Manuscript v2
Manuscript v2
to-maximal speed
running bouts
during different
turnarounds in
elite football:
association with
match hamstring
injuries
Martin Buchheit1,2,3, Maxime Settembre1, Karim Hader1 and Derek McHugh1
1
Kitman Labs, Dublin, Ireland;
2
Lille OSC, Lille, France;
3
HIITscience, Revelstoke, Canada
All authors have read and approved this version of the Author Martin Buchheit
manuscript. This article was last modified on July 17, 2022. @mart1buch can be reached on
Twitter.
Please cite as: Buchheit M, Settembre M, Hader K and McHugh D. (2022). Exposures to near-to-
maximal speed running bouts during different turnarounds in elite football: association with match
hamstring injuries SportRχiv.
ABSTRACT
Purpose: To examine the association between the occurrence of near-to-maximal
sprinting speed (near-to-MSS) running bouts during training and hamstring injury
rate during the consecutive match of the same turnaround in elite football (soccer).
top European leagues) were analysed (627 players, 96 non-contact time loss match
hamstring injuries).
We examined 1) the association between match hamstring injury rate and the
occurrence of >85%, >90% or >95% MSS exposures or not during training within
Results: The longer the length of the turnarounds and the lower the speed
thresholds, the greater the number (and proportion) of near-to-MSS exposures. For
some turnarounds, there were no match hamstring injuries when players were
exposed to running bouts >95% MSS during training vs. when there were no or
lower relative speed exposures (i.e., >85 or >90%). Finally, irrespective of the
turnaround length, there were no match hamstring injuries when >95% MSS
exposures occurred at D-2, while in contrast, injuries still happened when players
were not exposed at all, or when these exposures occurred at D-3 and/or earlier
1
Conclusion: While the present observational study design precludes the
during 3-d to 8-d turnarounds may be a relevant strategy to decrease the incidence
INTRODUCTION
Hamstring strain injuries remain the most prevalent time loss injuries in
professional football.1 While their relative occurrence may have slightly decreased
in relation to the likely increased match demands over the past decade,2
practitioners are still seeking mitigation strategies both in the gym and on the
bouts (either with or without the ball) are now the most recommended.5,6 Sprinting
is indeed both complex and unique at many levels (e.g., legs interaction, elastic
injuries and near-to-MSS exposures both in Australian Rules Football8,9 and Gaelic
Football10 players. More precisely, both under- and over near-to-MSS exposures
were associated with the higher injury rates, suggesting the existence of an optimal
chronic “dose” i.e. number of weekly exposures 8,10 and/or monthly cumulative
distance.9 This optimal chronic dose is likely specific to each population and
2
context, and it is therefore difficult to provide guidelines for all practitioners on the
back of those two studies. More importantly, those studies do not provide clear
turnarounds of different lengths. How fast football players should run is also still
unclear, since large variations in relative velocities have been reported, ranging
In fact, the question of the optimal intensity (i.e., >85% vs >90% or 95% MSS) and on
which day to program these near-to-MSS exposures is something that has not been
performance and hamstring injury management.11 The only partial answer to this
question that is available to us today comes from the 100 elite football (soccer)
practitioners that we surveyed in 2021.12 While the large majority of the responders
confirmed the need to regularly expose players to these high-speed running bouts,
especially whether it should 2 or 3 days before the match i.e. D-3 vs D-2. This was
likely due to the lack of robust evidence, and this programming practice was rather
Barcelona).
In order to shed light on this important topic, we examined retrospective data from
19 elite teams performing in top football leagues across the globe. We first
examined the association between match hamstring injury rate and the occurrence
of >85%, >90% or >95% MSS exposures or not during training within different
turnaround length. The second aim was to examine whether the above-mentioned
3
associations would differ depending on the day(s) of turnarounds when these
exposures occurred.
