4.6 Article

The validity of a non-differential global positioning system for assessing player movement patterns in field hockey

期刊

JOURNAL OF SPORTS SCIENCES
卷 27, 期 2, 页码 121-128

出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02640410802422181

关键词

Team sports; performance analysis; match analysis; satellite positioning

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Nine games players (mean age 23.3 years, s=2.8; height 1.73m, s=0.08; body mass 70.0kg, s=12.7) completed 14 laps of a measured circuit that incorporated intermittent running and directional changes, representative of the movements made by field hockey players during match-play. The distances and speeds recorded by a global positioning satellite (GPS) system (Spi Elite) were compared statistically with speed measurements made using timing gates and distances measured using a calibrated trundle wheel, to establish the criterion validity of the GPS system. A validation of the speed of movement of each participant separately was also made, using data from each timing gate, over a range of speeds. The mean distance recorded by the GPS system was 6821m (s=7) and the mean speed was 7.0kmh-1 (s=1.9), compared with the actual distance of 6818m and recorded mean speed of 7.0kmh-1 (s=1.9). Pearson correlations (r) among timing gate speed and GPS speed were 0.99 (P0.001) and the mean difference and 95% limits of agreement were 0.00.9kmh-1. These results suggest that a GPS system (Spi Elite) offers a valid tool for measuring speed and distance during match-play, and can quickly provide the scientist, coach, and player with objective information about certain movement patterns during competitive games.

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