Relative skeletal maturity status affects injury burden in U14 elite academy football players

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Abstract

Maturation progresses at different times and at different rates between individuals. Thus, differences in maturity status exist among players in the same chronological age-based category, especially in U14 players. The purpose of this prospective study was to describe injury burden according to the relative skeletal maturity status in U14 elite academy football players. From 2011 to 2020, injuries and individual exposure (training and match) were prospectively recorded in 183 male U14 players. Skeletal age (SA) was assessed using the Tanner-Whitehouse 2 method. Relative skeletal maturity status [SA minus chronological age (CA)] was classified as follows: early (SA–CA > 0.5), on-time (SA–CA ± 0.5), and late (SA–CA

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Monasterio, X., Bidaurrazaga-Letona, I., Larruskain, J., Lekue, J. A., Diaz-Beitia, G., Santisteban, J. M., … Gil, S. M. (2022). Relative skeletal maturity status affects injury burden in U14 elite academy football players. Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports, 32(9), 1400–1409. https://doi.org/10.1111/sms.14204

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