Abstract
Training load monitoring has grown in recent years with the acute:chronic workload
ratio (ACWR) widely used to aggregate data to inform decision-making on injury risk.
Several methods have been described to calculate the ACWR and numerous methodological
issues have been raised. Therefore, this study examined the relationship between the
ACWR and injury in a sample of 696 players from 13 professional rugby clubs over two
seasons for 1718 injuries of all types and a further analysis of 383 soft tissue injuries
specifically. Of the 192 comparisons undertaken for both injury groups, 40% (all injury)
and 31% (soft tissue injury) were significant. Furthermore, there appeared to be no
calculation method that consistently demonstrated a relationship with injury. Some
calculation methods supported previous work for a “sweet spot” in injury risk, while
a substantial number of methods displayed no such relationship. This study is the
largest to date to have investigated the relationship between the ACWR and injury
risk and demonstrates that there appears to be no consistent association between the
two. This suggests that alternative methods of training load aggregation may provide
more useful information, but these should be considered in the wider context of other
established risk factors.
Key words
workload - injury - prevention - athlete management