Julio Calleja-González1, Juan Mielgo-Ayuso2, José Antonio Lekue3, Xabier Leibar3, Julen Erauzkin3, Igor Jukic4, Sergej M Ostojic5, Anne Delextrat6, Jaime Sampaio7, Nicolás Terrados8. 1. a Laboratory of Human Performance, Department of Physical Education and Sport, Faculty of Physical Activity and Sport , University of the Basque Country , Vitoria , Spain. 2. b Faculty of Health Sciences , Universidad Isabel I , www.ui1.es, Burgos , Spain. 3. c Centro de Perfeccionamiento Técnico de Fadura, Sports Authority , Basque Government , Getxo , Spain. 4. d Faculty of Kinesiology, Sports Diagnostic Center , University of Zagreb , Zagreb , Croatia. 5. e Exercise Physiology Lab , Center for Health, Exercise and Sport Sciences , Belgrade , Serbia. 6. f Department of Sport Sciences, Exercise and Health , University of Trás-os- Montes and Alto Douro , Vila Real , Portugal. 7. g CreativeLab, Research Center for Sport Sciences, Health and Human Development , University of Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro at Vila Real , Vila Real , Portugal. 8. h Regional Sports Medicine Unit of Asturias, Aviles Municipal Sports Foundation and Department of Functional Biology , University of Oviedo , Oviedo , Spain.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The XXI Century Academy was a 6-year state-initiated intervention program that served as an alternative to basketball clubs for players in the u-14 and u-18 age groups in Spain, under guidelines established by the Spanish Basketball Federation. It was an important and unique project on talent development in basketball. To the best of the authors' knowledge, no evidence has been reported on long-term athlete development programs in basketball worldwide. The main aim of this report is to describe the design and evaluation methods used for the XXI Century Academy as a long-term intervention program in the elite Spanish Basketball Academy, aiming to prepare basketball players to compete at the elite level. METHODS: The monitoring time lasted from 1996 to 2001. A total of 55 players were assigned to the intervention groups based on age, position, maturation level, and country of origin. During this process, participants competed in up to two categories in addition to playing competitive official matches worldwide in international tournaments in their categories and with the national team in the European and World Championships (u-14 - u-18). Participants included 1 NBA player, 3 national A Team players, 10 ACB (First Spanish League) players, 5 LEB (second League) players and 39 LEB-2 EBA (third League) players. Assessments took place in a High-Performance Sports Center (CPT FADURA-GETXO- Basque Government, Getxo, Vizcaya, Spain) and consisted of health questionnaires, anthropometric measures, blood parameters, maturation level, birth age, fitness tests, training volume and intensity, physical activity, technical and tactical training, dietary intake, supplementation and injuries. Each player was assessed 4 times per year (September, December, April, June) for 4 years (16 data points). RESULTS: This is a purely methodological paper describing the design and evaluation methods used in the XXI Century Project, which will be used as a basis for future reporting of results. Therefore, the results of the project will be reported in subsequent publications. CONCLUSION: The viability of the Century XXI Project protocols has been described. This national project of training in basketball closely replicates the physical and technical match-play conditions for professionals and may constitute a useful training tool.
OBJECTIVES: The XXI Century Academy was a 6-year state-initiated intervention program that served as an alternative to basketball clubs for players in the u-14 and u-18 age groups in Spain, under guidelines established by the Spanish Basketball Federation. It was an important and unique project on talent development in basketball. To the best of the authors' knowledge, no evidence has been reported on long-term athlete development programs in basketball worldwide. The main aim of this report is to describe the design and evaluation methods used for the XXI Century Academy as a long-term intervention program in the elite Spanish Basketball Academy, aiming to prepare basketball players to compete at the elite level. METHODS: The monitoring time lasted from 1996 to 2001. A total of 55 players were assigned to the intervention groups based on age, position, maturation level, and country of origin. During this process, participants competed in up to two categories in addition to playing competitive official matches worldwide in international tournaments in their categories and with the national team in the European and World Championships (u-14 - u-18). Participants included 1 NBA player, 3 national A Team players, 10 ACB (First Spanish League) players, 5 LEB (second League) players and 39 LEB-2 EBA (third League) players. Assessments took place in a High-Performance Sports Center (CPT FADURA-GETXO- Basque Government, Getxo, Vizcaya, Spain) and consisted of health questionnaires, anthropometric measures, blood parameters, maturation level, birth age, fitness tests, training volume and intensity, physical activity, technical and tactical training, dietary intake, supplementation and injuries. Each player was assessed 4 times per year (September, December, April, June) for 4 years (16 data points). RESULTS: This is a purely methodological paper describing the design and evaluation methods used in the XXI Century Project, which will be used as a basis for future reporting of results. Therefore, the results of the project will be reported in subsequent publications. CONCLUSION: The viability of the Century XXI Project protocols has been described. This national project of training in basketball closely replicates the physical and technical match-play conditions for professionals and may constitute a useful training tool.
Entities:
Keywords:
Basketball; academy; international; long term program
Authors: Adam J Petway; Tomás T Freitas; Julio Calleja-González; Lorena Torres-Ronda; Pedro E Alcaraz Journal: Front Sports Act Living Date: 2020-10-21
Authors: Arnau Sacot; Víctor López-Ros; Anna Prats-Puig; Jesús Escosa; Jordi Barretina; Julio Calleja-González Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2022-08-05 Impact factor: 4.614