What are the effects of circadian rhythm in tennis training?
The circadian rhythm is a rhythm characterized by a period of about 24 hours. Examples are the wake-sleep rhythm, the rate of cortisol secretion and various other biological substances, the rate of change in body temperature and other parameters related to the circulatory system.
They depend on various factors, such as, for example, the alternation of day and night, the passing of hours and the variation of temperature. What are the effects of circadian rhythm in tennis training? The Journal of Sports Sciences has tried to give an answer with the study Circadian rhythm effect on physical tennis performance in trained male players. An abstract of this interesting article mentions:
"To determine the effect of circadian rhythm on neuromuscular responses and kinematics related to physical tennis performance, after a standardised warm-up, 13 highly competitive male tennis players were tested twice for serve velocity/accuracy (SVA), countermovement vertical jump (CMJ), isometric handgrip strength (IS), agility T-test (AGIL) and a 10-m sprint (10-m RUN).
In a randomised, counter-balance order, tennis players underwent the test battery twice, either in the morning (i.e., AM; 9:00 h) and in the afternoon (i.e., PM; 16:30 h). Paired t-tests were used to analyse differences due to time-of-day in performance variables.
Comparison of morning versus afternoon testing revealed that SVA (168.5 ± 6.5 vs. 175.2 ± 6.1 km · h-1; P = 0.003; effect size [ES] = 1.07), CMJ (32.2 ± 0.9 vs. 33.7 ± 1.1 cm; P = 0.018; ES = 1.46), AGIL (10.14 ± 0.1 vs. 9.91 ± 0.2 s; P = 0.007; ES = 1.23) and 10-m RUN time (1.74 ± 0.1 vs. 1.69 ± 0.1 s; P = 0.021; ES = 0.67) were significantly blunted during the morning testing.
However, IS was not affected by time-of-day (P = 0.891). Thus, tennis performance may be reduced when competing in the morning in comparison to early evening. Therefore, coaches and tennis players should focus on schedule the SVA, power, speed and agility training sessions in the afternoon."
from Tennis World USA http://bit.ly/2KnQCXn
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