Abstract

The relative age effect (RAE), which refers to an over-representation of selected athletes born early in the selection year, was proven to be present in alpine ski racing in all age categories at both national and international levels. However, the influential factors on, or the causal mechanisms of, the RAE are still unknown. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to examine three possible influential factors on the relative age effect in alpine skiing: physical performance, anthropometric characteristics and biological maturational status. The study included the investigation of 282 elite Austrian youth ski racers and 413 non-athletes (comparison group) of the same age (10–13 years) and region. Six physical performance tests were performed, body mass and height were assessed, and the age at peak height velocity (APHV) was calculated. A significant RAE was present in the ski racers. No differences were shown in the physical performance characteristics or in the calculated APHV between the relative age quarters. These results suggest that ski racers born in the last quarter can counteract the relative age disadvantages if they already present the same level of physical performance and maturational status as those born at the beginning of the year. The height and weight of ski racers born at the beginning of the year were significantly higher compared to the non-athletes, and ski racers born in relative age quarter 1 were taller and heavier compared to the ski racers of the other quarters. This indicates that the anthropometric characteristics influence the selection process in alpine ski racing, and that relatively older athletes are more likely to be selected if they exhibit advanced anthropometric characteristics.

Highlights

  • In many sports, participants of youth competitions are divided into competition categories based on their chronological age with the goals of guaranteeing fair competition and reducing the effect of developmental differences between athletes [1,2,3]

  • These results suggest that ski racers born in the last quarter can counteract the relative age disadvantages if they already present the same level of physical performance and maturational status as those born at the beginning of the year

  • A significant difference was shown between the relative age quarter distribution of the male ski racers compared to the male pupils (χ2(3, N = 155) = 13.85; p = 0.003; ω = 0.34) with an over-representation of athletes born in the first quarter (36.8%) and an under-representation of athletes born in Q4 (17.4%)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Participants of youth competitions are divided into competition categories based on their chronological age with the goals of guaranteeing fair competition and reducing the effect of developmental differences between athletes [1,2,3]. Even though this strategy is well intentioned, it is responsible for creating chronological age advantages, since it leads to age differences of up to 12 months between individuals [1,4]. A RAE exists when the relative age quarter distribution of a selected sports group shows a skewed distribution with an over-representation of athletes whose birth months are close to the cut-off date for the competition categories [1,8], even though the relative age quarter distribution of the general population shows an even distribution among the quarters [8,9]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call