A sleep analysis of elite female soccer players during a competition week
Purpose:
(1) To compare the sleep of female players from a professional soccer team to nonathlete controls across an in-season week and (2) to compare the sleep of core and fringe players from the same team on the night after a match to training nights.
Methods:
Using an observational design, 18 professional female soccer players and 18 female nonathlete controls were monitored for their sleep via wristwatch actigraphy across 1 week. Independent-sample t tests and Mann-Whitney U tests were performed to compare sleep between groups, while an analysis of variance compared sleep on training nights to the night after a match.
Results:
Soccer players had significantly greater sleep duration than nonathlete controls (+38 min; P = .009; d: 0.92), which may have resulted from an earlier bedtime (-00:31 h:min; P = .047; d: 0.70). The soccer players also had less intraindividual variation in bedtime than nonathletes (-00:08 h:min; P = .023; r: .38). Despite this, sleep-onset latency was significantly longer among soccer players (+8 min; P = .032; d: 0.78). On the night after a match, sleep duration of core players was significantly lower than on training nights (-49 min; P = .010; d: 0.77). In fringe players, there was no significant difference between nights for any sleep characteristic.
Conclusions:
During the in-season period, sleep duration of professional female soccer players is greater than nonathlete controls. However, the night after a match challenges the sleep of players with more match involvement and warrants priority of sleep hygiene strategies.
© Copyright 2021 International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance. All rights reserved.
| Subjects: | |
|---|---|
| Notations: | biological and medical sciences sport games |
| Published in: | International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
2021
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| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1123/ijspp.2020-0706 |
| Volume: | 16 |
| Issue: | 9 |
| Pages: | 1288-1294 |
| Document types: | article |
| Level: | advanced |