We more precisely also looked at the timing of these exposures within turnarounds
of varying length. We believe that the information provided will help performance
Methods
The overall research was based on retrospective analyses of both match hamstring
injury occurrences and players’ training locomotor (running) activities collected via
an online database (i.e., Kitman Labs platform, Dublin, Ireland) commonly used by
Each player and club is provided with an ID number on the platform. The researchers
in charge of the analysis could only pull and analyze data associated with their IDs -
no names included. Then, data was transformed and coded for injury occurrence
(dates only used for assessing occurrences, such as during a match vs during training
and when in relation from/to the previous match) and type (contact or non-contact
injury, without any more details), to provide a final dataset. The medical staff of each
team registers injury details in the platform as a part of their daily player care
4
management, including variables such as date of injury, type and location of injury,
as well as severity (days lost). Similarly, player game and training session
participation are recorded as part of the team staff’s daily monitoring. Additionally,
the measures of training and competitive load are also added to the platform. The
fact that all clubs used the same platform ensured the standardisation and the
(e.g., session duration and GPS data attached to the system calendar). We
nevertheless ran a thorough data health check to ensure that all data retained for
analysis met the same standard. In addition to all the steps above that guaranteed
granted by the teams for their inclusion in this research study, therefore ethics
Population
The data belonged to 19 different teams competing in the EPL, the Italian Serie A,
the French Ligue 1, the Bundesliga, the Scottish Premiership, the MLS and the
Dutch Eredivisie from January 2018 to December 2021. Team-seasons for which
injury information was not accessible were not used for analysis. Likewise, when
there was not enough information about players in the platform (e.g. exposure for
less than 15 players over the entire season) or insufficient locomotor tracking data
(e.g., daily maximal speed not defined or provided), the team season was not
5
Injuries
play which prevents a player from taking part in training or match-play for 1 or
more days following the occurrence.13 More precisely, in this study we focused on
non-contact hamstring injuries (i.e., a substantial strain of either the biceps femoris,
of each club, using the Orchard Sports Injury and Illness Classification System
hamstring injuries that substantially impact training and match participation and so
interruption i.e. ≥3-day time loss. In fact, we excluded all mild injuries (<2 days lost)
because injuries in this category could conceivably not have an impact on the next
game availability or training dynamic within the same turnaround. In addition, this
choice has allowed us to exclude days lost due to potential training removal as a
registered injuries from the start to the end of the season, we assumed that they
strictly adhered to this practice throughout the whole season, and that there was
Turnarounds
A n-d turnaround was defined as a microcycle with n days between the first and
second match, where n is the count of days from the first day after a match up to
and including the following match day. The shortest observed turnaround was 3
days (3-d) e.g. playing a match on Sunday and again the following Wednesday, while
6
the longest was 8 days (8-d) e.g. playing on Saturday and again the following
Sunday. The longer and less common turnarounds were excluded from analysis. In
total, 1358 turnarounds (at the team level) were extracted and were grouped by
1. An injury was registered for the player at any point during the microcycle,
contact time loss hamstring injuries, were removed from the analysis. At the level of
data preparation, the final data set included 36 team-seasons, including a total of
667 players, 1581 injuries including 229 non-contact time loss (> 3 days missed)
hamstring injuries, 1495 non-international matches and 6698 training session days.
The maximal sprinting speed of a player was calculated based on the available data.
The ideal scenario was when a club was actually testing for MSS, and in this case
7
the resulting MSS was used for analysis. When proper testing data was not
available, we used the average of the three highest speeds reached in the entire
GPS data set of each player (after having manually removed all possible erroneous
data >37 km/h).11 Following both the research literature8-10 and actual sport science
individual speed thresholds at >85%, >90% and >95% of each player’s MSS.11
training sequences leading to a match by the turnover value and added an indicator
individual player training sequences leading to the match (as a block of 2 to 7 days
for 3- to 8-d turnarounds) as including (true) and not (false) one or more near-to-
MSS exposure using >85%, >90% and >95% of each player’s MSS.11
say ‘x’ for a day without and ‘o’ for a day with exposure(s), and the frequency of
each of the possible combinations e.g. x/x/x, o/x/x, x/o/x, x/x/o, o/o/x, o/x/o, x/o/o,
o/o/o for 4-d turnarounds assessed for each turnaround. We then decided to group
together the first training days of each turnaround up to and including D-3 e.g. for a
7-d turnaround we grouped D-6 to D-3 together as D-3, and D-2 and D-1 were
8
considered as unique days. We did this for two main reasons: 1) to simplify the
analysis given the large amount of combinations, especially for the longest
turnarounds and 2) coaches generally split the between-match training cycle into
two phases (recovery/compensation from D+1 until D-3, and match preparation D-2
day turnaround. Since 3-d turnarounds do not include a D-3, this microcycle was
only included in a part of this analysis. Finally, only 3-day combinations containing
Data analysis
Considering all the above, the final analysis was run on a total of 627 players
participating in 5052 training session days and 1358 non-international matches for
Since preliminary analysis did not show any trends suggestive of differences
between the different leagues or continents, all data were pooled together to
We first looked at the associations between match hamstring injury rate within
each turnaround and whether >85%, >90% or >95% MSS running bout exposures
occurred during the overall block of training sessions leading to those matches.
