Quantifying technical actions in professional soccer using foot-mounted inertial measurement units

Sci Med Footb. 2022 May;6(2):203-214. doi: 10.1080/24733938.2021.1910333. Epub 2021 Apr 22.

Abstract

Objectives: This study aimed to (i) establish the concurrent validity and intra-unit reliability of a foot-mounted inertial measurement unit for monitoring soccer technical actions, (ii) quantify the within-microcycle inter-positional differences in the technical actions of professional soccer training, and (iii) determine the influence of drill category on the technical actions of professional soccer training.

Methods: Twenty-one professional soccer players' technical performance data (ball touches, releases, ball touches per minute, releases per minute), collected during training sessions throughout twenty-four weekly microcycles, were analysed using general linear modelling.

Results: The inertial measurement unit exhibited good concurrent validity (PA = 95.1% - 100.0%) and intra-unit reliability (PA = 95.9% - 96.9%, CV = 1.4% - 2.9%) when compared with retrospective video analyses. The most ball touches (X = 218.0) and releases (X = 110.8) were observed on MD - 1, with MD - 5 eliciting the highest frequency of ball touches (X = 3.8) and releases (X = 1.7) per minute. Central midfielders performed the most ball touches (X = 221.9), releases (X = 108.3), ball touches per minute (X = 3.4) and releases per minute (X = 1.6). Small-sided games evoked more ball touches (Xdiff = 1.5) and releases per minute (Xdiff = 0.1) than previously reported in match-play. The fewest ball touches (X = 1.2) and releases per minute (X = 0.5) were observed during tactical drills.

Conclusion: The results of this study provide a novel understanding of the within-microcycle, inter-positional and drill category differences in the technical actions performed by professional players during training.

Keywords: Professional soccer training; microcycle; microtechnology; player monitoring; technical actions.

MeSH terms

  • Athletic Performance* / physiology
  • Humans
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Soccer* / physiology
  • Touch Perception*