Methodological Approaches to Talent Identification in Team Sports: A Narrative Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Talent Identification Research Designs
2.1. Cross-Sectional Research
2.2. Longitudinal Research
2.3. Prospective/Retrospective Research Designs
3. A Multidisciplinary Approach
4. Signs and Samples
4.1. Signs
4.2. Samples
4.3. Subjective Expert Opinion
5. Conclusions
6. Directions for Future Research
- Future TID research should strive to adopt a longitudinal research design in order to provide regular and comprehensive evaluations of athlete’s performance in relevant characteristics and their individual rates of change as possible indicators of potential.
- A multidisciplinary approach to research would allow for more comprehensive athlete profiling and serve not only as a potential tool for TID but to also augment TD processes within team sport environments.
- Investigating both objective and subjective data through a combined approach of signs, samples and subjective expert opinions would allow researchers to bridge the gap between relevant characteristics and their transfer to performance, with an added perspective from “the coach’s eye”.
7. Practical Applications
- Identify key actions for successful match play and the underpinning multidisciplinary characteristics required to perform such actions.
- Profile the actions and relevant characteristics through multiple methods—signs, samples, and subjective expert opinions.
- Repeat the profiling longitudinally to account for non-linear development whilst also examining the trend of development as an indicator of potential i.e., showing the capacity to successfully perform such actions in the future.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Authors/Sport | Sample/Timeframe | Objectives | Key Findings |
---|---|---|---|
Till et al., 2013 [40]/rugby league | 81 male junior rugby league players from under 13-under 15/3 consecutive years. | Compare longitudinal development of physical and anthropometric characteristics considering position and selection level in junior rugby league players. | 1. Selection level (national vs. regional) had a significant overall main effect on physical and anthropometric characteristics. 2. Players who moved up in selection level significantly improved sprint speed and were the quickest at under 15 age category. 3. There was a significant interaction between maturation and time for sprint speed, vertical jump, and medicine ball throw. |
Matthys et al., 2013 [42]/handball | 94 youth handball players from under 14-under 18/3 consecutive seasons. | Assess longitudinal changes in anthropometry and physical performance between elite and non-elite handball players. | 1. Elite players did not improve their physical performance more rapidly than non-elites and had similar anthropometric profiles. 2. Elite players performed significantly better on the intermittent endurance, speed, and coordination items. It was revealed Yo-Yo distance and coordination with and without ball discriminated most between the two playing levels. |
Roescher et al., 2010 [43]/soccer | 130 male youth soccer players aged under 14-under 18/5 consecutive years with the exception of 1 year. | Investigate the development of intermittent endurance capacity, the underlying mechanisms affecting this development and attained adult playing level in talented youth soccer players. | 1. From 15 years of age players who reach professional status show a faster development pattern than non-professionals. 2. Both hours spent in soccer-specific training and hours spent in additional training were positively related to the development of intermittent endurance capacity. |
Elferink-Gemser et al., 2007 [41]/field hockey | 30 elite and 35 sub-elite male and female youth field hockey players from under 14-under 16/3 consecutive years. | Identify the performance characteristics that may help identify future elite hockey players. | 1. Both male and female elite players scored better than sub-elite on technical and tactical variables. 2. Female elite players also scored better on interval endurance capacity, motivation, and confidence. 3. Male and female elite players improved more than their sub-elite counterparts on interval endurance capacity and slalom dribble across the study period. |
Pyne et al., 2005 [44] /Australian rules football | 283 Australian rules football players/3 consecutive years. | Determine the relationships between anthropometrics and physical fitness tests and subsequent career progression. | 1. Drafted players were faster (5, 10 and 20-m), had higher estimated VO2 max and a faster agility run performance than non-drafted players. 2. No substantial differences in anthropometric or jump tests were found between drafted and non-drafted players. |
