Investigating the Relevance of Maximal Speed and Acceleration in Varsity-Level Female Ice Hockey Players.

IF 3.5 2区 医学 Q1 PHYSIOLOGY International journal of sports physiology and performance Pub Date : 2024-03-19 Print Date: 2024-05-01 DOI:10.1123/ijspp.2023-0417
Alexander S D Gamble, Kyle M A Thompson, Jessica L Bigg, Christopher Pignanelli, Lawrence L Spriet, Jamie F Burr
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Abstract

Purpose: To characterize and compare female ice hockey players' peak skating speed and acceleration ability during linear sprints and gameplay. We also sought to quantify the time spent at various speeds and the frequency of accelerations at different thresholds during games.

Methods: Seventeen varsity-level female ice hockey players (20 [1.4] y, 68.9 [4.9] kg, 167.6 [4.7] cm) participated in an on-ice practice session (performing 3 × 40-m linear sprints) and 4 regular-season games while being monitored using a local positioning system. Speed and acceleration were recorded from the sprint and within-game monitoring. Time on ice spent in relative skating speed zones and the frequency of accelerations at different intensities were recorded.

Results: Players' greatest peak speeds (29.5 [1.3] vs 28.3 [1.1] km/h) and accelerations (4.39 [0.48] vs 3.34 [0.36] m/s2) reached during gameplay were higher than those reached in linear sprinting (both P < .01). Peak in-game values were moderately predicted by linear sprint values for speed (r = .69, P < .01) but not for acceleration (r < .01, P = .95). Players spent little time at near-peak linear sprint speeds (≥80% [22.7 km/h], ∼3% time on ice; ≥90% [25.5 km/h], <1% of time on ice) during gameplay. However, 26% to 35% of accelerations recorded during the 4 games were ≥90% of linear sprint acceleration.

Conclusions: Although skating speed may be advantageous in specific game situations, our results suggest that players spend little time at near-maximal speeds while accelerating frequently during games. This warrants further investigation of direction changes, skating transitions, repeated sprints, and other determinant variables potentially related to on-ice success and the implementation of training strategies to improve repeated acceleration or qualities beyond maximal skating speed.

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研究校级女子冰球运动员最大速度和加速度的相关性。
目的:描述并比较冰上曲棍球女运动员在直线冲刺和比赛中的峰值滑行速度和加速能力。我们还试图量化比赛中各种速度下所花费的时间以及不同阈值下的加速频率:方法:17 名校级女子冰上曲棍球运动员(20 [1.4] 岁,68.9 [4.9] 公斤,167.6 [4.7] 厘米)参加了一次冰上练习(进行 3 × 40 米直线冲刺)和 4 场常规赛,同时使用本地定位系统进行监测。速度和加速度记录来自冲刺和赛内监测。记录了在相对滑行速度区的冰上时间和不同强度下的加速频率:结果:球员在比赛中达到的最大峰值速度(29.5 [1.3] vs 28.3 [1.1] km/h)和加速度(4.39 [0.48] vs 3.34 [0.36] m/s2)均高于线性冲刺时达到的峰值速度和加速度(P 均 < .01)。在速度方面,游戏中的峰值与线性冲刺的峰值有一定的预测关系(r = .69,P < .01),但与加速度的预测关系不大(r < .01,P = .95)。球员在接近峰值的线性冲刺速度上花费的时间很少(≥80% [22.7 km/h],3%的上冰时间;≥90% [25.5 km/h],结论:虽然滑行速度在特定比赛情况下可能具有优势,但我们的研究结果表明,运动员在比赛中频繁加速时,几乎没有时间以接近最大速度滑行。这就需要进一步研究方向变化、滑行转换、重复冲刺以及其他可能与冰上成功有关的决定性变量,并实施训练策略,以提高重复加速度或超越最大滑行速度的素质。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
12.10%
发文量
199
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance (IJSPP) focuses on sport physiology and performance and is dedicated to advancing the knowledge of sport and exercise physiologists, sport-performance researchers, and other sport scientists. The journal publishes authoritative peer-reviewed research in sport physiology and related disciplines, with an emphasis on work having direct practical applications in enhancing sport performance in sport physiology and related disciplines. IJSPP publishes 10 issues per year: January, February, March, April, May, July, August, September, October, and November.
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