1 / 14

SISA Soccer Protocol

SISA Soccer Protocol. SHMD 349. S ports I nformation & S cience A gency. SISA is a project of the South African Sports Commission. Focuses on creating a scientific and technological base for sport in South Africa.

Download Presentation

SISA Soccer Protocol

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SISA Soccer Protocol SHMD 349

  2. Sports Information & Science Agency • SISA is a project of the South African Sports Commission. • Focuses on creating a scientific and technological base for sport in South Africa. • The purpose of this manual is to assist testing personnel in conducting standardized physical evaluations of elite athletes.

  3. Introduction • Soccer requires players to: • Exercise repetitively at high intensities, • using large muscle groups, • for periods of several seconds to several minutes for the duration of a game (90 min). • Total distance covered during a single match: • 10-11 km • moderate-intensity running for top league players.

  4. Introduction • Approximately 10% of total distance is being covered: • short (4-5 sec) • high intensity bursts • with rest periods of ~30 sec • Players may: • start from a stationary position 48-70 times during a game, • and have to accelerate 40-62 times per match.

  5. Introduction • Higher the quality of the team: = greater running distance. = greater intensity and speed of a game. = superior aerobic & anaerobic power. • Main difference between players of different quality is not necessarily the total distance covered during a game, but the overall distance at speed during a match.

  6. Introduction • Research shows that soccer players exercise at close to their maximal HR for sustained periods throughout a game. • Often spending over two-thirds of an entire match at 85% of maximum HR. • Blood & muscle lactate concentrations are also significantly elevated throughout a game (demonstrates important role of anaerobic metabolism in soccer).

  7. Introduction • As soccer has evolved through the years, new strategies and tactics place increasing demands on a better all round fitness of players. • Professional players today possess a high maximal aerobic power, an aboveaverage anaerobic power, good muscle buffering capacity and musclestrength, and good flexibility when compared to players of lower ability. • Sports-specific, scientific testing protocols for soccer will, therefore, have to include multiple tests to accurately assess the physiological status of a player.

  8. TEST PROTOCOLS • AEROBIC ASSESSMENT 1.1 Multistage shuttle run 1.2 Repeated sprint test 2. ANAEROBIC ASSESSMENT 2.1 Anaerobic treadmill test 2.2 Vertical jump (Explosive Power) 3. SPEED   3.1 Maximum running speed and acceleration (30m sprint).

  9. TEST PROTOCOLS 4. AGILITY 4.1 Illinois Agility Test. 5. MUSCULAR STRENGTH ASSESSMENT 5.1 Incline leg press (1RM). 5.2 Parallel squat (1RM). 6. MUSCULAR ENDURANCE 6.1 & 6.2 Incline leg press and parallel squat. 6.3 Sit-ups.

  10. TEST PROTOCOLS 7. Anthropometry: • is the process of measuring physical dimensions of the human body. • These measurements are then used to either describe size and proportions, or to indirectly estimate an athlete's body composition. • Anthropometry can be used in sports science for evaluating athletes' size, shape, body proportions, body composition and degree of asymmetry between the dominant and non-dominant limbs.

  11. ANTHROPOMETRY • Measurements need to be accurate and performed strictly according to specified test protocols. • Body mass. • Stature. • Fat percentage: 7 site - • Biceps, triceps, • subscapular, • suprailiac, abdominal, • calf, • thigh.

  12. Diameter measurements. • Humerus. • Femur. • Biacromial. • Transverse chest. • Anterior-posterior chest. • Bi-iliac. • Girth measurements • Relaxed arm. • Contracted arm. • Calf. • Chest. • Sub-gluteal. • Mid-thigh. • Knee. • Abdominal. • Forearm. • Wrist. • Ankle. • Bitrochanteric.

  13. TEST PROTOCOLS 8. FLEXIBILITY 9.1. Modified sit and reach test. 9.2. Straight leg hamstring test (hip flexion). 9.3. Modified thomas test. 9.4. Shoulder and wrist elevation test. 9.5. Ankle plantar & dorsi flexion. 9.6. Shoulder external and internal rotation.

  14. Revision Questions • Discuss the fitness demands required of a player during a soccer match. 6 • How would the ‘quality of fitness’ differ between a top-level player, and a lower league player? 5 • As soccer has evolved over the years, the fitness demands of a soccer player has increased. How have these demands changed and why? 5 • Why is it important to have a standardized test protocol for specific sports? 3 • Name the components of fitness tested in the SISA soccer protocol. 8

More Related