Are rugby league players involved in more tackles than normal, prior to an injury sustained during a tackle event?

Title
Are rugby league players involved in more tackles than normal, prior to an injury sustained during a tackle event?
Publication Date
2022-11
Author(s)
Hopkinson, Mike
Nicholson, Gareth
Rennie, Gordon
Sawczuk, Thomas
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4220-8734
Email: mwelch8@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:mwelch8
Owen, Cameron
Hendricks, Sharief
Fitzpatrick, Anna
Naylor, Adam
Robertson, Colin
Jones, Ben
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Routledge
Place of publication
United Kingdom
DOI
10.1080/02640414.2023.2172418
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/57879
Abstract

Rugby league has a relatively high injury risk, with the tackle having the greatest injury propensity. The number of tackles players engage in, prior to injurious tackles may influence injury risk, which has yet to be investigated. Therefore, this study investigated if rugby league players are involved in more tackles (as either tackler or ball carrier) (i) in the 10 minutes, or (ii) 1-min periods prior to an injurious tackle-event, (iii) differences for ball carriers vs. tacklers, and (iv) forwards vs. backs. Video analysis was utilised to quantify the number and rate of tackles in the 10-min periods prior to 61 tackle-related injuries. One thousand two hundred and eighty 10-min periods where players were not injured, were used as matched-controls. Generalized mixed linear models were used to analyse mean total and rate for tackles. Injured players were involved in significantly fewer tackles during the 10-min period, yet significantly more tackles during the final minute prior to the injurious tackle-event, compared to non-injured players. There were no differences between ball carriers vs. tacklers during the 10-min period. Both injured position groups were involved in significantly more tackles in the final minute. Additional match data sources are needed to further inform injury preventive strategies of tackle events.

Link
Citation
Journal of Sports Sciences, 40(22), p. 2517-2523
ISSN
1466-447X
0264-0414
Start page
2517
End page
2523

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