Authors/Sport | Sample | Variables | Disciplines | Key Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dimundo et al., 2021 [70]/Rugby Union | 74 elite under 15 male youth rugby union players. | Height, body mass, 10-m and 20-m sprint time, counter-movement jump, isometric hip extension, dominant handgrip strength, date of birth, perceptual-cognitive video simulation. | Physical, tactical | 1. Selected players to an academy outperformed those not selected in body mass, handgrip strength, isometric hip extension and 20-m sprint (p < 0.05). 2. No significant differences were apparent for the perceptual-cognitive test. |
(Elferink-Gemser et al., 2004) [27]/Field Hockey | 126 elite male and female youth field hockey players aged 11–16. | Height, body mass, percentage body fat, peak shuttle sprint, repeated shuttle sprint, slalom sprint performance, interval endurance capacity, peak shuttle dribble, repeated shuttle dribble, slalom dribble, general tactics, tactics for possession of the ball, tactics for non-possession of the ball, motivation, confidence, anxiety control, mental preparation, team emphasis and concentration. | Physical, technical, tactical, psychological | 1. Stepwise discriminant analysis predicted better tactics for possession of the ball, being younger, having a higher motivation, and a quicker slalom dribble could best discriminate between elite and sub-elite players. 2. Elite youth players scored better than sub-elite youth players on technical (peak dribble and repeated dribble shuttle run), tactical (general tactics, tactics for possession and non-possession of the ball) and psychological variables (motivation) (p < 0.05). |
Falk et al., 2004 [45]/Water Polo | 24 male youth water polo players aged 12–14. | 50, 100, 200 and 400-m freestyle swim, 100-m breaststroke, 100-m butterfly, 50-m dribbling, throwing at goal, throwing for distance, vertical jump from water, game intelligence. | Physical, technical, tactical | 1. Two years before selection to the junior national team, players who were selected outperformed those non-selected on game-intelligence, 50-m dribbling and all swim tasks except 50-m freestyle and 100-m breaststroke (p < 0.05). 2. Using an average rank score, predictions for 67% of players were in agreement with final selections. |
Sieghartsleitner et al., 2019/Soccer | 117 elite under 14 youth soccer players. | Age, relative age, age at peak height velocity, height, body mass, in-game performance, YoYo intermittent recovery test level 1, 40-m sprint, agility, dribbling, passing, juggling, achievement motive, achievement goal orientation, self-determination, importance of football within family, parent’s priority of sport vs. school, financial investment, time investment, practice and play up to age 12. | Physical, technical, psychological, sociological | 1. A holistic model combining all predictor variables had the greatest accuracy (88%) in correctly predicting who would achieve professional vs. non-professional status 5 years later. |
Woods et al., 2015 [71]/Australian Rules Football | 84 elite under 18 Australian rules football (AF) athletes. | Standing height, dynamic vertical jump height on non-dominant leg, 20-m multistage fitness test, kicking, handballing, video decision-making. | Physical, technical, tactical | 1. Those selected for state representation (“talent identified”) outperformed non-talent identified on each test (p < 0.05). 2. Using a summative score receiver operating characteristics were able to correctly classify 95% of talent identified and 86% non-talent identified participants (AUC = 95.4%). |
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Barraclough, S.; Till, K.; Kerr, A.; Emmonds, S. Methodological Approaches to Talent Identification in Team Sports: A Narrative Review. Sports 2022, 10, 81. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports10060081
Barraclough S, Till K, Kerr A, Emmonds S. Methodological Approaches to Talent Identification in Team Sports: A Narrative Review. Sports. 2022; 10(6):81. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports10060081
Chicago/Turabian StyleBarraclough, Sam, Kevin Till, Adam Kerr, and Stacey Emmonds. 2022. "Methodological Approaches to Talent Identification in Team Sports: A Narrative Review" Sports 10, no. 6: 81. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports10060081
APA StyleBarraclough, S., Till, K., Kerr, A., & Emmonds, S. (2022). Methodological Approaches to Talent Identification in Team Sports: A Narrative Review. Sports, 10(6), 81. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports10060081