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Perceptions of wellness to monitor adaptive responses to training and competition in elite australian football

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posted on 2024-07-26, 14:06 authored by Paul B. Gastin, Denny MeyerDenny Meyer, Dean Robinson
Perceptions of wellness are often used by athletes and coaches to assess adaptive responses to training. The purpose of this research was to describe how players were coping with the demands of elite level Australian football over a competitive season using subjective ratings of physical and psychological wellness and to assess the ecological validity of such a monitoring approach. Twenty-seven players completed ratings for 9 items (fatigue, general muscle, hamstring, quadriceps, pain/stiffness, power, sleep quality, stress, well-being). Players subjectively rated each item as they arrived at the training or competition venue on a 1-5 visual analog scale, with 1 representing the positive end of the continuum. A total of 2,583 questionnaires were analyzed from completions on 183 days throughout the season (92 +/- 24 per player, 103 +/- 20 per week; mean +/- SD). Descriptive statistics and multilevel modelling were used to understand how player ratings of wellness varied over the season and during the week leading into game day and whether selected player characteristics moderated these relationships. Results indicated that subjective ratings of physical and psychological wellness were sensitive to weekly training manipulations (i.e., improve steadily throughout the week to a game day low, p <0.001), to periods of unloading during the season (i.e., a week of no competition, p < 0.05) and to individual player characteristics (e.g., muscle strain after a game was poorer in players with high maximum speed, p <0.01). It is concluded that selfreported player ratings of wellness provide a useful tool for coaches and practitioners to monitor player responses to the rigorous demands of training, competition, and life as a professional athlete.

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ISSN

1064-8011

Journal title

Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research

Volume

27

Issue

9

Pagination

8 pp

Publisher

Lippincott Williams and Wilkins

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2013 National Strength and Conditioning Association. This is the accepted manuscript of an article published in Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research and is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. The publication title has since changed and is now Perceptions of wellness to monitor adaptive responses to training and competition in elite Australian football and is available from http://doi.org/10.1519/JSC.0b013e31827fd600

Language

eng

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