Physical Functional Characteristics of Elite Adolescent and Collegiate Male Soccer Athletes: A Comparative Study Using Medical Check-Ups
Tingxu Zhang, Hanyan Yan, Ziwen Mu, Ang Ni, Haoxiang Wang, Zhiqiang Han, Kazuhiro Imai, Xiao Zhou

TL;DR
This study compares physical abilities of adolescent and collegiate male soccer players, finding differences in flexibility, balance, and trunk function.
Contribution
The study identifies distinct physical functional profiles between adolescent and collegiate soccer athletes using medical check-ups.
Findings
Adolescents had greater joint laxity and hip range of motion compared to collegiate athletes.
Collegiate athletes showed better dynamic balance but lower trunk functional capacity.
Both groups exhibited limb asymmetry, but in different directions and joints.
Abstract
Background: Physical functional capacity plays a critical role in sports performance and changes markedly from adolescence to adulthood. This study aimed to compare the physical functional characteristics between adolescent and collegiate soccer athletes. Methods: Fifty elite male soccer athletes (30 adolescents, 20 college students) were assessed for joint range of motion, muscle flexibility, dynamic balance, and trunk functional capacity. Results: Adolescent athletes achieved significantly greater general joint laxity score than collegiate athletes (p = 0.01), with significantly greater hip range of motion across all planes (abduction, internal rotation, and external rotation; all p < 0.01). College athletes had significantly lower SLR degree (left: p < 0.01, right: p < 0.05) but significantly greater degrees on passive Ely’s test (p < 0.01) than adolescent athletes. Collegiate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSports injuries and prevention · Knee injuries and reconstruction techniques · Lower Extremity Biomechanics and Pathologies
