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Field Hockey Physiology By Margaret Winter
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80% of field hockey is aerobic & 20% is anaerobic (2) Stick skills and semi-crouched running with stick increases energy expenditure (4) Anaerobic systems needed for changes in motion that occur every 5.5 sec (6)
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Field hockey is an intermittent sport Often changing between aerobic and anaerobic movements Shuttle tests are good for field hockey because they simulate game like movement (2) Lactate in blood after tests VO 2 max increases with training (1)
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Summary FH mostly aerobic (frequently running/walking) ATP-PC for stick work and changing direction Glycolytic for longer sprints and repeated sprints
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Works Cited (1) Boddington, M.K, Lambert, M.I,, Waldeck, M.R. (2004). Validity of a 5-meter multiple shuttle run test for assessing fitness of women field hockey players. Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, 18(1), 97-100. (2) Koen, Lemmink, Visscher. (2006). Role of energy systems in two intermittent field tests in women field hockey players. Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, 20(3), 682-688. (3) Martens, Rainer. (2004). Successful Coaching. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics. (4) Reilly, Borrie. (1992). Physiology applied to field hockey. Journal of Sports Medicine, 14(1), 10- 26. (5) Spencer, Rechichi, Lawrence, Dawson, Bishop, Goodman. (2004). Time-motion analysis of elite field hockey, with special reference to repeated-sprint activity. Journal of Sports Sciences, 22, 843- 850. (6) Spencer, Rechichi, Lawrence, Dawson, Bishop, Goodman. (2005). Time-motion analysis of elite field hockey during several games in succession: a tournament scenario. Journal of Science Medicine and Sport, 4(8), 382-391.
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