Acute and Residual Physical Fatigue, Along With Recovery Time Following Sided Games: A Scoping Review and Evidence Gap Map Focusing on Methodological Aspects
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Clemente, Filipe Manuel; Afonso, José; Trybulski, Robert; Beato, Marco; Sánchez Sánchez, Javier; Mroczek, Dariusz; Grzywacz, Tomasz; Sawicki, Piotr; González-Fernández, Francisco TomásEditorial
Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Materia
Sided-games Fatigue Recovery
Fecha
2025-12-01Referencia bibliográfica
Filipe Manuel Clemente, José Afonso, Robert Trybulski, Marco Beato, Javier Sanchez Sanchez, Dariusz Mroczek, Tomasz Grzywacz, Piotr Sawicki, Francisco Tomás González-Fernández. (2025) Acute and Residual Physical Fatigue, Along With Recovery Time Following Sided Games: A Scoping Review and Evidence Gap Map Focusing on Methodological Aspects. Journal of Sports Science and Medicine (24), 779 - 800. https://doi.org/10.52082/jssm.2025.779
Resumen
This scoping review aimed to (i) map methodological characteristics of studies investigating acute and residual fatigue and recovery after small-sided games (SSGs), (ii) identify outcomes,
measures, and timings assessed across neuromuscular, psychophysiological, and biochemical/endocrine domains, and (iii)
highlight evidence gaps to inform future research. Following a
registered protocol (OSF: osf.io/73rzs) and PRISMA-ScR guidelines, three databases (PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science) were
searched to July 2025. Eligible studies included Tier ≥2 athletes,
examined SSGs as interventions, and reported pre–post neuromuscular, psychophysiological and biochemical/endocrine outcomes. Data were extracted on populations, competitive level,
SSG formats, outcomes, and timings, and synthesized descriptively with evidence gap maps. From 3,842 records, 32 studies
were included. Most involved men soccer players at Tier 3, with
fewer on women, other sports, or adaptive contexts. SSG formats
clustered around 3v3 - 4v4. Psychophysiological measures were
most frequently reported, generally showing acute elevations in
heart rate and rating of perceived exertion and short-lived reductions in heart rate variability. Neuromuscular outcomes included
sprint and hamstring strength, often reduced up to 48 - 72 h, while
countermovement jump results were inconsistent. Biochemical/endocrine measures typically showed acute rises in lactate and
short-term creatine kinase elevations, with hormonal findings less
consistent. Assessments were concentrated immediately post and
at 24 h, with fewer extending beyond 48 h. As conclusion, current
evidence suggests that SSGs are associated with acute psychophysiological strain and, in some cases, short-term neuromuscular
and biochemical disturbances, but findings vary across studies.
Given the methodological heterogeneity and narrow scope of
populations, conclusions must be interpreted with caution.





