AI Article Synopsis

  • The study wanted to see if basketball players perform better at different times of the day.
  • Twenty female basketball players were tested in the morning and afternoon to measure things like jumping and running speed.
  • The results showed that they jumped higher and ran faster in the afternoon, and their body temperature was also higher then.

Article Abstract

: The aim of this study was to determine whether variations in technical and neuromuscular performance occur across different times of the day in basketball players. : Twenty semiprofessional, female basketball players (23 ± 4 years) competing in a second-division national basketball competition completed separate testing batteries in the morning (08:30) and in the afternoon (17:30) in a randomized counterbalanced order. Testing sessions consisted of a free-throw accuracy test to assess technical performance, as well as flexibility (ankle dorsiflexion range-of-motion test), dynamic balance (modified star excursion balance test), vertical jump height (squat jump, countermovement jump with and without arm swing), strength (isometric handgrip), change-of-direction speed (V-cut test), and linear speed (20-m sprint) tests to assess neuromuscular performance. Mechanism variables were also obtained including tympanic temperature, urinary specific gravity, and rating of perceived exertion at each session. : Squat jump height (6.7%;  = .001; effect size (ES) = 0.33), countermovement jump height with (4.1%;  = .018; ES = 0.27) and without arm swing (5.9%;  = .007; ES = 0.30), and 20-m sprint time (-1.4%;  = .015; ES = -0.32) were significantly superior in the afternoon compared to morning. Tympanic temperature was significantly higher in the afternoon than morning (1.4%;  < .001; ES = 1.31). In contrast, no significant differences between timepoints were evident for all remaining variables ( > .05; ES = -0.33 to 0.16). : Some neuromuscular variables exhibited a time-of-day effect with better jump and sprint performance in the afternoon compared to morning in semiprofessional, female basketball players.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02701367.2023.2265447DOI Listing

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