The Use of Recovery Strategies in Gaelic Games: A Mixed-Methods Analysis

Author:

Daly Lorcan S.1234ORCID,Catháin Ciarán Ó.12ORCID,Kelly David T.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sport and Health Sciences, Technological University of the Shannon, Athlone, Ireland

2. SHE Research group, Technological University of the Shannon, Athlone, Ireland

3. Department of Physical Education and Sport Sciences, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland

4. Sport and Human Research Centre, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland

Abstract

Purpose: This study investigated Gaelic games players’ (1) use of postexercise recovery strategies; (2) recovery strategies according to sport, biological sex, and playing standard; and (3) recovery strategy periodization. Methods: Participants were a total of 1178 Gaelic players (n = 574 female), age 24.6 (6.6) years. These players completed a questionnaire investigating postexercise recovery strategies. Participants were further dichotomized by playing standard into developmental (club/collegiate; n = 869) and national (intercounty; n = 309) levels and by sporting codes: Gaelic football (n = 813), Camogie/hurling (n = 342), and handball (n = 23). Results: Active recovery (90.4%), cold temperature exposure (79.5%), regular sleep routine (79.1%), strategic nutritional intake (72.3%), and massage (68.8%) were the most commonly used recovery strategies. Recovery strategy use was periodized by 30% of players. A significantly larger proportion of national-level players apply cold temperatures (86.7% vs 73.1%; P = .001) and nutritional strategies (80.1% vs 69.2%; P = .012) when compared with developmental players. A significantly larger proportion of female players have a regular sleep routine (82.6% vs 75.1%; P = .037), apply external heat (63.4% vs 48.5%; P = .002), and perform stretching (76.5% vs 66.4%; P = .002) postexercise when compared with male players. A significantly larger proportion of male players employ nutritional strategies (77.6% vs 67.5%; P = .007) and consume a combination of protein and carbohydrate (62.1% vs 28.0%; P < .001) postexercise when compared with female players. Conclusion: Gaelic games players regularly implement a range of postexercise recovery strategies in an attempt to expediate the return of performance capacity and psychophysiological status to preexercise levels. The current findings may support practitioners who seek to prescribe effective and periodized recovery interventions targeting optimized preference/compliance.

Publisher

Human Kinetics

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation

Reference43 articles.

1. Playing Senior Inter-County Gaelic Games—Experiences, Realities and Consequences;Kelly E,2018

2. Defining training and performance caliber: a participant classification framework;McKay AK,2022

3. Influence of team rating on running performance in elite Gaelic football;Mangan S,2018

4. Gaelic football match-play: performance attenuation and timeline of recovery;Daly LS,2020

5. The match heart rate and running profile of elite under-21 Hurlers during competitive match-play;Young D,2018

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