Subjective Monitoring in Under-20 Soccer Athletes: Affective, Load, Monotony, and Sleep Variations throughout a Competitive Cycle
Alessandro O. F. Junior, Ismael Viana Caldeira, Alberto Souza Sá Filho, Dailson P. Silva, Igor B. de Souza, Lorhenna P. Souza, Pedro Augusto Inacio, Gustavo de Conti Teixeira Costa, Vicente Aprigliano, Gaspar R. Chiappa, Sergio Machado, Marcelo Magalhães Sales

TL;DR
This study tracks how training and matches affect the mood, exertion, and sleep of young soccer players over an 11-week competitive cycle.
Contribution
The study provides a comprehensive analysis of subjective psychophysiological responses in under-20 soccer athletes over an extended competitive cycle.
Findings
Affective responses significantly decreased after training and match sessions.
Sleep duration increased in the later weeks, while training load and monotony declined.
Correlations between affective responses and other variables were weak to small.
Abstract
The physical and mental demands of competitive soccer, combined with a high density of matches and training sessions, impose substantial psychophysiological stress on athletes. In this context, subjective variables, such as affective responses, perceived exertion, and sleep, emerge as important indicators, offering additional insights into players’ readiness and recovery. However, few studies have examined these variables in an integrated manner over extended periods of preparation and competition. This study aimed to investigate the effects of soccer training sessions and matches on affective responses (valence and arousal), perceived exertion, and sleep duration in under-20 soccer athletes. Additionally, the objective of this study was to assess correlations between affective responses and traditional internal load variables (RPE), monotony, strain, and self-reported sleep duration.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSports Performance and Training · Occupational Health and Performance · Cardiovascular and exercise physiology