Next we examined match hamstring injuries in relation to the day when these
9
Statistical analysis
Results are presented as a mean and 95% confidence intervals (using the exact
binomial approach). Substantial differences were assumed when the CIs did not
overlap.14
RESULTS
>90% and >95% MSS exposures occurred (true) or not (false) during the training
session days leading to the match are shown in Table 1, 2 and 3, respectively.
exposure was clearly lower than without, i.e., 40%, 24%, 10% for >85, >90 and >90%
MSS, respectively.
When looking at the turnaround level, the longer the length of the turnarounds and
the lower the speed thresholds, the greater the number (and proportion) of near-
to-MSS exposures (Figure 1 and Tables 1-3). For example, when considering >85%
sequences without exposures than with. For the longest turnarounds however,
10
running bouts sequences
during the
training session
days leading to
the match
Table 1. Number of player-sequences within each turnaround examined where >85% MSS
11
exposures occurred (true) or not (false) during the training session days leading to the match,
number and rate (95% confidence limits, CL) of hamstring injuries during matches.
Occurrence of
12
True 803 2 2.5 (0-5.9)
Table 2. Number of player-sequences within each turnaround examined where >90% MSS
exposures occurred (true) or not (false) during the training session days leading to the match,
number and rate (95% confidence limits, CL) of hamstring injuries during matches.
Occurrence of
13
True 363 0 0 (0.0-10.1)
Table 3. Number of player-sequences within each turnaround examined where >95% MSS
exposures occurred (true) or not (false) during the training session days leading to the match,
number and rate (95% confidence limits, CL) of hamstring injuries during matches.
When looking at all turnarounds pooled, there was no difference in injury rate
when looking within each turnaround, there were no match hamstring injuries
when players were exposed to running bouts >90% MSS (i.e., 5-d turnaround) and
>95% MSS (i.e., 3-, 5- and 6-d turnaround) during the training sessions days leading
In contrast, injury rate was still substantial when considering running bouts >85%,
and when looking at the majority of turnarounds with >90% MSS exposures (Table
14
Figure 1. Proportion of (training) player-sequences including at least one >85%, >90% and
>95% MSS running bouts occurrence as a function ofthe length of the turnaround.
When looking specifically at the day(s) when >95% MSS was reached within an
average turnaround (i.e., 4- to 8-d turnarounds pooled), there were four main
patterns with large sample sizes (n >200): near-to-MSS occurrence at D-3 and
D-1, n = 215 and 2 injuries, and no exposure throughout the turnaround, n = 11168
and 46 injuries. The other day-combinations (e.g. occurrences both at D-2 and D-1)
15
had all very low sample sizes (n < 50), for a total of 126 player-turnarounds in total
and no injuries; these later combinations were not used for analysis.
When examining the pooled data and comparing these main four patterns, there
was no observation of match hamstring injury when >95% MSS was reached at D-2
- and only for that day (Figure 3). In contrast, injuries still happened when players
were not exposed at all, or when these exposures occurred at D-3 and/or earlier
within the turnaround. The difference in injury rate between exposures at D-2 vs D-
1 was unclear, likely due to the very low number of injuries for the latter (n=2!).
16
Figure 2. Match hamstring injury rate (with 95% confidence intervals, and per 1000
turnarounds participation) in players achieving (true) or not (false) >85% (upper panel), >90%
(middle panel) or >95% (lower panel) of their maximal sprinting speed (MSS) during the training
session days leading to the match, for the different turnarounds examined.
17
Daily programming of near-to-MSS exposures and match hamstring injuries during all
turnarounds pooled
During 3-d turnarounds (excluded from the above analysis since not including D-3
did not include 95% MSS exposures, with an hamstring injury rate of 7.1 (6.1-8.3).
