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World-Class Sprinters’ Careers: Early Success Does Not Guarantee Success at Adult Age

Gennaro Boccia, Marco Cardinale, and Paolo Riccardo Brustio

Purpose: To quantify how many of the top 50 under-18 (U18) sprinters in the world managed to become top 50 ranked as adult competitors. The authors also described the career trajectory of athletes ranked in the top 50 during either U18 or senior category. Methods: A total of 4924 male and female athletes competing in sprint races and ranked in the International Association of Athletics Federations (now World Athletics) lists in any of the seasons between the 2000 and 2018 were included in the study. The athletes ranked in the top 50 positions of all-time lists during U18, senior, or both categories were analyzed. Results: Only 17% of the male and 21% of the female top 50 ranked U18 managed to become top 50 ranked senior athletes. The top 50 ranked senior athletes consistently produced yearly larger improvements during late adolescence and early adulthood compared with those who ranked in the top 50 at U18. Furthermore, top 50 ranked senior athletes reached their peak performance later compared with the top 50 ranked only in U18. Conclusions: This study confirms that early success in track and field is not a good predictor of success at senior level in sprinting events. The yearly performance improvements and their tracking provide the most suitable approach to identify athletes more likely to succeed as elite performers in adulthood. The authors hope that the results of this study can provide useful comparative data and reference criteria for talent-identification and -development programs.

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Elite Junior Throwers Unlikely to Remain at the Top Level in the Senior Category

Gennaro Boccia, Marco Cardinale, and Paolo Riccardo Brustio

Purpose: This study investigated (1) the transition rate of elite world-class throwers, (2) the age of peak performance in either elite junior and/or elite senior athletes, and (3) if relative age effect (RAE) influences the chance of being considered elite in junior and/or senior category. Methods: The career performance trajectories of 5108 throwers (49.9% females) were extracted from the World Athletics database. The authors identified throwers who had reached the elite level (operationally defined as the World all-time top 50 ranked for each age category) in either junior and/or senior category and calculated the junior-to-senior transition rate. The age of peak performance and the RAE were also investigated. Results: The transition rate at 16 and 18 years of age was 6% and 12% in males and 16% and 24% in females, respectively. Furthermore, elite senior throwers reached their personal best later in life than elite junior throwers. The athletes of both genders considered elite in the junior category showed a large RAE. Interestingly, male athletes who reached the elite level in senior category also showed appreciable RAE. Conclusions: Only a few of the athletes who reach the top 50 in the world at 16 or 18 years of age manage to become elite senior athletes, underlining that success at the beginning of an athletic career does not predict success in the athlete’s senior career. Moreover, data suggest that being relatively older may confer a benefit across the whole career of male throwers.

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Content Analysis of Volunteer Youth Training Programs in the U.S.

Donna Duffy and Brian Loy

Despite the apparent positive impact that coaching education programs have on the attitudes and behaviors of volunteer youth sport coaches, few programs exist to actually educate these coaches (American Academy of Pediatrics, 2001; Gould et al., 1990). The organizations that coordinate youth sport leagues have an obligation to train these volunteer coaches, but few coaches receive training and if they do receive training, it is often lacking in specific developmental areas. There are also often differences between the coaching education programs that do exist and what volunteer coaches actually want to learn and need to learn.

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British Columbia’s Contribution to the Dominion-Provincial Youth Training Program through the Provincial-Recreation Program

Ronald S. Lappage

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Age, Sex, and Training Specific Effects on Cross-Education Training

Aymen Ben Othman, Saman Hadjizadeh Anvar, José Carlos Aragão-Santos, Anis Chaouachi, and David G. Behm

body strength measures. Greater dominant limb training effects ( 12 , 21 ) may be related to the stronger neural networks associated with the preference of using the dominant limb for most tasks ( 4 ). The finding that youth training adaptations exceeded adults’ with unilateral chest press 1RM, elbow

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Sport-Specific Free Play Youth Football/Soccer Program Recommendations Around the World

Marty K. Baker, Jeffrey A. Graham, Allison Smith, and Zachary T. Smith

leads to elite adult sport success, however, very little research has been found to support this claim ( Bompa, 1995 ; Brouwers, De Bosscher, Schailleé, Truyuns, & Sotiriadou, 2009 ; Gould, 2010 ). With the above background information in mind, this review was conducted to examine youth training

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Player Session Rating of Perceived Exertion: A More Valid Tool Than Coaches’ Ratings to Monitor Internal Training Load in Elite Youth Female Basketball

Corrado Lupo, Alexandru Nicolae Ungureanu, Riccardo Frati, Matteo Panichi, Simone Grillo, and Paolo Riccardo Brustio

to game workouts). Although session-RPE was demonstrated to be a valuable and practical tool to monitor and plan individualized youth training, some limitations were reported in situational sports, where RPE values resulted unproportionally lower HR responses. 4 , 10 , 11 For these results, it has

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Building the Transnational “Body Beautiful”—K.V. Iyer and the Circulation of Bodybuilding Practices between India and the United States

Aishwarya Ramachandran and Conor Heffernan

based out of India, though his influence was far-reaching. Kuvalayananda spent his youth training in combat drills, martial arts, and other Indian physical education practices under the tutelage of the famous wrestler, gymnast, and militant revolutionary, Professor Rajaratna Manick Rao, before turning

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Talent Development in Football—A Holistic Perspective: The Case of KRC Genk

Knud Ryom, Mads Ravn, Rune Düring, and Kristoffer Henriksen

their professional youth trainings and comment on them afterward. To initiate dialogue and knowledge sharing within the academy, a separate changing room for all the academy coaches and leaders was regularly used, and the main topic of discussion in here was football. A U16 coach informed us of an

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Relationship Between Short- and Long-Term Planning in Sports: A 12-Week Case Study of a Spanish Canoeing Coach

Jardel Costa, Gonçalo Neves, Fábio Yuzo Nakamura, João Ribeiro, Ana Ramos, Lee Bell, Manuel Loureiro, Filipe Manuel Clemente, Isabel Mesquita, Patrícia Coutinho, and José Afonso

exercise training in strength and physique sports. Manuel Loureiro is a PhD student in the Doctoral Program in Sports Science in the Faculty of Sports of University of Porto. He splits his activity between investigation in sports training, sports pedagogy, and youth training as well as coaching volleyball