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Internal Training Load Affects Day-After-Pretraining Perceived Fatigue in Female Volleyball Players

Authors :
Corrado Lupo
Paolo Riccardo Brustio
Alexandru Nicolae Ungureanu
Gennaro Boccia
Source :
International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance. 16:1844-1850
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Human Kinetics, 2021.

Abstract

Purpose: The primary aim of this study was to evaluate whether the internal (session rating of perceived exertion [sRPE] and Edwards heart-rate-based method) and external training load (jumps) affect the presession well-being perception on the day after (ie, +22 h), according to age and tactical position, in elite (ie, Serie A2) female volleyball training. Methods: Ten female elite volleyball players (age = 23 [4] y, height = 1.82 [0.04] m, body mass = 73.2 [4.9] kg) had their heart rate monitored during 13 team (115 individual) training sessions (duration: 101 [8] min). Mixed-effect models were applied to evaluate whether sRPE, Edwards method, and jumps were correlated (P ≤ .05) to Hooper index factors (ie, perceived sleep quality/disorders, stress level, fatigue, and delayed-onset muscle soreness) in relation to age and tactical position (ie, hitters, central blockers, opposites, and setters). Results: The results showed a direct relationship between sRPE (P P = .003). Conclusions: Findings indicated that female volleyball players’ internal training load influences the pretraining well-being status on the day after (+ 22 h). Therefore, coaches can benefit from this information to accurately implement periodization in a short-term perspective and to properly adopt recovery strategies in relation to the players’ well-being status.

Details

ISSN :
15550273 and 15550265
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2f8d1dde3f6cdf58e787cf79e01a12c5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1123/ijspp.2020-0829