The number of other player-sequences were all below 80, with no injury when
When adding the 3-d turnarounds to the previous analysis to increase the number
consistent), the trends were similar than in Figure 3, but there was almost no
18
Figure 3. Match hamstring injury rate (with 95% confidence intervals, and per 1000 player-
turnarounds) in relation to the training session day(s) of the turnaround when running bouts
>95% MSS occurred. *Note that D-3 is an aggregation of all training session days of the
turnaround before D-3 included (e.g., D-3 summarizes occurrences from D-6 to D-3 for a 7-d
turnaround, see methods). Data presented here are from 4- to 8-d turnarounds pooled
together; since there is no D-3 data during 3-d turnarounds, data from the entire 3-d
19
Figure 4. Match hamstring injury rate (with 95% confidence intervals, and per 1000 player-
turnarounds) in relation to near-to-MSS exposure over the last two training day(s) of the
DISCUSSION
This is to our knowledge the first study to examine both the occurrence of near-to-
MSS running bouts within typical turnaround in elite football, and the association
20
The main findings were the following: 1) the large majority of players arrived
to the match without having been exposed to near-to-MSS running bouts during
the training days of the current turnaround (60% for >85% MSS, 76% for >90% MSS
and 90% for >95% MSS), 2) the longer the length of the turnarounds and the lower
the speed thresholds, the greater the number (and proportion) of near-to-MSS
exposures, 3) for some of the turnarounds, there were no match hamstring injuries
when players were exposed to running bouts >95% MSS during the training session
days leading to matches, vs. when there was no exposures. In contrast, this was not
apparent when considering running bouts only >85% or >90% MSS, and finally, 4)
there were no hamstring injuries when >95% MSS exposures occurred at D-2, while
in contrast, injuries still happened when players were not exposed at all, or when
The most common practice was not to touch near-to-MSS running speeds during
to-MSS exposures than with, and it was only during the longest turnarounds that
The first part of these findings is not surprising, and is likely related to the type of
drills programmed by most coaches, which do not allow players to reach high
speeds.15 It is now well established that small-side games over small spaces are
insufficient with this regard (since players may need to maximally sprint over at
least 30 m to reach near-to-MSS speeds16), and that often, the only way to get
21
transition drills with enough depth17 and/or individual sprinting drills with or
without the ball.18 The current results (discussed below) lend support to this latter
practice.
also consistent with the results of our recent survey,12 where the most important
drivers for the programming of almost all training contents, and especially those
distance from and to the next match. With not enough time between matches, the
emphasis is put on recovery, and practitioners likely consider maximal sprint work
too demanding to be performed close to the previous match (the residual fatigue
from the previous match may increase injury risk during sprint training itself). In
(recovery and easy sessions) does not allow near-to-MSS exposures for starters;
those higher-speed exposures may only be possible (and required, see below) for
great question for practitioners, and a tentative answer to this will be provided in
the last part of the discussion. Finally, these results are also consistent with the
common trend found both in the scientific literature19 and the coaching
community, suggesting that 48h of recovery are generally needed between sprint
training sessions/events.
injury risk,8-10 there was still a lack of evidence about the minimal intensity required
22
for those runs to be protective. In fact, when it comes to selecting the minimal
running velocity that may be associated with reduced hamstring injuries, large
variations in relative velocities have been reported, ranging from ≥80,9 to 858 or
even 95% of MSS.10 While the present observational study design precludes the
examination of causal relationships, our results show for the first time in a very
large sample of elite football players (627 players for a total of 24486 player-
during training to be associated with reduced match hamstring injuries (Figure 2).
