Aerobic fitness of elite soccer players linked to player positions
Researchers have linked the fitness of elite soccer players to the positions they play. The ability to make this assessment can help coaches regulate individual training loads based on player position.
The study found that all positions on a soccer pitch except centre backs showed a strong association between aerobic power training and high-intensity performance.
鈥淚t is perhaps not surprising because centre backs cover less distance and perform fewer power events than other field positions,鈥 said Matteo Masucci, a PhD candidate in Kinesiology and Health Sciences at the University of 蓝莓视频. 鈥淐entre backs face the pitch and control the situation. They have a slower pace and play more of a mental or tactical game. Midfielders analyze everything in front and behind them and must react in both these directions. Strikers need to express maximal effort to get a shot off at the right time.鈥
Researchers worked with data from 62 Italian Serie A soccer players over a full season between 2014-15 and 2018-19 and tested whether targeted treadmill training and lactate blood samples from the players鈥 earlobes properly assessed aerobic fitness 鈥 the overall amount of energy required to perform a high-power event like acceleration or deceleration.
鈥淲hen paired with videos of on-field performance, our analysis showed that the link between aerobic fitness and repeated high-intensity sequences in a game varied with the position a soccer competitor played,鈥 said Masucci, who is also a soccer coach.
It was found that during a聽90-minute game, an elite soccer player can make up to 1,400聽activity changes and up to 200聽short multidirectional high-intensity efforts, necessitating physical conditioning not only in terms of speed but in movement pattern changes as well.
Previous studies have investigated the association between aerobic fitness and soccer, but only in the speed category. Masucci said because of the acceleration and deceleration that elite soccer players must expend, as well as the time it takes to recover from high-intensity sequences, it is also important to study high-power events that are not related to speed.
鈥淭hese findings mean that coaches can use lactate blood samples and incremental treadmill assessments to provide valuable information about soccer players,鈥 Masucci said. 鈥淧layers who have a聽high metabolic power distance cut-off equal to or higher than聽1,450聽m聽for centre backs,聽1,990聽m for full-backs,聽2,170聽m for midfielders and聽1,670聽m for forwards could be considered as having superior aerobic fitness. Therefore, coaches should consider these individual differences in physiological and physical performance when planning training and game strategy.鈥
The study, , was led by Vincenzo Manzi (Universit脿 Telematica Pegaso), and co-authored by Giuseppe Annino, Cristian Savoia, Giuseppe Caminiti, Elvira Padua, Masucci, Rosario D鈥橭nofrio and Ferdinando Iellamo. It was published in Biology of Sport.