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Talent identification in soccer: the influence of technical, physical and maturity-related characteristics on a national selection process - Anonymised dataset

McLaren-Towlson, Christopher

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Abstract

The present study examines the influence of technical, physical, and relative age characteristics on players selection success within the Scottish Performance School trials. Ninety adolescent players (81 males, 9 females; mean ± standard deviation: age = 11.3 ± 0.4 years, height = 149.6 ± 6.9 cm, mass 38.1 ± 4.7 kg) performed a battery of physical fitness (20m Sprint, CMJ, 5-0-5 agility test), anthropometric, and 8 small-sided games (SSG; 9v9) as part of a talent identification (TID) programme. Players technical (ball touches, time on the ball, high-speed releases) and locomotor activities (high-speed running distance, sprint distance, accelerations, and decelerations) were monitored using foot-mounted inertial measurements units during SSG’s. The data was analysed using independent sample T-tests. Mann-Whitney U analyses were conducted to examine the differences between groups whose data was determined as being (non)parametric, with Cohen effect sizes applied. Successful players performed significantly better during physical tests (Effect size ± confidence limits: Left 5-0-5 = -0.89±0.13, Right 5-0-5 = -0.51±0.11), had significantly higher locomotor activities during SSG (high-intensity distance = 0.4±26.6, horizontal accelerations = 0.59±1.19) and significantly higher technical outputs during SSG (touches = 0.71±6.1, releases = 0.49±2.5, high-speed releases = 0.59±2.7, time on the ball = 0.52±3.4) compared to unsuccessful players. Successful players had significantly higher locomotor activities and technical outputs during SSG than their unsuccessful counterparts. Monitoring technical and locomotor activities during SSG may compliment or replace physical testing batteries for assessing TID processes in soccer.

Citation

McLaren-Towlson, C. (2024). Talent identification in soccer: the influence of technical, physical and maturity-related characteristics on a national selection process - Anonymised dataset. [Data]

Acceptance Date Jan 21, 2024
Online Publication Date Feb 26, 2024
Publication Date Feb 26, 2024
Deposit Date Feb 21, 2024
Publicly Available Date Feb 26, 2024
Keywords Talent identification, Soccer, Maturation, Technical skill, Locomotor activities
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/4554614
Type of Data Anonymised academy soccer player anthropometric and physical data
Collection Method Player technical and locomotor activities (total distance covered, high-speed running distance[>4m/s][22], sprint distance [>5.5m/s], accelerations and decelerations[±2m/s/s][23]) and technical actions (ball touches, time on the ball, high-speed releases[>15m/s][24]) were quantified using commercially available foot-mounted, inertial measurement units.

Using the International Society for the Advancement of Kinanthropometry (ISAK) guidelines [27], the stretch stature, sitting stature, and body-mass were measured using a portable stadiometer and scales, respectively.

Linear maximum speed was estimated using electronic timing gates (Brower Timing Systems, Utah, USA) during 20-meter straight-line sprints.

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