While limited with the present data, the fact that >95% MSS exposures may be
associated with lower injury rates than when only reaching lower relative speeds
(85% and 90% MSS), may be related to both higher levels of movements specificity
(e.g., leg interaction, elastic energy transfer, reflexes, kinematics, kinetics)6 and
monthly cumulative distance).9 However, this optimal chronic dose is likely specific
to each population and context, and it is therefore difficult to provide guidelines for
all practitioners on the back of those three studies. More importantly, those studies
did not provide clear guidelines on how and when to program these near-to-MSS
lengths. For these reasons, we believe that our results shed some light on the
23
In this very large data set, there were no match hamstring injuries when near-to-
MSS exposures were programmed at D-2. Importantly, this was the case only when
near-to-MSS exposures were programmed on that day (Figure 3 and 4). Despite the
overlap of the CIs, and aknowledging that association does not imply causality, this
trend suggests that reaching near-to-MSS at D-2 may be the most advantageous
The actual programming of MSS exposures at D-2 vs D-3 was actually one the areas
the most debated among the practitioners we surveyed.12 In accordance with the
discussion around the alternance of moderate vs. light loads between D-2 and D-1,
the sequence order of high-speed running (HSR) and MSS work may have some
relevance in the context of injury risk. In fact, since high training loads including
HSR and playing over large spaces (which are mainly programmed on D-3,
fatigue,20 the programming of MSS work the next day (D-2) could expose players to
a higher risk of injury during those sprints (assuming that increased neuromuscular
fatigue and the changes in mobility/pelvic control that follow such sessions increase
injury risk).21,22 For that reason probably, and in somewhat contradiction with the
orientation of the tactical periodization approach that advises to plan speed work
on D-2,12 75% of practitioners reported to program MSS on the same day as HSR (D-
3) for both 6- and 7-day turnovers (Figure 7). This is often achieved during game-
play sequences over large spaces17 and/or through specific speed top-ups post
session when speed targets are not reached.18 Albeit anecdotal, several
practitioners commented in their notes that while they had started to program MSS
work at D-2 in the line of the tactical periodization paradigm, they ended up
24
changing this specific programming aspect for the above-mentioned reasons 22,24
Another important comment in relation to this specific point, is that having ‘speed’
as the focus of the third acquisition day (following ‘strength’ and ‘endurance’12 have
necessarily involve MSS work, but could simply refer to speed of execution, which is
often implemented via short attacking transition work and finishing actions.
unclear why exposing players at D-2 may be more appropriate than at D-1 or D-3
and earlier (if this is that clear, considering the CIs overlaps, though). This may be
related to the recovery time course of the posterior chain muscles when running
recovered on match day, and the stimulus (short-term conditioning effect?) may
fade away when performed too early in the week (D-3 and earlier), losing it’s
Practically, if D-2 was to be the most appropriate day for near-to-MSS exposures as
per the current results (Figure 3 and 4), the programming of the other days of the
week may need to be tailored accordingly (i.e., D-4 and D-3), so that players do not
reach D-2 with excessive levels of neuromuscular fatigue - not to be at higher risk of
hamstring injuries during the exposures themselves. Additionally, while those D-2
exposures may concern the entire squad for long turnarounds (i.e., 6- to 8-d), they
may only concern subs for 3- to 5-d turnarounds. In this latter scenario,
25
practitioners reported to program these exposures either on match day
immediately post-match, at D+1 or D+2 (in relation to potential days off).12 The
present D-2 practice is then straightforward when that day is either a D+1 (3-d
turnaround), or a D+3 (4-d turnaround). For 5-day turnaround, the option could be
to delay this exposure up to D+3/D-2, and/or spread it across multiple days (match
day and then again D+3/D-2). As always, players and practitioners' experience
would dictate the possible applications of the present findings in their own
context.26
The lack of clearer differences between the different exposures scenarios (CIs
overlap) - despite the very large data set - is likely related to the fact that other
factors than the programming of near-to-MSS exposures per se may have a greater
effect on injury rate, and, in turn, could have diluted/confounded the univariate
clear that injuries are largely multifactorial in nature27 and that different chronic
training loads and match minutes prior to the turnarounds examined, may also
directly affect injury rates. However, we deliberately decided to zoom within each
turnaround, since this is the way the very large majority of practitioners operate in
the football field, taking and programming one turnaround after the other, with
mobility or flexibility) and other measures of internal training load and responses to
load should also improve the analysis - while making the current outputs less
straightforward for practitioners. There is in fact a trade-off between the desire for
26
simple questions to have simple answers (e.g, when is it best to sprint?) and more
sophisticated analytic approaches that may have more precision but require more
Limitations
In the absence of consistent MSS testing practices across the different teams
examined, player’s MSS was determined from the available GPS data. While recent
results have shown that players may be able to reach their true MSS during
matches and some specific training sessions,15 we were not able to verify this at the
individual player level. It is therefore possible that inaccurate MSS were used in the
analysis, which may have added noise to the results. Also, the low number of
observations and injuries for some training sequences within some turnarounds
can sometimes increase injury rate beyond its actual magnitude, which should be
considered when interpreting the results. Finally, the injury records used for
analysis are as good as what practitioners may have registered. Relying on injuries
the value of the information provided, derived from a very large sample size (n =
Practical applications
While the present observational study design precludes the examination of causal
against non-contact time loss match hamstring injuries than only reaching >85% or
27
>90%. Additionally, programming 95% exposures at D-2 may be the more relevant
week. If D-2 was to be the most appropriate day for near-to-MSS exposures, the
programming of the other days of the week needs to be tailored accordingly (i.e., D-
4 and D-3), so that players do not reach D-2 with excessive levels of neuromuscular
themselves.
