# Physical and Performance Characteristics of Elite Youth Male Basketball Players Characterized by Maturity Status

**Authors:** Denis Čaušević, Monica Delia Bîcă, Amila Hodžić, Alina Elena Albină, Blake Densley, Dan Iulian Alexe, Milan Zelenović, Marta Bichowska-Pawęska, Mirza Ibrahimović, Cătălin Vasile Savu

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/life16010040 · Life · 2025-12-26

## TL;DR

This study shows that biological maturity significantly affects the physical traits and performance of young male basketball players.

## Contribution

The study provides empirical evidence on how maturity status influences physical characteristics and performance in elite youth basketball players.

## Key findings

- Early maturers are taller, heavier, and more muscular than on-time and late maturers.
- Biological maturity has moderate-to-large effects on jump, sprint, and agility performance.
- Maturity-informed approaches like bio-banding are recommended for fair talent development.

## Abstract

This study investigated the influence of biological maturity status on anthropometric, body composition, and physical performance characteristics in elite youth male basketball players. A total of 140 players (15.12 ± 0.78 years) competing in national elite programs were categorized as early, on-time, or late maturers according to years from peak height velocity (PHV). Each participant completed a standardized testing battery including anthropometric assessments, body composition analysis (InBody 720), countermovement jump (CMJ) with and without arm swing, drop jump from 40 cm (DJ40), linear sprints over 5–20 m, and agility tests (t-test and Lane Agility). Between-group differences were analyzed using one-way ANOVA and Bonferroni post hoc tests, while partial eta squared (ηp2) and magnitude-based inference (MBI) were applied to assess effect size and practical significance. Significant differences were observed across maturity groups (p < 0.05), with early maturers being taller, heavier, and more muscular than their on-time and late-maturing peers. Large effects were found for height (ηp2 = 0.667) and body mass (ηp2 = 0.455), and moderate-to-large effects for jump, sprint, and agility performance (ηp2 = 0.051–0.166). MBI results indicated that most differences between early and late maturers were “very likely” or “almost certain,” highlighting their practical relevance. These findings confirm that biological maturity substantially affects physical and performance profiles in adolescent basketball players and underscore the importance of maturity-informed approaches such as bio-banding and individualized training to ensure fair evaluation and equitable talent development in youth sport.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

41 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12843208/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12843208