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SOCCER LINKS
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SOCCER SCIENCE
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The British Columbia Soccer has teamed up with Soccer Science International to ensure the good health of players and maximize their fitness. Soccer Science International provides soccer specific education, instruction, and training that promotes injury prevention and maximizes players’ physical potential in the sport of soccer.
All articles written by Rick Celebrini and printed in the Province are now available on line. Click on the links below.
Rick Celebrini is a former Vancouver 86er captain, one of the founding physiotherapists of Soccer Science International, and is the sport science consultant of the British Columbia Soccer Association's technical committee.
The focus of Soccer Science is in the formation of a training program that addresses the prevention of soccer related injuries while enhancing player performance. BC Soccer's Soccer Science program is based on an extensive literature review on the incidences, mechanisms, contributing factors, and present/previous prevention strategies of soccer related injuries, augmented with its own research and its members' clinical and playing experience. This exercise program will be implemented across a broad demographic including players of different ages, sexes and skill levels to determine long-term outcomes and the effectiveness of the program in both the prevention of injuries and the enhancement of performance.
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| Aerobic Fitness |
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There are benefits of a soccer player having a high level of aerobic fitness. These benefits include an improvement in performance and potential avoidance of some injuries. The keys to training this system are following some basic principles common to all aerobic training and ensuring it is tailored to the soccer players demands. In other words, while running for long distances in a straight line at a constant pace may be adequate aerobic training for certain purposes, such as in building an aerobic base in preseason, it does not reflect the aerobic demands of a soccer player. |
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| Artificial Turf |
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It looks like grass, it feels like grass – it ain’t grass! By now, most players have played on the synthetic turf fields popping up all over the lower mainland. While this new development in field surfaces has many benefits, especially in terms of durability, has created a host of new concerns. |
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| Cause and Effect |
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Have you had several consecutive injuries? Are they a result of a gradual or progressive onset versus trauma (i.e. a tackle or collision)? Do you, as my partner Alex McKechnie used to remark, “look like a Ferrari but run like a Fiat”? |
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| Core ABS |
| As a young player, I remember coaches and older players encouraging us to do our “abs”. This meant 500 crunches and sit-ups of various types at the end of practice. Obviously, this was a long time ago (I’m not sure I could do anything 500 times anymore) and our view of the abdominal region and how to train it has changed considerably. |
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| Dissociation |
| Dissociation is a concept that our group has incorporated into the training and rehab of all of our soccer players. The definition of dissociation is to “disconnect” or “disunite”. However, it could also be thought of as coordination or agility. It is essentially another role or skill of the core unit. |
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| Endurance |
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A soccer player will cover an average of 10 km of ground over the course of a 90 minute game. The endurance required to maintain soccer specific movements over this distance and duration is technically referred to as aerobic fitness. Midfielders, especially in the modern game where they are often asked to be involved in attack and defense, require the most aerobic fitness. It is not a coincidence that I was a defender, the least aerobically demanding of the positions. |
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| The use of Ice and Injuries |
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Surprisingly, one of the most common questions still asked in the clinic is “Should I use ice or heat after injury?” Those that have enjoyed the soothing comfort of a hot tub after an injury, only to come out with the injury looking like something off the Discovery Channel, will attest to the answer being a resounding “ice”. |
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| Nutrition |
| Fried Schnitzel, pommes frites, and 101 different cheeses make up our daily staple as we travel through Europe in preparation for the World Alpine Ski Championships in St. Moritz, Switzerland. Not that I’m complaining but it does inspire one to write about nutrition for athletes, especially during travel when meal planning is often difficult. Now I am not an expert in this field but there are certain basics that every soccer player, coach, and parent should know to maximize a players’ performance and for generally healthy living. Ideally a player should consult a sports nutritionist to assess his/her daily and pre-game diet to make sure they are getting enough of the right types of nutrients and energy sources. |
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| Playoff Preperation |
| It’s that time of the year again when the protracted regular season is winding down, and the cup run has begun. |
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| Prehabilitation or Prehab |
| While this concept may seem on the surface to be shooting an already challenged health care system in the proverbial foot, I would argue that prehab is part of an evolution of all of our professions, especially in the game of soccer. |
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