Modelling age and secular differences in fitness between basketball players

Abstract Concerns about the value of physical testing and apparently declining test performance in junior basketball players prompted this retrospective study of trends in anthropometric and fitness test scores related to recruitment age and recruitment year. The participants were 1011 females and 1087 males entering Basketball Australia's State and National programmes (1862 and 236 players, respectively). Players were tested on 2.6 ± 2.0 (mean ± s) occasions over 0.8 ± 1.0 year. Test scores were adjusted to recruitment age (14 – 19 years) and recruitment year (1996 – 2003) using mixed modelling. Effects were estimated by log transformation and expressed as standardized (Cohen) differences in means. National players scored more favourably than State players on all tests, with the differences being generally small (standardized differences, 0.2 – 0.6) or moderate (0.6 – 1.2). On all tests, males scored more favourably than females, with large standardized differences (>1.2). Athletes entering at age 16 performed at least moderately better than athletes entering at age 14 on most tests (standardized differences, 0.7 – 2.1), but test scores often plateaued or began to deteriorate at around 17 years. Some fitness scores deteriorated over the 8-year period, most notably a moderate increase in sprint time and moderate (National male) to large (National female) declines in shuttle run performance. Variation in test scores between National players was generally less than that between State players (ratio of standard deviations, 0.83 – 1.18). More favourable means and lower variability in athletes of a higher standard highlight the potential utility of these tests in junior basketball programmes, although secular declines should be a major concern of Australian basketball coaches.

[1]  R. Mcmurray Developmental Exercise Physiology , 1996 .

[2]  A. Pienaar,et al.  Identifying and developing rugby talent among 10-year-old boys: a practical model. , 1998, Journal of sports sciences.

[3]  T. Olds,et al.  Secular trends in physical performance of Australian children. Evidence from the Talent Search program. , 2003, The Journal of sports medicine and physical fitness.

[4]  W. Kraemer,et al.  Relationship Between Athletic Performance Tests and Playing Time in Elite College Basketball Players , 1996 .

[5]  P. Lachenbruch Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences (2nd ed.) , 1989 .

[6]  P. Bale Anthropometric, body composition and performance variables of young elite female basketball players. , 1991, The Journal of sports medicine and physical fitness.

[7]  Jacob Cohen Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences , 1969, The SAGE Encyclopedia of Research Design.

[8]  G. Hunter,et al.  Changes in Fitness During 4 Years of Intercollegiate Basketball , 1993 .

[9]  S Trninić,et al.  System of the performance evaluation criteria weighted per positions in the basketball game. , 2000, Collegium antropologicum.

[10]  I. Karsai,et al.  Relationship of anthropometrical, physiological and motor attributes to sport-specific skills. , 2003, Acta physiologica Hungarica.

[11]  K. Berg,et al.  Physical and Performance Characteristics of NCAA Division I Male Basketball Players , 1994 .

[12]  S Trninić,et al.  Set of criteria for the actual quality evaluation of the elite basketball players. , 1999, Collegium antropologicum.

[13]  W. Kraemer,et al.  Strength, Speed and Endurance Changes During the Course of a Division I Basketball Season , 1991 .

[14]  Spiros Kellis,et al.  The Evaluation of Jumping Ability of Male and Female Basketball Players According to Their Chronological Age and Major Leagues , 1999 .

[15]  M. LaMonte,et al.  Comparison of Physical and Physiological Variables for Female College Basketball Players , 1999 .

[16]  W. Hopkins,et al.  Velocity specificity of weight training for kayak sprint performance. , 2003, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.

[17]  O. Bar-or,et al.  Growth, Maturation and Physical Activity , 1992 .

[18]  G. McKenzie Gillam,et al.  Basketball: Identification of anthropometric and physiological characteristics relative to participation in college basketball , 1985 .

[19]  Barney R. Groves,et al.  Physiological Changes in Male Basketball Players in Year‐Round Strength Training , 1993 .

[20]  D G Hoare,et al.  Predicting success in junior elite basketball players--the contribution of anthropometic and physiological attributes. , 2000, Journal of science and medicine in sport.

[21]  C. Willíams,et al.  A progressive shuttle run test to estimate maximal oxygen uptake. , 1988, British journal of sports medicine.

[22]  Kevin Norton,et al.  Measurement techniques in anthropometry , 1996 .

[23]  K. Berg,et al.  Comparison of Physical and Performance Characteristics of NCAA Division I Basketball and Football Players , 1995 .

[24]  D. G. Hoare,et al.  Talent identification and women's soccer: An Australian experience , 2000, Journal of sports sciences.

[25]  D. Kerr,et al.  Absolute size and proportionality characteristics of World Championship female basketball players. , 1997, Journal of sports sciences.

[26]  W G Hopkins,et al.  Measures of Reliability in Sports Medicine and Science , 2000, Sports medicine.

[27]  G. Beunen,et al.  Growth and Biologic Maturation: Relevance to Athletic Performance , 2008 .

[28]  M. McKenna,et al.  Characterizing changes in fitness of basketball players within and between seasons , 2005 .