The relative contribution of training intensity and duration to daily measures of training load in professional rugby league and union

Title
The relative contribution of training intensity and duration to daily measures of training load in professional rugby league and union
Publication Date
2020
Author(s)
Weaving, Dan
Dalton-Barron, Nicholas
McLaren, Shaun
Scantlebury, Sean
Cummins, Cloe
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1960-8916
Email: ccummin5@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:ccummin5
Roe, Gregory
Jones, Ben
Beggs, Clive
Abt, Grant
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Routledge
Place of publication
United Kingdom
DOI
10.1080/02640414.2020.1754725
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/31752
Abstract

This study examined the relative contribution of exercise duration and intensity to team-sport athlete's training load. Male, professional rugby league (n = 10) and union (n = 22) players were monitored over 6- and 52-week training periods, respectively. Whole-session (load) and per-minute (intensity) metrics were monitored (league: session rating of perceived exertion training load [sRPE-TL], individualised training impulse, total distance, BodyLoad™; union: sRPE-TL, total distance, high-speed running distance, PlayerLoad™). Separate principal component analyses were conducted on the load and intensity measures to consolidate raw data into principal components (PC, k = 4). The first load PC captured 70% and 74% of the total variance in the rugby league and rugby union datasets, respectively. Multiple linear regression subsequently revealed that session duration explained 73% and 57% of the variance in first load PC, respectively, while the four intensity PCs explained an additional 24% and 34%, respectively. Across two professional rugby training programmes, the majority of the variability in training load measures was explained by session duration (~60-70%), while a smaller proportion was explained by session intensity (~30%). When modelling the training load, training intensity and duration should be disaggregated to better account for their between-session variability.

Link
Citation
Journal of Sports Sciences, 38(14), p. 1674-1681
ISSN
1466-447X
0264-0414
Pubmed ID
32314673
Start page
1674
End page
1681

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