| Literature DB >> 29740559 |
Marcus Fábio Agostinho1,2, José Alfredo Olivio Junior2,3, Nemanja Stankovic4, Raquel Escobar-Molina5, Emerson Franchini1,6.
Abstract
The aims of this work were to compare the performances of male and female cadet and junior judo athletes and to develop classificatory tables to these judo-specific tests for international-level from these ages. Data collected during training camps of male and female cadet and junior judo teams from three nations (Brazil, Serbia, and Spain) were analyzed, totalizing 252 individual results of special judo fitness test (SJFT), and 222 and 208 of dynamic and isometric judogi chin-up tests, respectively. Juniors performed better than cadets in the SJFT, with higher number of throws in A, B, C, and total (P<0.001 for all comparisons), lower final heart rate (P=0.021), and lower index (P<0.001), as well as higher relative performance in the dynamic chin-up test (P<0.001). Furthermore, male athletes presented better performance compared to female athletes in the SJFT (higher number of throws in A, B and total, and lower index) and in the isometric and dynamic chin-up tests (higher absolute and relative performances) (P<0.001 for all comparisons). Considering these differences, tables were established by sex and age groups, using percentile values. Thereby, each of the parameters of the SJFT (number of throws, heart rate after and 1 min after the test, and SJFT index), as well as absolute and relative results in chin-up judogi tests, were classified by sex and age. These classificatory tables can be useful for judo coaches to monitor specific physical performance during different phases of periodization process.Entities:
Keywords: Combat sports; Field tests; Sports performance; Young athletes
Year: 2018 PMID: 29740559 PMCID: PMC5931161 DOI: 10.12965/jer.1836020.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exerc Rehabil ISSN: 2288-176X
Special judo fitness test performance in male and female cadet and junior judo athletes
| Variable | Female cadets (n=64) | Male cadets (n=93) | Female juniors (n=50) | Male juniors (n=45) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Throws in series A (rep) | 5.8±0.5 (5.7–5.9) | 6.2±0.6 (6.0–6.3) | 6.0±0.7 (5.8–6.2) | 6.5±0.7 (6.3–6.7) |
| Throws in series B (rep) | 10.1±1.0 (9.9–10.4) | 10.6±0.9 (10.4–10.8) | 10.4±1.1 (10.1–10.7) | 11.0±1.1 (10.6–11.3) |
| Throws in series C (rep) | 9.0±1.0 (8.8–9.3) | 9.5±1.0 (9.3–9.7) | 9.2±1.3 (8.9–9.6) | 10.0±1.1 (9.6–10.3) |
| Total throws (rep) | 24.9±2.3 (24.4–25.5) | 26.2±2.2 (25.8–26.7) | 25.6±2.7 (24.8–26.4) | 27.4±2.7 (26.6–28.2) |
| HR immediately after (bpm) | 184±10 (182–187) | 185±11 (183–188) | 183±9 (181–186) | 180±11 (177–183) |
| HR 1 min after (bpm) | 165±16 (161–170) | 163±15 (160–166) | 164±15 (160–168) | 156±17 (151–162) |
| Index (bpm/throw) | 14.19±1.95 (13.69–14.69) | 13.36±1.41 (13.07–13.66) | 13.76±1.97 (13.20–14.33) | 12.35±1.36 (11.93–12.77) |
Values are presented as mean±standard deviation (95% confidence intervals).
HR, heart rate.
Age effect (juniors>cadets, P<0.05).
Sex effect (males>females, P<0.05).
Age effect (juniors
Sex effect (males
Age and sex interaction effect (male cadet
Age and sex interaction effect (male junior
Absolute and relative isometric and dynamic chin-up gripping the judogi in male and female cadet and junior judo athletes
| Variable | Female cadets (n=62/60) | Male cadets (n=83/80) | Female juniors (n=30/35) | Male juniors (n=43/47) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Isometric chin-up (sec) | 41.6±16.7 (36.9–46.2) | 54.9±20.8 (50.3–59.4) | 41.3±22.9 (32.7–49.9) | 49.9±18.7 (44.1–55.6) |
| Dynamic chin-up (rep) | 11±7 (9–13) | 20±8 (18–21) | 12±9 (9–15) | 21±9 (19–24) |
| Isometric chin-up (sec.kg) | 1,914±1,224 (1,592–2,236) | 3,628±1,327 (3,338–3,918) | 1,627±1,381 (1,145–2,109) | 3,919±1,285 (3,524–4,315) |
| Dynamic chin-up (rep.kg) | 569±402 (467–671) | 1,315±569 (1,197–1,432) | 582±486 (418–747) | 1,665±615 (1,485–1,846) |
Values are presented as mean±standard deviation (95% confidence intervals). Numbers represents number of athletes who performed the isometric and dynamic tests, respectively.
Sex effect (males>females, P<0.05).
Age effect (juniors>cadets, P<0.05).
Interaction effect (male cadet>both female groups, P<0.001).
Interaction effect (male junior>all other groups, P<0.01).
