Quantity of within-sport distance variety – what can pool swimmers and track runners learn from each other?
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Frontiers Media
Materia
adolescence competition diversification
Date
2024-12-04Referencia bibliográfica
Peter Born, D. et. al. Front. Sports Act. Living 6:1502758. [https://doi.org/10.3389/fspor.2024.1502758]
Sponsorship
Swiss Olympic (national governing body of sports) [311019/ng/Norm Values and Benchmarks]; Swiss Aquatics (national swimming federation) [ZI70B1020071 RLS 3M/SwissAqua/KPI]Abstract
Objective: To determine the relationship between success at peak performance
age and quantity of within-sport distance variety and compare the dose-timeeffect
between swimming and track running by determining probability of
becoming an international-class female athlete based on the number of
different race distances the athletes compete in each year throughout their
development process.
Methods: Race times of female Tier 2 to Tier 5 freestyle pool swimmers
(n = 2,778) and track runners (n = 9,945) were included in the present study. All
athletes were ranked according to their personal best at peak performance
age. Subsequently, number of different race distances during each year were
retrospectively extracted from peak performance to early junior age. Personal
best performance points at peak performance age were correlated with the
number of different race distances across the various age categories. Poisson
distribution determined the dose-time-effect of becoming an internationalclass
athlete based on the number of different swimming strokes.
Results: At peak performance age, correlation analysis showed a larger within-sport
distance variety for higher ranked athletes, particularly for track runners (r ≤ 0.35,
P < 0.001). Despite reaching statistical significance, the effects were small to
moderate. While swimmers showed a generally larger within-sport distance variety
than track runners, Poisson distribution revealed a dose-time-effect for the
probability of becoming an international-class swimmer. Sprint and middledistance
swimmers benefit from competing in three race distances during junior
age and a transition to two race distances at 17–18, 18–19, 20–21 and 25–26
years of age for 50 m, 100 m, 200 m and 400 m races, respectively. Long-distance
swimmers should maintain three different race distances throughout peak
performance age. Probability analysis showed a consistent benefit of competing in
one or two race distances for 100 m, 200 m, 400 m and 800 m track runners.
Conclusion: Within-sport distance variety is not a continuum but an everevolving
process throughout the athletes’ careers. While swimmers generally
show larger variety than track runners, the progressive specialization towards
peak performance age improves success chances to become an internationalclass
swimmer.