Training cessation and subsequent retraining of a world‐class female Olympic sailor after Tokyo 2020: A case study

Author:

Ishida Yuko1,Yamagishi Takaki2ORCID,Mujika Iñigo34ORCID,Nakamura Mariko2ORCID,Suzuki Eiko1,Yamashita Daichi12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sports Medical Center Japan Institute of Sports Sciences, Japan High Performance Sport Center Tokyo Japan

2. Department of Sport Science and Research Japan Institute of Sports Sciences, Japan High Performance Sport Center Tokyo Japan

3. Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine and Nursing University of the Basque Country Leioa Spain

4. Exercise Science Laboratory, School of Kinesiology, Faculty of Medicine Universidad Finis Terrae Santiago Chile

Abstract

AbstractOlympic sailing is a complex sport where sailors are required to predict and interpret weather conditions while facing high physical and physiological demands. While it is essential for sailors to develop physical and physiological capabilities toward major competition, monitoring training status following the competition is equally important to minimize the magnitude of detraining and facilitate retraining. Despite its long history in the modern Olympics, reports on world‐class sailors' training status and performance characteristics across different periodization phases are currently lacking. This case study aimed to determine the influence of training cessation and subsequent retraining on performance parameters in a world‐class female sailor. A 31‐year old female sailor, seventh in the Women's Sailing 470 medal race in Tokyo 2020, completely stopped training for 4 weeks following the Olympics, and resumed low‐intensity training for 3 weeks. Over these 7 weeks, 12.7 and 5.3% reductions were observed in 6 s peak cycling power output and jump height, respectively, with a 4.7% decrease in maximal aerobic power output. Seven weeks of training cessation‐retraining period induced clear reductions in explosive power production capacities but less prominent decreases in aerobic capacity. The current findings are likely attributed to the sailor's training characteristics during the retraining period.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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