The effect of stress and recovery on field-test performance in floorball

Hendrike van der Does, Michel Brink, Chris Visscher, B.C. Huijgen, Wouter Frencken, Koen Lemmink

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Physical and psychosocial stress and recovery are important performance determinants. A holistic approach that monitors these performance determinants over a longer period of time is lacking. Therefore this study aims to investigate the effect of a player’s physical and psychosocial stress and recovery on field-test performance. In a prospective non-experimental cohort design 10 female Dutch floorball players were monitored over 6 months. To monitor physical and psychosocial stress and recovery, daily training-logs and three-weekly the Recovery-Stress Questionnaire for Athletes (RESTQ-Sport) were filled out respectively. To determine field-test performance 6 Heart rate Interval Monitoring System (HIMS) and 4 Repeated Modified Agility T-test (RMAT) measurements were performed. Multilevel prediction models were applied to account for within-players and between-players field-test performance changes. The results show that more psychosocial stress and less psychosocial recovery over 3 to 6 weeks before testing decrease HIMS performance (p≤0.05). More physical stress over 6 weeks before testing improves RMAT performance (p≤0.05). In conclusion, physical and psychosocial stress and recovery affect submaximal interval-based running performance and agility up to 6 weeks before testing. Therefore both physical and psychosocial stress and recovery should be monitored in daily routines to optimize performance.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)460-465
JournalInternational Journal of Sports Medicine
Volume36
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2015

Keywords

  • sport
  • physical stress
  • recovery
  • monitoring

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