Low sleep quality and morningness-eveningness scale score may impair ball placement but not kicking velocity in youth academy soccer players
Purpose: The current study examined the possible relationships between one-off single night sleep metrics and subsequent kicking performance in a youth soccer context.
Methods: Twenty-eight under-17 academy players (15.9±0.8years-old) completed a kick testing protocol consisting in 20 attempts, 18 m from the goal and against a goalkeeper. Four digital video cameras (240Hz) allowed to determine 3-D approach run, lower limb and ball velocities. Two additional cameras (60Hz) were used to calculate 2-D mean radial error, bivariate variable error and accuracy. Over 24h prior to testing, players were monitored by wrist actigraphy to determine their sleep indices. Self-reported sleep quality, sleepiness and chronotype scale scores (Horne and Östberg morningness-eveningness questionnaire) were also collected immediately before kicking experiment.
Results: Multiple linear regressions indicated that wake up time and chronotype contributed to 40% of mean radial error. Self-reported sleep quality influenced respectively on 19% and 24% of accuracy and bivariate variable error variances. Taken together self-reported sleep quality and wake up time explained 33% of accuracy (all p <0.05). Indicators of kicking velocity were non-significantly correlated with sleep (r =-0.30-0.29; p >0.05).
Conclusion: One-off sleep measures showed some sensitivity to acutely detect inter-individual oscillations in kicking performance. Low perceived sleep quality, later wake up time and a chronotype toward evening preference seem either related to immediately subsequent worst ability of ball placement when kicking. Monitoring sleep-wake transition and perceived sleep quality may be important to help prevent acute performance declines in targeting the goal during kick attempts from the edge of penalty area.
© Copyright 2022 Science and Medicine in Football. Taylor & Francis. All rights reserved.
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| Notations: | sport games junior sports |
| Published in: | Science and Medicine in Football |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
2022
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| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1080/24733938.2021.2014550 |
| Volume: | 6 |
| Issue: | 4 |
| Pages: | 528-538 |
| Document types: | article |
| Level: | advanced |