What do you hear? The effect of stadium noise on football players` passing performances

Stadium noise - created by spectators and fans - plays a critical part in the reality of professional sports. Due to a lack of research on the impact of these auditory cues and multimodal environments on motor performance, it is currently unclear how professional athletes experience and perceive stadium noise and how this potentially affects performance in practice. In order to explore the effect of stadium noise on athletes` performance, this paper presents an experimental design using the unique and standardised football training tool known as the "Footbonaut". Specifically, fifteen skilled German football players engaged in a standardised football-specific technical training programme while subjected to four different auditory training conditions; these included both "positive" and "negative" stadium noise conditions, a "baseline" condition providing auditory guidance, and a "no (auditory) cue" condition. Performance data for passing accuracy and passing time were measured for training in each auditory condition. A repeated measures MANOVA revealed a significant main effect for passing time. Specifically, participants showed faster passing times in the baseline compared to the negative and no auditory cue conditions. Findings are presented and discussed from a constraints-led perspective, allied to principles of ecological dynamics and nonlinear pedagogy. Particularly, the use of representative training experiences (including multimodal sensory and emotional information) appears to underline training to refine expert athletes` adaptive coordination of complex motor actions. Highlights This study aimed to better understand skilful coordination of a representative football-specific task under limited multisensory information. Results show that auditory cues, or likewise the absence of them, can disrupt movement coordination. Findings underline benefits of training environments with appropriate levels of task complexity and representativeness that support skill refinement and performance preparation. Passing time may be considered a key performance indicator for elite-level football-specific skill production and performance.
© Copyright 2021 European Journal of Sport Science. Taylor & Francis. Kaikki oikeudet pidätetään.

Aiheet: jalkapallo kilpailu urheilija suorituskyky urheilutila katsoja apuväline havainto korva
Aihealueet: urheilukilpailut
Tagging: Lärm Passspiel
DOI: 10.1080/17461391.2020.1809714
Julkaisussa: European Journal of Sport Science
Julkaistu: 2021
Vuosikerta: 21
Numero: 7
Sivuja: 1035-1044
Julkaisutyypit: artikkeli
Kieli: englanti (kieli)
Taso: kehittynyt