that focuses on the quality of clinical measurement and uses methods derived from psychometrics. In this commentary, we briefly review some of the attributes that must be explored when validating a test: the conceptual model, validity, reliability, and responsiveness. Examples from the sport science literature are provided.

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University Rankings in Sport Science: A True Reflection of Excellence?

Ivana Matic Girard and Olivier Girard

, international outlook, and industry income. • Academic Ranking of World Universities: Also known as the ShanghaiRanking, it considers research output and quality, including Nobel Prizes and Fields Medals won, highly cited researchers, and articles published in Nature and Science . Sport science remains a

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Tramadol and Cycling: Is It the End of a “Painful” Relationship? An Insight From 60,802 Doping-Control Samples From 2012 to 2020

Thomas Zandonai, Ana M. Peiró, Caterina Covelli, Xavier de la Torre, and Francesco Botré

. Conclusions In recent years, the debate about the use of tramadol in cycling has pervaded the sport’s environment. This brief report, through an extraordinary number of samples collected from different sports disciplines, evidenced a clear decreasing use of tramadol in cycling in the last decade. References 1

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The Use of Relative Speed Zones in Australian Football: Are We Really Measuring What We Think We Are?

Nick B. Murray, Tim J. Gabbett, and Andrew D. Townshend

Australian football (AF) is a fast-paced, highly intermittent sport requiring players to perform high-intensity activities (ie, sprinting, running, and physical contacts) interspersed with low-speed (ie, walking and jogging) movements. 1 , 2 It is common practice in elite sporting organizations to

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Objectifying Tactics: Athlete and Race Variability in Elite Short-Track Speed Skating

Marco J. Konings and Florentina J. Hettinga

offer interesting insights into that individual’s race strategy and the extent to which athletes modify their pacing behavior in response to the behavior of other competitors. 9 For example, in several middle-distance and endurance sport disciplines, finishing times are irrelevant as long as you finish

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Seasonal Training Load and Wellness Monitoring in a Professional Soccer Goalkeeper

James J. Malone, Arne Jaspers, Werner Helsen, Brenda Merks, Wouter G.P. Frencken, and Michel S. Brink

acceptable levels of reliability and validity for the PlayerLoad™ calculation. 7 The device components are the same as those used in the Catapult S5 model, which has demonstrated valid measures for velocity-based metrics. 8 The data collection followed the guidelines for using GPS data in sport. 9 , 10

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The Relevance of Muscle Fiber Type to Physical Characteristics and Performance in Team-Sport Athletes

Henry J. Hopwood, Phillip M. Bellinger, Heidi R. Compton, Matthew N. Bourne, and Clare Minahan

this knowledge, little research has investigated whether an optimal MFT exists for team-sport athletes. While there is a large heterogeneity in MFT between different muscles within an individual, there does appear to be a between muscle phenotype. 6 , 8 – 10 Practically, this has relevance given that

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The Effect of a Synthetic-Grass Sport Surface on Physiology and Perception During Intermittent Exercise in Hot Conditions

Gurpreet Singh, Kyle J.M. Bennett, Hannah McGuigan, Scott G. Goddard, and Christopher J. Stevens

recent Australian government report has called for research that determines whether synthetic grass surfaces affect markers of heat stress and thermoregulation in humans. 13 Additionally, an International Olympic Committee consensus statement on recommendations and regulations for sport events in the