Ricardo Rebelo-Gonçalves
University of Coimbra
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ricardo Rebelo-Gonçalves.
International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance | 2015
Ricardo Rebelo-Gonçalves; Manuel J. Coelho-e-Silva; Vítor Severino; Antonio Tessitore; António J. Figueiredo
Studies focused on position-related characteristics of young soccer players often ignore the goalkeepers. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of playing position on anthropometry, physiological attributes, soccer skills, and goal orientation across adolescence. One hundred forty-five soccer players age 11-19 y were assessed in training experience, body size, maturation, physiological parameters, soccer skills, and goal orientation. Factorial ANOVA was used to test the effect of age group, playing position, and respective interaction terms, while analysis of variance was used to compare goalkeepers vs outfielders in middle (under 13 [U-13] and U-15) and late (U-17 and U-19) adolescence. Discriminant analysis was used to identify the variables that contributed to explaining playing positions. Age group was a consistent source of variation for all variables except task and ego orientations. Fat mass, agility, endurance, dribbling speed, shooting accuracy, and passing were affected by the gradient derived from the classification between goalkeepers and outfielders. It was possible to correctly classify the playing position based on fat-free mass and 3 manipulative skills in younger players and on 4 skills in U-17 and U-19 soccer players. Future research should include longitudinal information to improve our understanding of the factors that contribute to distinguish goalkeepers from outfielders.
International Journal of Sports Medicine | 2014
João Valente-dos-Santos; Manuel J. Coelho-e-Silva; João P. Duarte; João R. Pereira; Ricardo Rebelo-Gonçalves; António J. Figueiredo; M. A. Mazzuco; Lauren B. Sherar; Marije T. Elferink-Gemser; Robert M. Malina
This study evaluates the contributions of age, skeletal maturation, body size and composition, training and playing position to the development of agility and dribbling speed in young male soccer players (10-18 years) followed longitudinally. 83 players [defenders (n=35), midfielders (n=27), forwards (n=21)] were followed annually over 5 years (average: 4.4 observations per player). Skeletal age (SA), stature, body mass, triceps and subscapular skinfolds, agility and dribbling speed were measured annually. Body composition was estimated from the 2 skinfolds. Annual training volume was estimated from weekly participation forms completed by coaches. The multiplicative allometric models with the best statistical fit showed that statural growth of 1 cm predicts 1.334 s and 1.927 s of improvement in agility and dribbling speed, respectively. Significant independent effects of fat-free mass and annual volume training were found for agility and dribbling speed, respectively (P<0.05). Predicted agility (from 12 to 18 years of SA) and dribbling speed (from 13 to 18 years of SA) differed significantly among players by playing positions (midfielders>forwards>defenders). The present results provide developmental models for the interpretation of intra- and inter-individual variability in agility and dribbling speed among youth soccer players across adolescence, and may provide a framework for trainers and coaches to develop and evaluate individualized training protocols.
Revista Paulista De Pediatria | 2016
Leonardo Gomes de Oliveira Luz; André Seabra; Cristina Padez; João P. Duarte; Ricardo Rebelo-Gonçalves; João Valente-dos-Santos; Tatiana D.D. Luz; Bruno C.M. Carmo; Manuel J. Coelho-e-Silva
Abstract Objective: The present study aimed to: 1) examine the association of biological maturation effect on performance at a motor coordination battery and 2) to assess whether the association between biological maturation and scores obtained in motor coordination tests is mediated by some anthropometric measurement. Methods: The convenience sample consisted of 73 male children aged 8 years old. Anthropometric data considered the height, body mass, sitting height, waist circumference, body mass index, fat mass and fat-free mass estimates. Biological maturation was assessed by the percentage of the predicted mature stature. Motor coordination was tested by the Körperkoordinationstest für Kinder. A partial correlation between anthropometric measurements, z-score of maturation and the motor coordination tests were performed, controlling for chronological age. Finally, causal mediation analysis was performed. Results: Height, body mass, waist circumference and fat mass showed a slight to moderate inverse correlation with motor coordination. Biological maturation was significantly associated with the balance test with backward walking (r=-0.34). Total mediation of the waist circumference was identified in the association between biological maturation and balance test with backward walking (77%). Conclusions: We identified an association between biological maturation and KTK test performance in male children and also verified that there is mediation of waist circumference. It is recommended that studies be carried out with female individuals and at other age ranges.
PLOS ONE | 2018
Manuel J. Coelho-e-Silva; Ricardo Rebelo-Gonçalves; Diogo Martinho; Alexis Ahmed; Leonardo Gomes de Oliveira Luz; João P. Duarte; Vítor Severino; Rafael C. Baptista; João Valente-dos-Santos; Vasco Vaz; Rui Soles Gonçalves; Antonio Tessitore; António J. Figueiredo
The current study aimed to examine the reproducibility of estimated peak power and estimated pedal velocity in a multi-trial 10-s all-out cycling test among adult athletes (n = 22; aged 23.50±4.73 years). Stature, sitting height and body mass were measured. Leg length was estimated as stature minus sitting height. Body volume was obtained from air displacement plethysmography and was subsequently used to calculate body density. Fat mass and fat-free mass were derived. The short-term power outputs were assessed from the force-velocity test (FVT), using a friction-braked ergometer on two separated occasions. Differences between repeated measurements were examined with paired t-test and effect sizes calculated. No significant differences were found between session 1 (898 W, 142 rpm) and session 2 (906 W, 142 rpm). Test-retest procedure showed acceptable reliability for estimated peak power output [technical error of measurement (TEM) = 31.9 W; % coefficient of variation (CV) = 3.5; intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) = 0.986] and pedal velocity (TEM = 5.4 rpm, %CV = 3.8, ICC = 0.924). The current study demonstrated a reasonable reproducibility of estimated peak power and pedal velocity outputs in non-elite male athletes and supports that a familiarization session including a complete FVT protocol is not required.
