Physical and metabolic demands of training and match-play in the elite football player
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Abstract
In soccer, the players perform intermittent work. Despite the players performing low-intensity activities for more than 70% of the game, heart rate and body temperature measurements suggest that the average oxygen uptake for elite soccer players is around 70% of maximum (VO(2max). This may be partly explained by the 150 - 250 brief intense actions a top-class player performs during a game, which also indicates that the rates of creatine phosphate (CP) utilization and glycolysis are frequently high during a game. Muscle glycogen is probably the most important substrate for energy production, and fatigue towards the end of a game may be related to depletion of glycogen in some muscle fibres. Blood free-fatty…
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Keywords
- Glycogen
- Football players
- Football
- Creatine
- VO2 max
- Work rate
- Work (physics)
- Physical medicine and rehabilitation
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