Exploring the impact of social relationship modification on young female soccer players' performance in small-sided games

Date

2024-12-06

Authors

Los Arcos Larumbe, Asier
González-Artetxe, Asier
Lombardero, Sara
Esnal-Arrizabalaga, Oihan

Director

Publisher

Termedia
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Artículo / Artikulua
Versión publicada / Argitaratu den bertsioa

Project identifier

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OpenAlexGoogle Scholar
No disponible en Scopus

Abstract

This study compared young female soccer players' tactical, conditional, and emotional responses during two small-sided games (SSGs), without restrictions (SSGfree), and introducing an additional rule (SSGrelationship: if a player touches an opponent just before she receives the ball, her team wins the ball back with an indirect free kick). Fourteen developmental U14 players participated in two 4 × 6-min seven-a-side games (six each, plus goalkeepers) on a 50-m long × 30-m wide field. Players' positional data were collected using a GPS to assess their tactical performance (central tendency and entropy measures of the surface area, distance between players and to the nearest opponent, and stretch and spatial exploration indices) and conditional performance (total and low-moderate, high, very high speed, sprinting distance covered, and the number of accelerations and decelerations). Participants also rated their perceived enjoyment and competence using the BECS scale. Tactical central tendency measures were higher during SSGfree (p < 0.05) than in SSGrelationship, but no differences were apparent for entropy and conditional measures (p > 0.05). From bout to bout, central tendency measures of tactical variables decreased more frequently during SSGfree than SSGrelationship. Entropy measures and conditional performance hardly varied between bouts. Enjoyment and perceived competence levels were similar for both SSGs. The findings indicate that modifying the interaction between opponents affects players' tactical responses more than conditional responses when compared with free play. Specifically, touching an opponent before they receive the ball may encourage players to play closer to their opponents during training tasks.

Description

Keywords

Women's sport, Football, Training, Behavior, Time-motion analysis

Department

Ingeniería / Ingeniaritza / Institute of Smart Cities - ISC

Faculty/School

Degree

Doctorate program

item.page.cita

Los Arcos, A., Gonzalez-Artetxe, A., Lombardero, S., Esnal-Arrizabalaga, O., Aginaga, J. (2025). Exploring the impact of social relationship modification on young female soccer players' performance in small-sided games. Journal of Human Kinetics, 95, 1-15. https://doi.org/10.5114/jhk/189425.

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Articles published in the Journal of Human Kinetics are licensed under an open access Creative Commons CC BY 4.0 license.

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