Residual neuromuscular fatigue influences subsequent on-court activity in basketball.
Jodie A PalmerRodrigo Rico BiniDaniel W T WundersitzMichael I C KingsleyPublished in: European journal of sport science (2022)
The aim of this study was to determine if residual neuromuscular fatigue influenced subsequent match and training activity in professional women's basketball. Prior to matches and training sessions throughout a season, players performed countermovement jumps while wearing a magnetic, angular rate and gravity (acceleration) sensor on their upper back. Flight time to contraction time ratio was used to determine neuromuscular performance and to identify neuromuscular fatigue. Average session intensity and volume, the proportion of live time spent in different intensity bands (matches), and absolute and relative time spent in different intensity bands (training) were quantified using accelerometry. Residual neuromuscular fatigue was deemed to be present when the decrement in neuromuscular performance relative to pre-season baseline was greater than the smallest worthwhile change. Players displayed residual neuromuscular fatigue before 16% of matches and 33% of training sessions. When players were fatigued prior to matches, the proportion of live time undertaking supramaximal activity was 5.7% less ( p = 0.02) and moderate-vigorous activity was 3.7% more than when not fatigued ( p = 0.02). When fatigued prior to training, the players displayed a 2.6% decrement in average intensity ( p = 0.02), 2.8% decrement in absolute ( p = 0.01) and 5.0% decrement in relative ( p = 0.01) maximal activity, as well as 13.3% decrement in absolute ( p < 0.01) and 6.8% decrement in relative ( p < 0.01) supramaximal activity when compared to not being fatigued. These findings suggest that residual neuromuscular fatigue influences players' ability to perform supramaximal activity, which highlights the importance of monitoring neuromuscular performance throughout a professional season. Highlights Residual neuromuscular fatigue can influence the amount of supramaximal activity players perform in a subsequent training session or match.Practices should be implemented to minimise residual neuromuscular fatigue carried into matches while maintaining a sufficient training volume to elicit physiological adaptations.MARG sensors can be used as an affordable and time-efficient tool for regularly monitoring countermovement jump-derived neuromuscular fatigue.