The influence of soccer match play on physiological and physical performance measures in soccer referees and assistant referees

Daniel Castillo, Javier Yanci, Jesús Cámara, Matthew Weston

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The aim of this study was to quantify the acute impact of soccer match officiating on selected physiological and physical performance measures. Twenty-four officials from the Spanish National 3rd Division participated in this study. External (global positioning system; GPS) and internal (heart rate) load data were collected for each match official during 8 official matches. Pre- and post-matches, referees were assessed for tympanic temperature, blood lactate, 15 and 30-m sprint speed and unilateral (dominant and non-dominant legs) and bilateral vertical jump performance. For referees, the acute physiological and physical performance effects of officiating (post-match value minus pre-match value) were large increases in blood lactate (1.7 mmol.l-1; ±90% confidence limit 0.9 mmol.l-1, effect size ES = 4.35), small increases in 15-m sprint (0.09; ±0.04 s, ES = 0.53) and 30-m sprint speed (0.14; ±0.08 s, ES = 0.39) and a small increase in non-dominant leg jump performance (2.1; ±1.4 cm, ES = 0.31). For assistant referees, there was a small decrease in tympanic temperature (-0.3°C; ±0.2°C, ES = -0.65), and small increases in blood lactate (0.4; ±0.3 mmol.l-1, ES = 0.66), 15-m sprint (0.06; ±0.04 s, ES = 0.47), 30-m sprint (0.11; ±0.16 s, ES = 0.49) and bilateral countermovement jump height (3.4; ±1.5 cm, ES = 0.45). Taken together, these data demonstrate that the physical demands of soccer officiating are sufficient to elicit increases in blood lactate and small decrements in sprint performance and thereby provide some evidence for match-related fatigue.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)557-563
Number of pages7
JournalJournal of Sports Sciences
Volume34
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2 Nov 2015

Keywords

  • match officials
  • field testing
  • fatigue
  • sprinting
  • jumping

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