Impact of a 6-Day Official Tournament on Physical Demands, Perceptual–Physiological Responses, Well-Being, and Game Performance of Under-18 Basketball Players

Author:

García Franc123ORCID,Castellano Julen45ORCID,Vicens-Bordas Jordi6ORCID,Vázquez-Guerrero Jairo23ORCID,Ferioli Davide7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. INEFC (Institut Nacional d’Educació Física de Catalunya), Barcelona, Spain

2. Sports Performance Area, Futbol Club Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain

3. Barça Innovation Hub, Futbol Club Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain

4. Physical Education and Sports Department, Faculty of Education and Sport, University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU), Vitoria, Spain

5. GIzartea, Kirola eta Ariketa Fisikoa Ikerkuntza Taldea/Society, Sports, and Exercise Research Group (UPV/EHU), Vitoria, Spain

6. Sport Performance Analysis Research Group (SPARG) and Sport and Physical Activity Studies Center (CEEAF), University of Vic-Central University of Catalonia, Barcelona, Spain

7. New Basket Brindisi S.p.A., Brindisi, Italy

Abstract

Purpose: This study aimed to examine the effect of a 6-day basketball tournament on the physical demands, perceptual–physiological responses, well-being, and game statistics of elite under-18 (years of age) players. Methods: Physical demands (player load [PL], steps, impacts, and jumps, all normalized by playing time), perceptual–physiological responses (heart rate and rating of perceived exertion), well-being (Hooper index), and game statistics of 12 basketball players were monitored during 6 consecutive games. Linear mixed models and Cohen d effect sizes were used to assess differences among games. Results: Significant changes were found for PL per minute, steps per minute, impacts per minute, peak heart rate, and Hooper index over the tournament. Pairwise comparisons showed that PL per minute was higher in game #1 than in games #4 (P = .011, large), #5 (P < .001, very large), and #6 (P < .001, very large). PL per minute recorded during game #5 was also lower than in games #2 (P = .041, large) and #3 (P = .035, large). The number of steps per minute was higher in game #1 than in all other games (all P < .05, large to very large). Impacts per minute were significantly higher in game #3 than in games #1 (P = .035, large) and #2 (P = .004, large). The only physiological variable that varied significantly was peak heart rate (higher in game #3 than in game #6; P = .025, large). The Hooper index gradually increased throughout the tournament, indicating poorer player well-being as the tournament advanced. Game statistics did not significantly change among games. Conclusions: The average intensities of each game and the players’ well-being gradually decreased throughout the tournament. Conversely, physiological responses were mostly unaffected, and game statistics were unaffected.

Publisher

Human Kinetics

Subject

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

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