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Football/Soccer

Football/Soccer

POWERbreathe – Improve Performance In Football / Soccer Players

  • Accelerated recovery during repeated sprints by up to 7%
  • Improved inspiratory muscle strength by 31.2%
  • Improved inspiratory muscle endurance by 27.8%
  • Reduced whole body effort during exercise
  • Improved performance within 4-weeks (following tried & tested training regimen)

Scroll down to read how POWERbreathe improves performance in football / soccer players...

 

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POWERbreathe – Improves Performance In Football / Soccer Players

  • Accelerated recovery during repeated sprints by up to 7%
  • Improved inspiratory muscle strength by 31.2%
  • Improved inspiratory muscle endurance by 27.8%
  • Reduced whole body effort during exercise
  • Improved performance within 4-weeks (following tried & tested training regimen)

POWERbreathe Inspiratory Muscle Training For Football / Soccer Players

Football / soccer players cover approximately 10-12 km during the course of a match, which they do at an average intensity of 75-80% of their maximal oxygen uptake (VO2 max.). They sprint for 3-5 seconds and cruise for 30-90 seconds throughout the 90 minutes of the game.

Although most activity during a game is sub-maximal, the intermittent sprints that are integral to the game, are supra-maximal. This pattern of exertion places extreme demands upon breathing because these activities are anaerobic and generate high levels of lactic acid. Lactic acid stimulates breathing to increase as part of a compensatory strategy to overt fatigue of other muscles.

“Following a sprint, breathing is driven to its highest levels, inducing extreme breathlessness. If players are to continue to make an active and effective contribution to the game, their breathing must recover quickly” explains sports scientist and respiratory physiologist Dr Alison McConnell.

Breathing muscles are also essential for twisting and flexing movements of the trunk and make a contribution to stabilising and turning the trunk during kicking, as well as flexing the upper body during heading, so fatigue of the breathing muscles can affect more than running ability.

As well as helping players to recover more rapidly and avoid breathing muscle fatigue, inspiratory muscle training can be used as part of a pre-match and pre-substitution warm-up. By warming-up the breathing muscles the sense of increased breathing effort and breathlessness experienced during the first few minutes of activity can be avoided.

POWERbreathe training specifically targets the breathing muscles, strengthening them by around 30-50%, significantly improving performance and helping to eliminate breathing fatigue. And in studies, POWERbreathe training enabled players to recover and sprint maximally again more quickly.

Train smarter, not harder, to perform better.

Resources:

Research:

Links to research papers, published in peer-reviewed, high quality scientific journals. As well as original studies, we have also included some articles that review IMT; these have been written by experts in this field of research.

Inspiratory Muscle Training

Warm-up and Cool-down

Exercise-induced Inspiratory Muscle Fatigue

Miscellaneous

Review Articles

 

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