Towards a more objective time standard in competitive rowing

(Auf dem Weg zu einer objektiveren Zeitnorm im Wettkampfrudern)

Rowing needs a standardized Gold Medal Standard (GMS) to clearly compare performance across boat classes in competition. Here, we report a method to factor out environmental effects, developing a fairer GMS for individual rowing events. We used results from World Rowing Championships and Olympics Games (2005-2016) to calculate the difference between the fastest winning time of the day and other event winning times on the same day. From this, we calculated a prognostic GMS time for each event via repeated k-fold cross-validation linear regression. Then, we compared these values with the 10-year average winning time and the World Best Time (WBT). We repeated this process to develop prognostic podium standard (PS) times. The prognostic GMS times (RMSE = 9.47; R2 = 0.875) were universally slower than the WBT (current GMS) by 6.2 s on average but faster than the 10-year average by 12.3 s. The prognostic PS times (RMSE = 10.5; R2 = 897) were also slower than the WBT but faster than the 10-year average, by 12.2 and 6.3 s respectively. Our time-difference prediction model based on historical data generates non-outlier prognostic times. With the utilization of relative time difference, this approach promises a selection standard independent of environmental conditions, easily applicable across different sports.
© Copyright 2021 Journal of Quantitative Analysis in Sports. de Gruyter. Alle Rechte vorbehalten.

Bibliographische Detailangaben
Schlagworte:
Notationen:Ausdauersportarten Naturwissenschaften und Technik
Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Quantitative Analysis in Sports
Sprache:Englisch
Veröffentlicht: 2021
Online-Zugang:https://doi.org/10.1515/jqas-2020-0055
Jahrgang:17
Heft:4
Seiten:307-311
Dokumentenarten:Artikel
Level:hoch