Discriminating performance profiles of cycling disciplines

The aim of this study was to document the athletic profiles of adolescent and young adult high performance cycling athletes and to investigate to what extent different cycling disciplines can be discriminated from each other based on a generic test battery. A total of 243 adolescent (12.0- 15.99 y) and 63 young adult (>=16 y) male cyclists from road cycling, track cycling, cyclo-cross, and mountain bike (MTB) participated in the study. All participants performed four anthropometric, five physical, three motor coordination, and two cycling-specific tests. Using discriminant analyses, the young adult athletes could be correctly classified to their discipline for 80.7%. Track cyclists outperformed the other disciplines in explosive and coordinative skills while for cyclo-cross, and particularly MTB, the performance on the shuttle bike test seemed to be a distinctive variable. Road cyclists however, showed a significant overlap in performance characteristics with the other disciplines. In spite of the less pronounced discriminative character in the adolescent cycling population (51.0%), the discriminative characteristics are in line with the results of the young adults. This study allows to orient cyclists towards their best-fitted discipline in young adulthood. The relevance of these findings for coaches, experts and federations with respect to early/late specialization, and talent orientation are discussed.
© Copyright 2021 International Journal of Sports Science & Coaching. SAGE Publications. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:training science endurance sports junior sports
Tagging:frühzeitige Spezialisierung
Published in:International Journal of Sports Science & Coaching
Language:English
Published: 2021
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1747954120948146
Volume:16
Issue:1
Pages:110-122
Document types:article
Level:advanced