CONCLUSION
Using a very large data set (for a total of 667 players across 38 team-seasons), we
showed for the first time that the large majority of players arrived at the match
without having been exposed to near-to-MSS running bouts during the training
days of the current turnaround. However, and while association does not imply
causation, match hamstring injuries in elite football were systematically lower when
CONTRIBUTIONS
Contributed to conception and design: MB and MS
Contributed to acquisition of data: MS and MB
Contributed to analysis and interpretation of data: MB, MS, KH and DM
Drafted and/or revised the article: MB, MS, KH and DM
Approved the submitted version for publication: MB, MS, KH and DM
28
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors thanks Stephen Smith and Darcy Norman for their comments on a
draft of the current manuscript.
REFERENCES
1. Ekstrand J., Spreco A., Bengtsson H., Bahr R. Injury rates decreased in men's
professional football: an 18-year prospective cohort study of almost 12,000 injuries
sustained during 1.8 million hours of play. Br J Sports Med. 2021 Oct; 55(19):1084-
1091. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2020-103159. Epub 2021 Feb 5.
2. Buchheit M, Eirale C, Simpson BM, et al. Injury rate and prevention in elite football:
Let us first search within our own hearts. Br J Sports Med, 2018.
3. Buckthorpe M, Wright S, Bruce-Low S, et al. Recommendations for hamstring injury
prevention in elite football: Translating research into practice. Br J Sports Med,
2019;53(7):449-456.
4. Bourne MN, Timmins RG, Opar DA, et al. An evidence-based framework for
strengthening exercises to prevent hamstring injury. Sports Med, 2018;48(2):251-267.
5. Butler S, Running fast: The cause, the cure and a vaccine, in BJSM Blog,
https://blogs.bmj.com/bjsm/2019/03/19/running-fast-the-cause-the-cure-and-a-
vaccine/, Editor. 2019.
6. Edouard P, Mendiguchia J, Guex K, et al. Sprinting: A potential vaccine for hamstring
injury? Sport Performance & Science Reports, 2019;January(48):v1.
7. van den Tillaar R, Solheim JAB, and Bencke J. Comparison of hamstring muscle
activation during high-speed running and various hamstring strengthening exercises.
Int J Sports Phys Ther, 2017;12(5):718-727.
8. Colby MJ, Dawson B, Peeling P, Heasman J, Rogalski B, Drew MK, Stares J.
Improvement of Prediction of Noncontact Injury in Elite Australian Footballers With
Repeated Exposure to Established High-Risk Workload Scenarios. Int J Sports Physiol
Perform. 2018 Oct 1;13(9):1130-1135. doi: 10.1123/ijspp.2017-0696. Epub 2018 Oct
19.
9. O'Connor F, Thornton HR, Ritchie D, et al. Greater association of relative thresholds
than absolute thresholds with noncontact lower-body injury in professional
australian rules footballers: Implications for sprint monitoring. Int J Sports Physiol
Perform, 2019:1-9.
29
10. Malone S, Roe M, Doran DA, et al. High chronic training loads and exposure to bouts
of maximal velocity running reduce injury risk in elite gaelic football. J Sci Med Sport,
2017;20:250-4.
11. Buchheit, M., Simpson, BM, Hader, K., and Lacome, M. Occurrences of near-to-
maximal speed running bouts in elite soccer: insights for training prescription and
injury mitigation.Sci Med Footb. 2021 May;5(2):105-110. doi:
10.1080/24733938.2020.1802058.
12. Buchheit, M. Sandua M, Berndsen J, Shelton, Smith S, Norman D, McHugh D and
Hader K. Loading patterns and programming practices in elite football: insights from
100 elite practitioners. Sport Perf & Sci Research, Dec 2021, V1.
