The Effects of Two Different Rest Intervals on the Repeated Skating Ability of Ice Hockey Forwards and Defensemen

 Article (PDF) 
Authors
Jakub Baron, Subir Gupta, Anna Bieniec, Grzegorz Klich, Tomasz Gabrys, Andrzej Szymon Swinarew, Karel Svatora, Arkadiusz Stanula.
Abstract

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of two different rest intervals (2 min and 3 min), between two consecutive sets of repeated sprint skating ability (RSSA) tests, on the repeated sprint ability of ice hockey Forwards and Defensemen. Two protocols of RSSA tests, RSSA-2 and RSSA-3, were completed by 16 ice hockey Forwards and 8 Defensemen. Defensemen were heavier (p < 0.05) than Forwards, although their % body fat did not differ significantly. In RSSA-2, athletes performed six sets of 3×80 m sprint skating with 2 min passive recovery between two consecutive sets. In RSSA-3, the rest interval between the sets was 3 min. Average speed, average heart rate (HRaver), blood lactate concentration ([BLa]), and the rate of perceived exertion (RPE) were measured in both RSSA-2 and RSSA-3 tests. Both Forwards and Defensemen skated faster in RSSA-3 than in the corresponding set of RSSA-2. Forwards were faster than Defensemen in both the tests, however, the difference was significant (p < 0.05) only in RSSA-2. In Forwards and Defensemen, HRaver increased gradually from set 1 through set 6 in RSSA-2 and RSSA-3. In most of the sets, RPE was higher in RSSA-2 than in RSSA-3, and Defensemen perceived higher exertion than Forwards. No difference in [BLa] was noted between Forwards and Defensemen, although players of both positions showed higher [BLa] in RSSA-3 than in RSSA-2. This study concludes that (1) Forwards skate faster than Defensemen, (2) average heart rate and [BLa] do not vary between Forwards and Defensemen, and (3) a higher perceived exertion is observed in Defensemen than Forwards during repeated sprint skating tests
DOI
DOI: 10.2478/hukin-2022-0102
Citation
 APA 
Baron, J., Gupta, S., Bieniec, A., Klich, G., Gabrys, T., Szymon Swinarew, A. … Stanula, A. (2022). The Effects of Two Different Rest Intervals on the Repeated Skating Ability of Ice Hockey Forwards and Defensemen. Journal of Human Kinetics, 84, 216-223. https://doi.org/10.2478/hukin-2022-0102
 Harvard 
Baron, J., Gupta, S., Bieniec, A., Klich, G., Gabrys, T., Szymon Swinarew, A., Svatora, K., and Stanula, A. (2022). The Effects of Two Different Rest Intervals on the Repeated Skating Ability of Ice Hockey Forwards and Defensemen. Journal of Human Kinetics, 84, pp.216-223. https://doi.org/10.2478/hukin-2022-0102
 MLA 
Baron, Jakub et al. “The Effects of Two Different Rest Intervals on the Repeated Skating Ability of Ice Hockey Forwards and Defensemen.” Journal of Human Kinetics, vol. 84, 2022, pp. 216-223. doi:10.2478/hukin-2022-0102.
 Vancouver 
Baron J, Gupta S, Bieniec A, Klich G, Gabrys T, Szymon Swinarew A et al. The Effects of Two Different Rest Intervals on the Repeated Skating Ability of Ice Hockey Forwards and Defensemen. Journal of Human Kinetics. 2022;84:216-223. https://doi.org/10.2478/hukin-2022-0102
Key words
blood lactate concentration, rate of perceived exertion, skating speed, heart rate,

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