Acceleration profile of high-impact movements during young football games: a cross-sectional study involving healthy children

Repetitive high-impact movements cause growth-related injuries in children. This study aimed to identify which movements during junior football games require >6 G and >8 G acceleration and the frequency at which they occur. Additionally, we compared the components of acceleration among movemen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sports biomechanics 2021-09, Vol.ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print), p.1-15
Hauptverfasser: Sasaki, Shogo, Nagano, Yasuharu, Suganuma, Yusaku, Koyama, Takeshi, Ichikawa, Hiroshi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Repetitive high-impact movements cause growth-related injuries in children. This study aimed to identify which movements during junior football games require >6 G and >8 G acceleration and the frequency at which they occur. Additionally, we compared the components of acceleration among movements with >8 G resultant acceleration. Eleven young male footballers (10.7 ± 0.4 years) played 8-a-side games while wearing a tri-axial accelerometer on their upper back. The number and frequency of the movements that generated >6 G and >8 G were calculated, and each directive acceleration of the top five items was compared using two-way ANOVA to examine the effect of movements. The frequency of movements that generated >6 G and >8 G acceleration during junior football games was 8.70 case/min and 2.62 case/min, respectively. The top five >8 G movements were braking and pre-braking in shuffle, slowdown, stop, and run/jog items. The vertical acceleration was significantly greater during braking in shuffle than during slowdown, stop, and run/jog and also greater during stop and pre-braking in shuffle than during run/jog movement. This pilot study suggests that decelerated movements mainly provoked high-impact situations and may be key actions for preventing overuse injury in young footballers.
ISSN:1476-3141
1752-6116
DOI:10.1080/14763141.2021.1970796