Int J Sports Med 2017; 38(03): 201-209
DOI: 10.1055/s-0042-119029
Training & Testing
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Relative Age, Maturation and Physical Biases on Position Allocation in Elite-Youth Soccer

Chris Towlson
1   Sport, Health and Exercise Science, The University of Hull, Hull, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
,
Stephen Cobley
2   Faculty of Health Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia
,
Adrian Wayne Midgley
3   Sport and Physical Activity, Edgehill University, Ormskirk, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
,
Andrew Garrett
1   Sport, Health and Exercise Science, The University of Hull, Hull, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
,
Guy Parkin
4   Pro Football Support, Huddersfield, Yorkshire, United Kingdom
,
Ric Lovell
5   School of Science and Health, Sport and Exercise Science, Western Sydney University, Penrith, Australia
› Author Affiliations
Further Information

Publication History



accepted after revision 03 October 2016

Publication Date:
20 February 2017 (online)

Abstract

This study assessed the contribution of relative age, anthropometry, maturation, and physical fitness characteristics on soccer playing position (goalkeeper [GK], central-defender [CD], lateral-defender [LD], central-midfield [CM], lateral-midfielder [LM], and forward [FWD]) for 465 elite-youth players (U13–U18’s). U13–14 CD were relatively older than LD and CM (likely small effects). CD and GK were generally taller and heavier (likely small to very-likely moderate effects) than other players at each developmental stage and were advanced maturers at U13–14 (very-likely small to likely moderate effects). GK had inferior agility (very-likely small to likely moderate effects), endurance (very-likely small to likely moderate effects), and sprint capacities (likely small-moderate effects) vs. outfield positions at U13–14, but deficits in anaerobic phenotypes were diminished in U15–16 and U17–18. Position specific fitness characteristics were distinguished at U15–16 (likely small) and U17–18 (likely moderate), where LM were faster than their central counterparts. In summary, relative age, maturation and anthropometric characteristics appear to bias the allocation of players into key defensive roles from an early development stage, whereas position-specific physical attributes do not become apparent until the latter stages of talent development in outfield players. Given the inter-individual trajectories of physical development according to biological maturation, playing position allocation might be considered ‘plastic’ by selectors, until complete-maturity is achieved.

