University of Wollongong
Browse

Injury risk-workload associations in NCAA American college football

Download (748.6 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-15, 01:24 authored by John SampsonJohn Sampson, Andrew Murray, Sean Williams, Travis Halseth, J Hanisch, G Golden, Hugh Fullagar
Objectives: To determine injury risk-workload associations in collegiate American Football. Design: Retrospective analysis. Methods: Workload and injury data was recorded from 52 players during a full NCAA football season. Acute, chronic, and a range of acute:chronic workload ratios (ACWR: 7:14, 7:21 and 7:28 day) calculated using rolling and exponentially weighted moving averages (EWMA) were plotted against non-contact injuries (regardless of time lost or not) sustained within 3- and 7-days. Injury risks were also determined relative to position and experience. Results: 105 non-contact injuries (18 game- and 87 training-related) were observed with almost 40% sustained during the pre-season. 7-21 day EWMA ACWR's with a 3-day injury lag were most closely associated with injury (R2 = 0.54). Relative injury risks were > 3x greater with high compared to moderate and low ratios and magnified when combined with low 21-day chronic workloads (injury probability = 92.1%). Injury risks were similar across positions. 'Juniors' presented likely and possibly increased overall injury risk compared to 'Freshman' (RR: 1.94, CI 1.07-3.52) and 'Seniors' (RR: 1.7, CI 0.92-3.14), yet no specific ACWR - experience or - position interactions were identified. Conclusions: High injury rates during college football pre-season training may be associated with high acute loads. In-season injury risks were greatest with high ACWR and evident even when including (more common and less serious) non-time loss injuries. Substantially increased injury risks when low 21-day chronic workloads and concurrently high EWMA ACWR highlights the importance of load management for individuals with chronic game- (non-involved on game day) and or training (following injury) absences.

History

Citation

Sampson, J. A., Murray, A., Williams, S., Halseth, T., Hanisch, J., Golden, G. & Fullagar, H. H. K. (2018). Injury risk-workload associations in NCAA American college football. Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport, 21 (12), 1215-1220.

Journal title

Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport

Volume

21

Issue

12

Pagination

1215-1220

Language

English

RIS ID

127832

Usage metrics

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC