Test–retest reliability of strength, power, agility, and sprint performance in female team handball players
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/36624Dato
2024-11-26Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Osborne, John Owen; Kildalsen, Ingrid; Pedersen, Sigurd; Pettersen, Svein Arne; Welde, Boye; Minahan, Clare L.; Andersson, Bror Erik PetrusSammendrag
Design - Eighteen handball players (naturally menstruating: n = 8) completed performance test batteries on three separate occasions.
Methods - The performance test battery included: a 1-repetition Smith machine back squat, maximal handgrip strength tests, counter-movement jumps, squat jumps, a modified agility T-test, and 15-m linear sprints. For the naturally menstruating players, the testing sessions were completed at three hormonally-distinct points within a menstrual cycle (i.e., early follicular, ovulation, and mid-luteal phases). Reliability statistics (intraclass correlations, standard error of measurement, minimum difference, and coefficient of variation) were calculated for each performance test.
Results - Good-to-excellent test–retest reliability was found for all performance measures (intraclass correlation2,1 point estimates = 0.82 to 0.94), although max squat jumps were somewhat lower (intraclass correlation2,1 = 0.75 [95 % confidence interval = 0.55, 0.88]). Subgroup analysis for naturally menstruating players also revealed consistently high reliability values for all tests (intraclass correlation2,1 point estimate = 0.83 to 0.74).
Conclusions - These reliability data support the periodic use of selected athletic tests in routine handball assessments, in order to identify changes in sporting performance and monitor player progress. As test reliability does not appear to be influenced by the menstrual cycle phase, coaches and sports practitioners may schedule testing sessions for all athletes, without concern of a confounding effect from menstrual phases.