Passing the Test: A Standardised Passing Drill Provides a Valid Assessment of Cardiorespiratory Fitness in Senior Football Athletes
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
We aimed to assess validity of a sport-specific intermittent-variable submaximal fitness test (SMFT) as an indicator of cardiorespiratory fitness. In a 12-week repeated measures design, eighteen male senior football (soccer) players were monitored. Each week, a standardised Y-shape passing drill (practical SMFT) was administered immediately following a 4-min continuous run (criterion SMFT), with exercise heart rate (HRex) measured during both protocols. Laboratory-derived cardiorespiratory outcome measures were assessed at the start and end of this period. The repeated measures correlation between HRex from the two SMFTs was large, with a significant improvements in the relationship and model fit after controlling for total and high-speed running distances in the practical SMFT protocol (χ2=52.1, p<0.001; adjusted vs unadjusted model statistics: marginal R2=0.56 vs 0.29, Akaike information criterion=434.8 vs 477.0, root mean square error=1.63 vs 2.21%-points of HRmax). Adjusted HRex values from the passing drill showed large to very-large correlations with maximal oxygen uptake and maximal aerobic speed. A Y-shape passing drill can be used as a valid and practical assessment of cardiorespiratory fitness within the SMFT framework. We provide a correction equation to help practitioners adjust HRex for external training load, which improved the agreement with HRex measured from a criterion SMFT protocol.