 
  • References

  • 1 Baechle TR, Earle RW. Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning: Human Kinetics. 2008;
  • 2 Bailey D. The Saskatchewan Pediatric Bone Mineral Accrual Study: bone mineral acquisition during the growing years. Int J Sports Med 1997; 18: S191-S194
  • 3 Bailey D, McKay H, Mirwald R, Crocker P, Faulkner R. A six-year longitudinal study of the relationship of physical activity to bone mineral accrual in growing children: the university of Saskatchewan bone mineral accrual study. J Bone Miner Res 1999; 14: 1672-1679
  • 4 Batterham AM, Hopkins WG. Making meaningful inferences about magnitudes. Int J Sports Physiol Perform 2006; 1: 50-57
  • 5 Berthoin S, Gerbeaux M, Turpin E, Guerrin F, Lensel-Corbeil G, Vandendorpe F. Comparison of two field tests to estimate maximum aerobic speed. J Sports Sci 1994; 12: 355-362
  • 6 Buchheit M, Mendez-Villanueva A, Simpson B, Bourdon P. Match running performance and fitness in youth soccer. Int J Sports Med 2010; 31: 818-825
  • 7 Carling C, Le Gall F, Reilly T, Williams A. Do anthropometric and fitness characteristics vary according to birth date distribution in elite youth academy soccer players?. Scand J Med Sci Sports 2009; 19: 3-9
  • 8 Cobley SP, Baker J, Wattie N, McKenna J. Annual age-grouping and athlete development. Sports Med Open 2009; 39: 235-256
  • 9 Dellal A, Chamari K, Wong DP, Ahmaidi S, Keller D, Barros R, Bisciotti GN, Carling C. Comparison of physical and technical performance in European soccer match-play: FA Premier League and La Liga. Eur J Sport Sci 2011; 11: 51-59
  • 10 Dellal A, Wong DP, Moalla W, Chamari K. Physical and technical activity of soccer players in the French First League-with special reference to their playing position: original research article. Int SporMed J 2010; 11: 278-290
  • 11 Deprez D, Coutts A, Fransen J, Deconinck F, Lenoir M, Vaeyens R, Philippaerts R. Relative age, biological maturation and anaerobic characteristics in elite youth soccer players. Int J Sports Med 2013; 34: 897-903
  • 12 Deprez D, Fransen J, Boone J, Lenoir M, Philippaerts R, Vaeyens R. Characteristics of high-level youth soccer players: variation by playing position. J Sports Sci. 2014; DOI: 10.1080/02640414.2014.934707.
  • 13 Di Salvo V, Baron R, Tschan H, Calderon Montero F, Bachl N, Pigozzi F. Performance characteristics according to playing position in elite soccer. Int J Sports Med 2007; 28: 222
  • 14 Harriss D, Atkinson G. Ethical standards in sport and exercise science research: 2016 update. Int J Sports Med 2015; 36: 1121-1124
  • 15 Helsen WF, Van Winckel J, Williams AM. The relative age effect in youth soccer across Europe. J Sports Sci 2005; 23: 629-636
  • 16 Hirose N. Relationships among birth-month distribution, skeletal age and anthropometric characteristics in adolescent elite soccer players. J Sports Sci 2009; 27: 1159-1166
  • 17 Hopkins WG. A spreadsheet for deriving a confidence interval, mechanistic inference and clinical inference from a P value. Sportscience 2007; 11: 16-21
  • 18 Hulse M, Morris J, Hawkins R, Hodson A, Nevill A, Nevill M. A field-test battery for elite, young soccer players. Int J Sports Med 2013; 4: 302-311
  • 19 Leger LA, Lambert J. A maximal multistage 20-m shuttle run test to predict VO2 max. Eur J Appl Physiol 1982; 49: 1-12
  • 20 Lovell TC, Parkin G, Portas M, Vaeyens R, Cobley S. Soccer player characteristics in english lower-league development programmes: the relationships between relative age, maturation, anthropometry and physical fitness. PloS one 2015; 10: e0137238
  • 21 Malina RM, Eisenmann JC, Cumming SP, Ribeiro B, Aroso J. Maturity-associated variation in the growth and functional capacities of youth football (soccer) players 13–15 years. Eur J Appl Physiol 2004; 91: 555-562
  • 22 Malina RM, Kozieł SM. Validation of maturity offset in a longitudinal sample of Polish boys. J Sports Sci 2014; 32: 424-437
  • 23 Malina RM, Reyes MP, Eisenmann J, Horta L, Rodrigues J, Miller R. Height, mass and skeletal maturity of elite Portuguese soccer players aged 11–16 years. J Sports Sci 2000; 18: 685-693
  • 24 Mendez-Villanueva A, Buchheit M, Kuitunen S, Douglas A, Peltola E, Bourdon P. Age-related differences in acceleration, maximum running speed, and repeated-sprint performance in young soccer players. J Sports Sci 2011; 29: 477-484
  • 25 Mirwald RL, Baxter-Jones A, Bailey DA, Beunen GP. An assessment of maturity from anthropometric measurements. Med Sci Sports Exerc 2002; 34: 689
  • 26 Ramsbottom R, Brewer J, Williams C. A progressive shuttle run test to estimate maximal oxygen uptake. Br J Sports Med 1988; 22: 141-144
  • 27 Romann M, Fuchslocher J. Relative age effects in Swiss junior soccer and their relationship with playing position. Eur J Sport Sci 2013; 13: 356-363
  • 28 Semenick D. Tests and measurements: The T-test. Strength Cond J 1990; 12: 36-37
  • 29 Stewart A. Physiological Tests for Elite Athletes. In: Taylor & Francis; 2002
  • 30 The English Premier League. Elite Player Performance Plan. In 2011;
  • 31 Vaeyens R, Philippaerts RM, Malina RM. The relative age effect in soccer: A match-related perspective. J Sports Sci 2005; 23: 747-756
  • 32 Wattie N, Cobley S, Baker J. Towards a unified understanding of relative age effects. J Sports Sci 2008; 26: 1403-1409