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Movement Demands of Rugby Sevens in Men and Women: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

    1. [1] University of Sydney

      University of Sydney

      Australia

  • Localización: Journal of strength and conditioning research: the research journal of the NSCA, ISSN 1064-8011, Vol. 33, Nº. 12, 2019, págs. 3475-3490
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • Global positioning systems (GPS) provide comprehensive information of player movement demands in rugby 7's. Although studies have investigated the use of GPS within many field-based team sports, the application of GPS within rugby 7's remains unclear. The aim of this review was to evaluate the movement demands and conduct a meta-analysis on comparable GPS measures to assess player movement in rugby 7's. A systematic search of electronic databases Medline, SPORTDiscus, Cinahl, Web of Science, Scopus, and Embase was performed. The search strategy combined terms covering: global positioning systems AND rugby union. Studies were included if they contained rugby sevens' players monitored by GPS. Meta-analyses were conducted to provide a pooled mean and confidence intervals (CIs) on outcomes for data extracted from at least 3 studies. A total of 24 publications were eligible for review and included 661 (447 male and 214 female) rugby 7's players. Meta-analysis indicated that male players cover greater relative distance (male: 108.5 m[middle dot]min-1, 95% CI [104.9-112.1] m[middle dot]min-1, female: 100.3 m[middle dot]min-1, 95% CI [96.0-104.7] m[middle dot]min-1), distance at >12.6 km[middle dot]h-1 (male: 449.3 m, 95% CI [427.0-471.5] m, female: 339.5 m, 95% CI [291.1-387.9] m) and >18.0 km[middle dot]h-1 (male: 190.3 m, 95% CI [180.7-199.9] m, female: 129.9 m, 95% CI [99.9-159.8] m), and have a greater maximum velocity compared with female players (male: 29.8 km[middle dot]h-1, 95% CI [29.2-30.4] km[middle dot]h-1, female: 24.6 km[middle dot]h-1, 95% CI [23.3-25.9] km[middle dot]h-1), whereas relative distance is higher for the first half (109.5 m[middle dot]min-1, 95% CI [99.1-120.0] m[middle dot]min-1) compared with the second half (93.8 m[middle dot]min-1, 95% CI [87.4-100.1] m[middle dot]min-1) of match play across sexes and playing levels. Independent velocity zone classifications should apply for male and female players, whereas velocity thresholds should remain consistent across studies. Rugby 7's training intensity should vary between male and female players.


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