Physical and Physiological Demands of Recreational Team Handball for Adult Untrained Men

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Abstract

Lack of motivation to exercise was reported as a major cause of sedentary behavior in adulthood. This descriptive study examines the acute physical and physiological demands of recreational team handball and evaluates whether it could be suggested as an exercise mode for fitness and health enhancement in 33-55-year-old untrained men. Time-motion, heart rate (HR), and blood lactate analyses were obtained from 4 recreational matches. Mean distance covered during the 60 min matches was 6012±428 m. The players changed match activity 386±70 times, of which high-intensity runs and unorthodox movements amounted to 59±18 and 26±26 per match, respectively. The most frequent highly demanding playing actions were jumps and throws. Match average and peak HR were 82±6% and 93±5% HRmax, respectively. Players exercised at intensities between 81 and 90% HRmax for 47% (28±14 min) and >90% HRmax for 24% (14±15 min) of total match time. Match average and peak blood lactate values were 3.6±1.3 and 4.2±1.2 mM, respectively. Recreational team handball is an intermittent high-intensity exercise mode with physical and physiological demands in the range of those found to have a positive effect on aerobic, anaerobic, and musculoskeletal fitness in adult individuals. Training studies considering recreational team handball as a health enhancing intervention are warranted.

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Póvoas, S. C. A., Castagna, C., Resende, C., Coelho, E. F., Silva, P., Santos, R., … Krustrup, P. (2017). Physical and Physiological Demands of Recreational Team Handball for Adult Untrained Men. BioMed Research International, 2017. https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/6204603

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