| Literature DB >> 33344966 |
Gareth N Sandford1,2,3, Benjamin T Day4, Simon A Rogers5,6.
Abstract
Background: 1,500 m running has long been a blue ribbon event of track championship racing. The eventual medalists employ common tactical behaviors such as a fast sustained pace from the start (gun-to-tape), or, slow initial laps that precede a precisely timed race kick. Before the kick, there are positional changes caused by surging, that can go uncharacterized. The inter-relationship of surge events, tactical positioning, and kick execution may have important implications for eventual medal winning outcomes and require further definition.Entities:
Keywords: coaching; middle-distance running speed; performance; strategy; tactics
Year: 2019 PMID: 33344966 PMCID: PMC7739615 DOI: 10.3389/fspor.2019.00043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Sports Act Living ISSN: 2624-9367
Men's 1,500 m championship race finishing times in their slow, medium, and fast categories.
| “ | WC (London) | 2017 | 3:33.61 |
| OG (Beijing) | 2008 | 3:32.94 | |
| WC (Paris) | 2003 | 3:31.77 | |
| WC (Edmonton) | 2001 | 3:31.68 | |
| OG (Sydney) | 2000 | 3:32.07 | |
| “ | WC (Beijing) | 2015 | 3:34.40 |
| WC (Moscow) | 2013 | 3:36.28 | |
| OG (London) | 2012 | 3:34.08 | |
| WC (Daegu) | 2011 | 3:35.69 | |
| WC (Berlin) | 2009 | 3:35.93 | |
| WC (Osaka) | 2007 | 3:34.77 | |
| OG (Athens) | 2004 | 3:34.18 | |
| “ | OG (Rio de Janeiro) | 2016 | 3:50.00 |
| EC (Amsterdam) | 2016 | 3:46.65 | |
| EC (Zurich) | 2014 | 3:45.60 | |
| EC (Helsinki) | 2012 | 3:46.20 | |
WC, IAAF world championships; OG, olympic games; EC, European athletics championships; Fast, ≤3:34.00; Medium, 3:34.00–3:41.99; Slow, ≥3:42.00.
Figure 1Number of surges before the race kick within each individual fast (n = 5), medium (n = 7), and slow (n = 4) race analyzed, and the mean (90% CL) for each category in the solid square plots. Brackets indicate the magnitude differences between means of each of the three race categories with the probability of each difference indicated as *possibly substantial difference, **likely substantial difference, ***very likely substantial difference, and ****most likely substantial difference.
Figure 2Mean distance from the finish line of the reported final surge and race kick across fast (n = 5), medium (n = 7), and slow (n = 4) race categories. Brackets indicate the substantial magnitude differences between means of each final surge across the three race categories. The probability of each difference is indicated as *possibly substantial difference, **likely substantial difference, ***very likely substantial difference, and ****most likely substantial difference. Unmarked comparisons showed unclear differences. Error bars represent the 90% confidence limits.
Figure 3Positions of all eventual medalists at the initiation of the race kick in each individual race from the fast (A), medium (B), and slow (C) race categories. WC, IAAF world championships; OG, olympic games; EC, European athletics championships.