13. Bahr R, Clarsen B, Derman W, Dvorak J, Emery CA, Finch CF, Hägglund M, Junge A,
Kemp S, Khan KM, Marshall SW, Meeuwisse W, Mountjoy M, Orchard JW, Pluim B,
Quarrie KL, Reider B, Schwellnus M, Soligard T, Stokes KA, Timpka T, Verhagen E,
Bindra A, Budgett R, Engebretsen L, Erdener U, Chamari K. International Olympic
Committee consensus statement: methods for recording and reporting of
epidemiological data on injury and illness in sport 2020 (including STROBE Extension
for Sport Injury and Illness Surveillance (STROBE-SIIS)). Br J Sports Med. 2020
Apr;54(7):372-389. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2019-101969.
14. Cumming, G. Understanding The New Statistics. Effect Sizes, Confidence Intervals,
and Meta-Analysis. 2011,Routledge, 2011, 536p. ISBN 9780415879682.
15. Kyprianou E, Di Salvo V, Lolli L, Al Haddad H, Villanueva AM, Gregson W, Weston M. To
Measure Peak Velocity in Soccer, Let the Players Sprint. J Strength Cond Res. 2022 Jan
1;36(1):273-276. doi: 10.1519/JSC.0000000000003406. PMID: 31800476
16. Buchheit M, Simpson BM, Peltola E, Mendez-Villanueva A. Assessing maximal
sprinting speed in highly trained young soccer players. Int J Sports Physiol Perform.
2012 Mar;7(1):76-8. doi: 10.1123/ijspp.7.1.76. Epub 2011 Oct 12. PMID: 22001861
17. Asian-Clemente J, Rabano-Munoz A, Requena B, Suarez-Arrones L. High-speed
training in a specific context in soccer: transition games. Int J Sports Med. 2022 Mar
10. doi: 10.1055/a-1794-9567. Online ahead of print. PMID: 35272387
18. Jeffreys I, Huggins S, and Davies N. Delivering a game speed-focused speed and agility
development program in an english premier league soccer academy. Strength and
Conditioning Journal, 2017;40(3):23-32.
19. Haugen T, Seiler S, Sandbakk Ø, Tønnessen E. The Training and Development of Elite
Sprint Performance: an Integration of Scientific and Best Practice Literature. Sports
Med Open. 2019 Nov 21;5(1):44. doi: 10.1186/s40798-019-0221-0.
20. Buchheit M, Lacome M, Cholley Y, Simpson BM. Neuromuscular Responses to
Conditioned Soccer Sessions Assessed via GPS-Embedded Accelerometers: Insights
Into Tactical Periodization. Int J Sports Physiol Perform. 2018 May 1;13(5):577-583. doi:
10.1123/ijspp.2017-0045. Epub 2018 May 22.
30
21. Verrall GM, Slavotinek JP, Barnes PG, Fon GT, Spriggins AJ. Clinical risk factors for
hamstring muscle strain injury: a prospective study with correlation of injury by
magnetic resonance imaging. Br J Sports Med. 2001 Dec;35(6):435-9; discussion 440.
doi: 10.1136/bjsm.35.6.435.
22. Hennessey L, Watson AW. Flexibility and posture assessment in relation to hamstring
injury. Br J Sports Med. 1993 Dec;27(4):243-6. doi: 10.1136/bjsm.27.4.243.
23. Kyprianou E. Let’s talk about weekly plans in soccer. Blog post June 2020, EK Sports
Performance.
24. Kyprianou E. Balancing Physical & Tactical Load in Soccer. A practical guide for soccer
practitioners. Complementary training. 2019
25. Rhodes D, McNaughton L, Greig M.. The temporal pattern of recovery in eccentric
hamstring strength post-soccer specific fatigue. Res Sports Med. 2019 Jul-
Sep;27(3):339-350. doi: 10.1080/15438627.2018.1523168. Epub 2018 Oct 8.
26. Buchheit M, Allen SV. To Optimize? First, Empathize.Int J Sports Physiol Perform. 2022
Apr 1;17(4):505-506. doi: 10.1123/ijspp.2022-0036. Epub 2022
27. McHugh D & Buchheit, M. Analytics For Sport Performance And Health: A Reality
Check. Kitman Labs Website. Last accessed April 4, 2022.
31