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Journal Article

Citation

Daly LS, Catháin C, Kelly DT. Sports (Basel) 2020; 8(12): e166.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, MDPI: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute)

DOI

10.3390/sports8120166

PMID

33348584

Abstract

This study investigated acute changes in markers of fatigue and performance attenuation during and following a competitive senior club-level Gaelic football match. Forty-one players were tested immediately pre-match, at half-time, full-time, 24 h post-match and 48 h post-match. Creatine kinase, drop jump height and contact-time, reactive strength index, countermovement jump height and perceptual responses were assessed at the aforementioned time-points. 18 Hz global positioning system devices were used to record players in-game workload measures. Compared to pre-match, perceptual responses (-27.6%) and countermovement jump height (-3.9%) were significantly reduced at full-time (p < 0.05). Drop jump height (-8.8%), perceptual responses (-27.6%), reactive strength index (-15.6%) and countermovement jump height (-8.6%) were significantly lower 24 h post-match (p < 0.05). Pre-match creatine kinase was significantly increased (+16.2% to +159.9%) when compared to all other time-points (p < 0.05). Total distance, total accelerations, total sprints, sprint distance and average heart rate were all correlated to changes in perceptual responses (r = 0.34 to 0.56, p < 0.05). Additionally, maximum speed achieved (r = 0.34) and sprint distance (r = 0.31) were significantly related to countermovement jump changes (p < 0.05), while impacts (r = 0.36) were correlated to creatine kinase increases (p < 0.05). These results demonstrate that Gaelic football match-play elicits substantial neuromuscular, biochemical and perceptual disturbances.


Language: en

Keywords

GPS; fatigue; recovery; monitoring; countermovement jump; Gaelic football; match-play; muscle damage; post match; post-match fatigue

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