Abstract

A total of 3,782 performance results for male and female weightlifters, ages 14–30 from 123 countries, from Youth, Junior, and Senior World Championships and Olympic Games 2013–2017 were used to estimate the age at peak performance in Olympic weightlifting and quantify performance development from adolescence to adulthood. The age at peak performance was estimated for men and women globally and for different geographic regions. Overall, male and female weightlifters achieve their peak performance in weightlifting at similar ages. The median peak age is 26.0 years (95% CI: 24.9, 27.1) for men and 25.0 years (95% CI: 23.9, 27.4) for women, at the 90th percentile of performances. The median peak age was 26.3 years for men (95% CI: 24.5, 29.6) and 26.4 years for women (95% CI: 24.5, 29.6), at the 50th percentile. It is a novel finding that the age at peak performance varies for male and female athletes from different geographic regions (Western Europe, Eastern Europe, Middle East, Far East, North- and South America). For some regions men reach peak performance at a younger age than women, while this relationship is reversed for other regions. A possible explanation could be that socio-economic factors influence the pool of available athletes and thus may under- or overestimate the true peak age. Unlike in track and field where the discipline might determine specific body types, weightlifters at all ages compete in body weight classes, enabling us to compare performance levels and annual rate of change for athletes of different body mass. We quantified increases in performance in Olympic weightlifting for male and female adolescents. Sex-specific differences arise during puberty, boys outperform girls, and there is a rapid increase in their performance levels before the further growth slows down. The largest annual rate of increase in the total weight lifted was achieved between 16 and 17 years of age for both sexes with lower body mass and between 21 and 22 years with higher body mass. Such new information may help to establish progression trajectories for young athletes.

Highlights

  • Olympic weightlifting training is comprised of high-speed resistance exercises

  • We focused on analyzing performances in recent years, 2013–2017, from World Championships and Olympic Games since there has been an influx of youth and women into the sport of weightlifting, and improvements in performances were seen over time (Elmenshawy et al, 2015; Huebner et al, 2019)

  • The age at peak performance differed for athletes from various geographical regions

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Summary

Introduction

Olympic weightlifting training is comprised of high-speed resistance exercises. It requires technical skills, speed, balance, coordination, and strength. Performance Development in Weightlifting depends on changes due to puberty and differ for male and female athletes. Participants in Youth World Championships in Olympic weightlifting are 13–17 years old. This is the age range when sex differences in functional capacities for strength, muscular power, and speed become more pronounced (Malina et al, 2010). Despite the highly technical component of Olympic weightlifting the changes in performances are expected to mirror such age and sex related differences. A prior study estimated the age at peak performance from Senior World Championships results (Solberg et al, 2019), but to our knowledge performance curves during the competitive lifespan have not been documented in weightlifting

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