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Heart rate responses and activity profiles during training and matchesin youth soccer athletesYau, Chun-lim, Anson., 邱俊廉. January 2005 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Sports Science / Master / Master of Science in Sports Science
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The effect of aerobic power on elite youth soccer selection2015 June 1900 (has links)
Abstract
Soccer is a multifaceted sport requiring game-specific intelligence and particular physiological
and physical characteristics for success. Despite the wide variety of contributing factors, it has
been reported that youth soccer players who are larger in size, more mature, and have superior
aerobic power are favoured during team selection. The current investigation examined aerobic
power and anthropometric size differences between selected and not selected elite youth soccer
players; values were also compared between playing position and sexes. Twenty-three elite
soccer players, 10 males and 13 females, with an average age of 14 years were recruited for the
study; participants performed a graded treadmill test to exhaustion and a sport participation
questionnaire. Aerobic power results from the treadmill test were expressed in absolute (l/min)
and relative terms, to body mass and fat free mass (ml/kg/min & ml/kg FFM/min); values were
compared between selection status, playing position and sex. No significant differences were
detected for any measure of aerobic power or anthropometric size between selected and not
selected athletes when sexes were combined or separated (p>0.05); males had significantly
higher aerobic power levels compared to females despite scaling method (p<0.05). In females,
goalkeepers had a significantly lower absolute aerobic power (p<0.05), differences were not
detected when expressed relative to body mass or fat free mass (p>0.05). Males showed no
significant difference between playing positions in any measurement of aerobic power (p>0.05).
It appears as though Saskatchewan coaches view attributes, other than physical size and aerobic
fitness, as more beneficial for team success at this level. Results are encouraging as they suggest
that size and aerobic power may not be the main influencing criteria for achieving success on an
elite youth Saskatchewan soccer team.
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Corporate and social responsibility in professional football club organizationsKolyperas, Dimitrios January 2012 (has links)
While professional football clubs are facing increasing pressures to balance their business with social goals, an important unanswered question is whether these rather stakeholder-oriented organizations understand the nature and impact of corporate and social responsibility (CSR). Research has yet provided little information on how football clubs perceive and react to CSR. This thesis examines how three important aspects of CSR (communication, development and integration with other strategies) evolve across different football clubs and cultures. Because specific clubs may have unique social responsibilities attributed to them, the current study is not limited to one industry and one particular club / segment. It rather contains three complementary case studies and explores CSR activities associated with an overall 38 professional football clubs residing in a pan-European, national (league), and organizational context respectively. Specifically, the primary international analysis reveals that while most football clubs communicate various CSR efforts, these activities primarily refer to ten distinct areas. These areas, as well as prior literature, served as the framework for the development of an international football CSR typology. In addition, qualitative results gathered from a second study across football clubs from the same national context sought to determine the moderating role of national business system characteristics (i.e. legislations, socio-political drivers, internal and external barriers, and phases of CSR development). The results of a third study generally supported the aforementioned contentions providing additional information on the strategic benefits more integrative CSR can offer. Synthesizing outcomes and findings from three complementary studies, this thesis develops a conceptual model that brings together the two different views of the modern CSR debate. This conception theorises CSR as being a legally, socially and organizationally constructed umbrella positioned over the corporate organization. On one hand, CSR is an umbrella protection to cover up corporate irresponsibility, window-dress illegitimate actions, and distract public attention from sensitive business issues. On the other hand, more collaborative, planned, participative and long-term involvement to CSR activity can turn the umbrella model upside down and provide a collector of public support, or a battery where public benevolence can be stored and reused for future purposes. These findings are discussed in the context of contributions to the field of sport management and marketing, practitioners within the football industry, and scholars pursuing a research agenda in the area of CSR and sports. Future research suggestions are forwarded.
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The effect of game location on self-efficacy and assertive play in women's collegiate soccerPigozzo, Julie M. January 2004 (has links)
Several studies conducted on home advantage in sport have focused on game location and performance outcome. The purpose of this study was to examine three components of home advantage, such as the effect that game location has on self-efficacy, a critical psychological state, and assertive play, a critical behavioral state. Participants (N = 21) from one mid-sized, midwest, Division I soccer program completed the Modified State Sport-Confidence Inventory (MSSCI) prior to six home conference games and six away conference games. In addition, all 12-conference games were observed and coded according to four assertive behaviors of soccer players. Data were analyzed using a permutation test and Spearman's Rho with a level of significance set at .05. Results indicated there was no significant difference in self-efficacy between home and away games and no significant difference in assertive play between home and away games. No significance relationship was found for self-efficacy and assertive play. Possible limitations along with recommendations for the future are discussed. / School of Physical Education
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A sociology of Scottish football fan cultureGiulianotti, Richard January 1996 (has links)
While football is legitimately regarded as the ultimate global game, its significance to Scotland is even more exaggerated, in historical, social and cultural terms. Scots were at the forefront of 'globalising' the sport, teaching the English and other foreigners to play a highly technical and 'passing' game, only to abandon this later with characteristic complacency. Within Scotland, 'the only game' has provided its inhabitants with a cultural obsession, in which sectarian, regional and national animosities and inequalities may be contested and unsatisfactorily resolved. Consequently, the Scots are credited with gifting the world the phenomenon of 'football hooliganism', primarily at domestic club level, although the authorities latterly claim to have 'solved' such fan disorder. Upon the national stage, some argue football's social and political impacts have been markedly more pernicious, in being a dubious receptacle for the tartan-coated 'sub-nationalism' of a nation still denied a protective State. Therefore, this thesis examines the culture of these two particular, polarised categories of Scottish football fans, namely the contemporary hooligans (the 'soccer casuals') and the national team's supporters (the carnival or ambassadorial 'Tartan Army'). The thesis draws heavily upon qualitative fieldwork with these supporter groups, undertaken over the course of five years (1990-1994). To achieve this, the thesis is divided into three parts. The first part contextualises the discussion, by looking at previous explanations of football hooliganism and the extent to which these fit with initial evidence from the opposing, Scottish fan cultures. The second and third parts then introduce sustained fieldwork and analyses of these supporter groups.
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Competitive anxiety and coping of female collegiate soccer goalkeepersPayne, Ellen K. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--San Jose State University, 2003. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 63-67). Also available online (PDF file) by a subscription to the set or by purchasing the individual file.
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The UEFA club licensing system and its implementation into the top Greek professional football league a case study /Manologlou, Panagiotis. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (leaf 102). Also available online (PDF file) by a subscription to the set or by purchasing the individual file.
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Comparison of trunk, hip and knee kinematics during a side-step cutting maneuver between male and female Division I collegiate soccer playersDiStefano, Michael John. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 113-119). Also available online (PDF file) by a subscription to the set or by purchasing the individual file.
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Competitive anxiety and coping of female collegiate soccer goalkeepersPayne, Ellen K. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--San Jose State University, 2003. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 63-67).
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Collective efficacy, cohesion, and winning percentage in high school and Division III collegiate male and female student-athletesDamato, Gregory C. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Springfield College, 2003. / Includes bibliographical references.
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