Stress drives soccer athletes` wellness and movement: using convergent cross-mapping to identify causal relationships in a dynamic environment

Purpose Prediction of athlete wellness is difficult—or, many sports-medicine practitioners and scientists would argue, impossible. Instead, one settles for correlational relationships of variables gathered at fixed moments in time. The issue may be an inherent mismatch between usual methods of data collection and analysis and the complex nature of the variables governing athlete wellness. Variables such as external load, stress, muscle soreness, and sleep quality may affect each other and wellness in a dynamic, nonlinear, way over time. In such an environment, traditional data-collection methods and statistics will fail to capture causal effects. If we are to move this area of sport science forward, a different approach is required. Methods We analyzed data from 2 different soccer teams that showed no significance between player load and wellness or among individual measures of wellness. Our analysis used methods of attractor reconstruction to examine possible causal relationships between GPS/accelerometer-measured external training load and wellness variables. Results Our analysis showed that player self-rated stress, a component of wellness, seems a fundamental driving variable. The influence of stress is so great that stress can predict other components of athlete wellness, and, in turn, self-rated stress can be predicted by observing a player`s load data. Conclusion We demonstrate the ability of nonlinear methods to identify interactions between and among variables to predict future athlete stress. These relationships are indicative of the causal relationships playing out in athlete wellness over the course of a soccer season.
© Copyright 2024 International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:sport games biological and medical sciences
Tagging:Spielfähigkeit Saisonverlauf
Published in:International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance
Language:English
Published: 2024
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1123/ijspp.2024-0007
Volume:19
Issue:10
Pages:1030-1040
Document types:article
Level:advanced