Special judo fitness test classificatory table for high-level female cadet judo athletes
| Level | No. of throws | HR after (beats/min) | HR 1 min after (beats/min) | Index |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Excellent | ≥28 | ≤168 | ≤132 | ≤11.53 |
| Good | 27 | 169–176 | 133–148 | 11.54–12.63 |
| Regular | 23–26 | 177–193 | 149–176 | 12.64–15.45 |
| Poor | 21–22 | 194–202 | 177–189 | 15.46–18.00 |
| Very poor | ≤20 | ≥203 | ≥190 | ≥18.01 |
HR, heart rate.
Special judo fitness test classificatory table for high-level female junior judo athletes
| Level | No. of throws | HR after (beats/min) | HR 1 min after (beats/min) | Index |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Excellent | ≥30 | ≤168 | ≤148 | ≤11.48 |
| Good | 28–29 | 169–179 | 149–157 | 11.49–12.00 |
| Regular | 25–27 | 180–190 | 158–176 | 12.01–14.70 |
| Poor | 22–24 | 191–196 | 177–180 | 14.71–17.45 |
| Very poor | ≤21 | ≥197 | ≥181 | ≥17.46 |
HR, heart rate.
Special Judo Fitness Test classificatory table for high-level male cadet judo athletes
| Level | No. of throws | HR after (beats/min) | HR 1 min after (beats/min) | Index |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Excellent | ≥30 | ≤163 | ≤132 | ≤11.15 |
| Good | 28–29 | 164–174 | 133–148 | 11.16–12.38 |
| Regular | 25–27 | 175–195 | 149–175 | 12.39–14.32 |
| Poor | 23–24 | 196–200 | 176–184 | 14.33–15.92 |
| Very poor | ≤22 | ≥201 | ≥185 | ≥15.93 |
HR, heart rate.
Special judo fitness test classificatory table for high-level male junior judo athletes
| Level | No. of throws | HR after (beats/min) | HR 1 min after (beats/min) | Index |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Excellent | ≥31 | ≤162 | ≤127 | ≤10.40 |
| Good | 30 | 163–174 | 128–144 | 10.41–11.29 |
| Regular | 26–29 | 175–188 | 145–168 | 11.30–13.52 |
| Poor | 23–25 | 189–198 | 169–184 | 13.53–14.18 |
| Very poor | ≤22 | ≥199 | ≥185 | ≥14.19 |
HR, heart rate.
Absolute and relative isometric and dynamic chin-up gripping the judogi classificatory table for high-level female cadet judo athletes
| Level | Isometric chin-up (sec) | Dynamic chin-up (rep) | Isometric chin-up (sec.kg) | Dynamic chin-up (rep.kg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Excellent | ≥75 | ≥23 | ≥3,406 | ≥1,143 |
| Good | 56–74 | 17–22 | 2,933–3,405 | 800–1,142 |
| Regular | 27–55 | 6–16 | 1,515–2,932 | 351–799 |
| Poor | 13–26 | 2–5 | 555–1,514 | 145–350 |
| Very poor | ≤12 | ≤1 | ≤554 | ≤144 |
Absolute and relative isometric and dynamic chin-up gripping the judogi classificatory table for high-level female junior judo athletes
| Level | Isometric chin-up (sec) | Dynamic chin-up (rep) | Isometric chin-up (sec.kg) | Dynamic chin-up (rep.kg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Excellent | ≥72 | ≥24 | ≥3,934 | ≥1,297 |
| Good | 58–71 | 21–23 | 3,217–3,933 | 1,057–1,296 |
| Regular | 18–57 | 4–20 | 1,233–3,216 | 307–1,056 |
| Poor | 3–17 | 1–3 | 244–1,232 | 59–306 |
| Very poor | ≤2 | 0 | ≤243 | ≤58 |
Absolute and relative isometric and dynamic chin-up gripping the judogi classificatory table for high-level male cadet judo athletes
| Level | Isometric chin-up (sec) | Dynamic chin-up (rep) | Isometric chin-up (sec.kg) | Dynamic chin-up (rep.kg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Excellent | ≥90 | ≥32 | ≥5,857 | ≥2,245 |
| Good | 70–89 | 26–31 | 4,507–5,856 | 1,738–2,244 |
| Regular | 41–69 | 14–25 | 2,745–4,506 | 785–1,737 |
| Poor | 8–40 | 3–13 | 627–2,744 | 227–784 |
| Very poor | ≤7 | ≤2 | ≤626 | ≤226 |
Absolute and relative isometric and dynamic chin-up gripping the judogi classificatory table for high-level male junior judo athletes
| Level | Isometric chin-up (sec) | Dynamic chin-up (rep) | Isometric chin-up (sec.kg) | Dynamic chin-up (rep.kg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Excellent | ≥76 | ≥31 | ≥5,714 | ≥2,367 |
| Good | 66–75 | 29–30 | 4,733–5,713 | 2,027–2,366 |
| Regular | 35–65 | 16–28 | 3,159–4,732 | 1,159–2,026 |
| Poor | 7–34 | 4–15 | 823–3,158 | 412–1,158 |
| Very poor | ≤6 | ≤3 | ≤822 | ≤411 |