Science and Medicine in Football | 2017
Ricardo Rebelo-Gonçalves; Manuel J. Coelho-e-Silva; João Valente-dos-Santos; Antonio Tessitore; António J. Figueiredo
ABSTRACT The purpose of the current study was to evaluate the contribution of chronological age (CA), maturation, body size, and annual volume training to the longitudinal changes in aerobic performance and soccer-specific skills in youth soccer goalkeepers aged 11–18 years. A total of 16 goalkeepers were annually followed over a minimum of 3–5 years (4.4 measurements per goalkeeper). Anthropometric characteristics, training experience, and annual volume training were recorded. Performance was assessed by the 20-m shuttle run test, the dribbling speed test (time to complete the slalom course while dribbling the ball with the feet), and the wall pass test (number of passes made to a wall in 20 s). Multilevel modeling was used to predict developmental changes in aerobic performance, dribbling speed, and passing ability across ages. Based on multilevel models, the impact of age was a consistent source of variation in all performance indicators among goalkeepers aged 11–18 years [1 year predicts 192.5 m (37.02%), 0.35 s (2.26%), and 1 pass (6.11%) of improvement in aerobic performance, dribbling speed and passing ability, respectively]. Moreover, the predicted longitudinal scores for soccer-specific skills improved with the annual volume of training (1000 h predicts 3 s and 5 passes of improvement). Our results highlighted the importance of training in the development of aerobic performance and soccer-specific skills, and may provide a framework for trainers and coaches to develop and evaluate effective training programs for individual goalkeepers.
Journal of Human Kinetics | 2016
João P. Duarte; Óscar M. Tavares; João Valente-dos-Santos; Vítor Severino; Alexis Ahmed; Ricardo Rebelo-Gonçalves; João R. Pereira; Vasco Vaz; Susana Póvoas; André Seabra; Sean P. Cumming; Manuel J. Coelho-e-Silva
Abstract The intermittent nature of match performance in youth soccer supports relevance of ability to repeatedly produce high-intensity actions with short recovery periods. This study was aimed to examine the reproducibility of a repeated dribbling ability protocol and, additionally, to estimate the contribution of concurrent tests to explain inter-individual variability in repeated dribbling output. The total sample comprised 98 players who were assessed as two independent samples: 31 players were assessed twice to examine reliability of the protocol; and 67 juveniles aged 16.1 ± 0.6 years were compared by the competitive level (local, n = 34; national, n = 33) to examine construct validity. All single measurements appeared to be reasonably reliable: total (ICC = 0.924; 95%CI: 0.841 to 0.963); ideal (ICC = 0.913; 95%CI: 0.820 to 0.958); worst (ICC = 0.813; 95%CI: 0.611 to 0.910). In addition, the percentage of the coefficient of variation was below the critical value of 5% for total (%CV = 3.84; TEM = 2.51 s); ideal (%CV = 3.90, TEM = 2.48 s). Comparisons between local and national players suggested magnitude effects as follows: moderate (d-value ranged from 0.63 to 0.89) for all repeated sprint ability scores; large for total (d = 1.87), ideal (d = 1.72), worst (d = 1.28) and moderate for composite scores: the fatigue index (d = 0.69) and the decrement score (d = 0.67). In summary, the dribbling protocol presented reasonable reproducibility properties and output extracted from the protocol seemed to be independent from biological maturation.
Revista Paulista De Pediatria | 2016
Leonardo Gomes de Oliveira Luz; André Seabra; Cristina Padez; João P. Duarte; Ricardo Rebelo-Gonçalves; João Valente-dos-Santos; Tatiana D.D. Luz; Bruno C.M. Carmo; Manuel J. Coelho-e-Silva
Journal of Sports Science and Medicine | 2016
Ricardo Rebelo-Gonçalves; António J. Figueiredo; Manuel J. Coelho-e-Silva; Antonio Tessitore
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2018
João Valente-dos-Santos; Ricardo Rebelo-Gonçalves; Diogo Martinho; João P. Duarte; Daniela Costa; Paulo Sousa-e-Silva; Vítor Severino; Vasco Vaz; Rui Soles Gonçalves; Antonio Tessitore; António J. Figueiredo; Manuel J. Coelho-e-Silva
Archive | 2016
António J. Figueiredo; Manuel J. Coelho-e-Silva; Ricardo Rebelo-Gonçalves; Vítor Severino; Robert M. Malina