Identifying the key body size and maturity characteristics associated with superior physical fitness performance tests: does one size fit all?

Nevill, Alan M.; Duncan, Michael J.; Nobre, Glauber C.; Gaya, Adroaldo; Myers, Tony; Mello, Julio B.

Abstract

PurposeTo examine which key body size characteristics are common to success when performing a variety of physical fitness tests and, at the same time, to identify further characteristics that benefit only specific fitness tests.MethodsCross-sectional study carried out with data from 94,484 6-18 year olds. The physical fitness tests were: 1) 20-m sprint test, 2) four-square agility test, 3) abdominal strength test (sit-ups/min), 4) horizontal jump test, 5) seated 2 kg medicine ball throw test and 6) a cardiorespiratory test (6 min run). The body size and maturation characteristics were body mass, height, arm span and maturity offset (MO). The ideal body size and MO characteristics associated with the six physical performance variables were identified using allometric modelling.ResultsTwo key characteristics associated with superior performances in all six physical performance tests were identified, to have a greater arm span together with a positive maturity offset. The arm span was the predictor with the largest effect size (Partial Eta Squared between 0.005 and 0.013) in five of the six physical fitness tests evaluated. The contribution of body mass varied depending on whether the physical performance test required the children to carry their body mass or not. In the case of endurance events, the mass term was negative. In the case when the test did not require the child to carry their body mass (e.g. throwing the medicine ball test), the mass term was always positive. However, for sprinting, the optimal performances peaked at 62 kg for 20 m sprinting and 73 kg for agility tests.ConclusionThe prominence of arm span's influence underscores its role in sports evaluations and the talent identification processes, reaffirming its practical significance. In addition, the study hints at the nuanced relationship between body mass and specific test requirements, potentially guiding targeted training strategies for different physical tasks.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:001201472300001 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: SPORT SCIENCES FOR HEALTH
Editorial: SPRINGERNATURE
Fecha de publicación: 2024
DOI:

10.1007/s11332-024-01196-7

Notas: ISI