1. More than a Metric: How Training Load is Used in Elite Sport for Athlete Management.
- Author
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West SW, Clubb J, Torres-Ronda L, Howells D, Leng E, Vescovi JD, Carmody S, Posthumus M, Dalen-Lorentsen T, and Windt J
- Subjects
- Athletic Injuries prevention & control, Communication, Data Collection methods, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Decision Making, Humans, Risk Management methods, Stakeholder Participation, Workload statistics & numerical data, Athletes, Athletic Performance, Physical Conditioning, Human methods, Sports physiology
- Abstract
Training load monitoring is a core aspect of modern-day sport science practice. Collecting, cleaning, analysing, interpreting, and disseminating load data is usually undertaken with a view to improve player performance and/or manage injury risk. To target these outcomes, practitioners attempt to optimise load at different stages throughout the training process, like adjusting individual sessions, planning day-to-day, periodising the season, and managing athletes with a long-term view. With greater investment in training load monitoring comes greater expectations, as stakeholders count on practitioners to transform data into informed, meaningful decisions. In this editorial we highlight how training load monitoring has many potential applications and cannot be simply reduced to one metric and/or calculation. With experience across a variety of sporting backgrounds, this editorial details the challenges and contextual factors that must be considered when interpreting such data. It further demonstrates the need for those working with athletes to develop strong communication channels with all stakeholders in the decision-making process. Importantly, this editorial highlights the complexity associated with using training load for managing injury risk and explores the potential for framing training load with a performance and training progression mindset., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflicts of interest to report. This editorial meets the ethical standards of the journal as per Harris et al. 37., (Thieme. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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