Deliberate practice in training differentiates the best Kenyan and Spanish long-distance runners

The aim of this novel research was to compare the amount of systematic training and the different training activities undertaken by elite-standard long-distance runners during their first seven years of systematic training. Participants were divided into three performance groups: world-class Kenyans...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of sport science 2020-08, Vol.20 (7), p.887-895
Hauptverfasser: Casado, Arturo, Hanley, Brian, Ruiz-Pérez, Luis Miguel
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The aim of this novel research was to compare the amount of systematic training and the different training activities undertaken by elite-standard long-distance runners during their first seven years of systematic training. Participants were divided into three performance groups: world-class Kenyans (N = 19), European-standard Spanish athletes (N = 18), and Spanish national-standard athletes (N = 18). Performance and training data were obtained for two-year periods using retrospective recall (including training diaries) from the time the athletes began systematic training, until the seventh year after. These activities included high-intensity training sessions considered deliberate practice (DP) and easy runs. There was no evidence that starting systematic training at a younger age was advantageous, and easy runs (a non-DP activity) were the most used by participants as a proportion of overall running distance. As part of an overall higher accumulation of distance run (P 
ISSN:1746-1391
1536-7290
DOI:10.1080/17461391.2019.1694077