Physical and physiological differences of backs and forwards from the Brazilian National rugby union team
Autor: | Cal Abad Cc, José Eduardo Moraes, Kobal R, Lucas A. Pereira, Teixeira Vaz Lm, K. Kitamura, Irineu Loturco, Fábio Yuzo Nakamura |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Football Physical Therapy Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation RESTING HEART RATE 03 medical and health sciences Vertical jump Young Adult 0302 clinical medicine Squat jump Heart Rate medicine Humans Orthopedics and Sports Medicine 030212 general & internal medicine Championship Exercise physiology Exercise 030229 sport sciences Cross-Sectional Studies Sprint Countermovement jump Physical therapy Exercise Test Physical Endurance Psychology Brazil |
Zdroj: | The Journal of sports medicine and physical fitness. 57(12) |
ISSN: | 1827-1928 |
Popis: | Background The aim of this study was to compare backs and forwards rugby union players recruited to a National team in the following physical and physiological indicators: anthropometrics, squat jump (SJ), countermovement jump (CMJ), 10- and 30-meter sprint, resting heart rate variability (HRV), Yo-Yo Test and heart rate (HR) at 2 minutes of test. Methods The measurements were performed on the first day of a training camp planned to finely select the players who would participate in the 2016 America's Rugby Championship. The magnitude-based inference was used in the comparisons. Results Backs demonstrated almost certainly greater distance in the Yo-Yo Test (backs: 2305.9±231.3 meters; forwards: 1802.4±361.2 meters), higher vertical jump height in both SJ and CMJ (SJ: 44.0±5.3 cm vs. 37.6±5.4 cm; CMJ: 46.1±5.0 cm vs. 40.0±5.5 cm, for backs and forwards respectively), and superior sprint velocity in 10- and 30-m (10-m: 6.02±0.23 m.s-1 vs. 5.51±0.34 m.s-1; 30-m: 7.46±0.25 m.s-1 vs. 6.89±0.37 m.s-1, for backs and forwards respectively) than the forwards. In contrast, forwards were almost certainly taller and heavier than backs, and displayed higher sprint momentum in 10- and 30-meters (10 meters: 513.0±51.6 kg.m.s-1 vs. 598.4±53.1 kg.m.s-1; 30 meters: 635.3±56.1 kg.m.s-1 vs. 749.0±70.5 kg.m.s-1, for backs and forwards respectively). The submaximal HR in the first 2-minutes of the Yo-Yo test was likely lower in the backs than in the forwards (77.6±5.1% of the maximal HR vs. 81.3±5.4% of the maximal HR for backs and forwards respectively), while HRV indices were not different between backs and forwards. Conclusions Playing position appears to be determined by the players' physical and physiological characteristics in top-level rugby union, and the submaximal HR measured during Yo-Yo test can be a simple alternative to discriminate backs and forwards. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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