# Anthropometric Determinants of Rowing Performance in a Multinational Youth Cohort

**Authors:** László Suszter, Zoltán Gombos, Ottó Benczenleitner, Ferenc Ihász, Zoltán Alföldi

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jfmk11010039 · Journal of Functional Morphology and Kinesiology · 2026-01-17

## TL;DR

This study explores how body size and composition affect rowing performance in young athletes from different countries.

## Contribution

The study identifies multidimensional anthropometric configurations, such as body surface area and muscle mass, as key predictors of rowing performance in youth.

## Key findings

- Males outperformed females across all age groups in rowing performance.
- Body surface area and relative muscle mass were the strongest predictors of performance.
- Higher body fat was negatively associated with rowing performance.

## Abstract

Background: Rowing performance in youth athletes is strongly influenced by anthropometric characteristics, body composition, and limb proportions; however, the combined contribution of these factors across developmental stages remains insufficiently understood. This study investigated the relationships between key anthropometric variables and ergometer performance in a multinational cohort of young rowers. Methods: A total of 194 athletes (48 females, 146 males) from ten countries participated. Based on age and sex, participants were categorized into junior female (JF), junior male (JM), adult female (AF), and adult male (AM) groups. Body height, body mass, body fat (F%), relative muscle mass (M%), limb lengths, and body surface area (BSA) were measured. Rowing performance was assessed via maximal 2000 m ergometer trials. Results: Males outperformed females across all age groups (p < 0.001). Performance showed strong positive correlations with body height (r = 0.673, p = 0.003), body mass (r = 0.724, p = 0.005), arm span (r = 0.681, p = 0.002), lower-limb length (r = 0.394, p = 0.004), relative muscle mass (39.9 ± 5.2%; r = 0.531, p < 0.001), and especially BSA (1.94 ± 0.19 m2; r = 0.739, p < 0.001). Relative body fat was negatively associated with performance (17.6 ± 6.9%; r = −0.465, p < 0.001). Conclusions: Findings indicate that rowing performance in youth athletes reflects multidimensional anthropometric configurations rather than isolated traits, characterized primarily by the combined contribution of body surface area, relative muscle mass, and segmental body dimensions. From a practical perspective, higher-performing athletes typically exhibited body surface area values approaching or exceeding ~1.90 m2 and relative muscle mass above ~40%, suggesting these ranges as indicative reference benchmarks rather than fixed selection thresholds. Integrating anthropometric profiling with physiological assessment may enhance early talent identification and support individualized training strategies in competitive youth rowing.

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

43 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12821641/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12821641