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There is potential to enhance the interest of basketball and volleyball coaches in developing their players' motor response speed during training sessions.
Coaches should conduct ongoing assessments to identify the progress of their players' reaction speed through the exercises and drills they practice.
Additionally, it would be beneficial to carry out studies that examine how improving motor response speed affects various motor skills in team sports.
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Understanding the 7Ps and their distinct characteristics is essential for achieving marketing success.
An extended framework of the 7Ps in sport includes cross-platform marketing that aligns with key SDGs related to inclusion, education, well-being, and impactful partnerships.
Recognising contemporary trends can enable practitioners to address evolving consumer expectations and inform future research.
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The present study revealed that the ACTN3 RR genotype was associated with superior back and handgrip strength among well-trained male badminton players, indicating a potential advantage in explosive strength-related movements required in the sport.
Players with the RR genotype also experienced less severe injuries, although they tended to have shorter badminton experience, which may suggest that genetic factors play a role even in early athletic development.
A genetic screening for ACTN3 polymorphism may support coaches and sports scientists in designing individualized strength and injury prevention programs, thereby optimizing training outcomes and athlete performance.
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Cultural heritage sports tourism has significant potential in the tourism market, as illustrated in Cluster I.
Digital archiving of cultural heritage sports is crucial for preserving them, as illustrated in co-occurrence cluster V.
Providing good service to visitors or participants in sporting events is essential for maintaining the host's image, as illustrated in the top-cited article.
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This review offers a foundational guideline for scholars seeking to evaluate the economic impacts of sporting events.
It presents a critical analysis of the advantages and limitations of the most commonly employed analytical approaches in prior research within this domain.
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A four-week sleep hygiene intervention was associated with improvements in subjective sleep scores, suggesting that structured sleep routines may support recovery during high-demand tournament phases. However, these findings should be interpreted with caution due to the reliance on self-reported measures and the absence of objective sleep tracking.
Exposure to the sleep protocol coincided with measurable changes in selected performance indicators, indicating that sleep may play a supportive role in athletic output and fatigue management. Nonetheless, the influence of other uncontrolled variables and the limited sample size warrant careful interpretation.
Positive associations between sleep hygiene and performance outcomes suggest that sleep-focused strategies could be a useful component of athlete support programs. However, their contribution to competitive success remains uncertain and likely depends on a broader set of contextual and performance-related factors.
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Sports marketers can immediately integrate congruent athlete endorsements to optimize frontal alpha suppression and beta dynamics, achieving enhanced consumer engagement and a projected 15-25% increase in intent-driven sales for aligned products.
Future studies should extend these neural correlates to diverse cultural cohorts using multimodal neuroimaging.
Congruent endorsements etch enduring neural signatures of consumer preference in competitive markets.
This review highlights the practical potential of rhythm-based training for enhancing athletic performance in open-skill sports through integrated physiological, psychological, and technical benefits.
The synthesized evidence provides practitioners with evidence-informed guidance for optimizing rhythm-based training interventions within sport-specific contexts.
Based on the available findings, music tempos ranging from approximately 100–140 BPM appear to be suitable for rhythm-based training applications. Lower tempos (approximately 100–110 BPM) may be particularly appropriate for tasks emphasizing coordination, movement control, and fine motor skills.
oderate tempos (approximately 120–130 BPM) are commonly associated with improvements in explosive power, agility, and general movement efficiency. Higher tempos (approximately 135–140 BPM) may be beneficial for fast-paced, high-intensity open skill sports, as they are linked to increased neuromuscular activation, enhanced attentional focus, and improved temporal precision.
Practitioners are encouraged to tailor tempo selection according to sport-specific demands, task characteristics, and individual athlete responses.
Velocity-Specific Programming: Coaches and clinicians should consider high-velocity dual-task resistance training (HVDRT) as a potentially more effective modality for specifically targeting upper-body strength compared to traditional slow-velocity methods in older adults.
Time-Efficient Multimodal Benefits: Both high- and low-velocity dual-task resistance training can be effectively used to improve aerobic capacity and dynamic balance. This allows practitioners to design time-efficient programs that address cardiovascular health and fall prevention simultaneously without needing separate aerobic sessions.
Fall Risk Mitigation: Integrating dual-task elements (combining cognitive challenges with resistance exercise) is highly recommended for improving performance in mobility tasks such as the 8-Foot Up-and-Go test. This is a critical practical consideration for therapists focused on enhancing spatiotemporal awareness and reducing fall risk in the elderly population.
Prescription for Power: To address the age-related decline in Type II muscle fibers and lower extremity power, trainers should emphasize the fastest possible concentric phase during dual-task resistance exercises. Even when statistical significance is not reached, this approach may offer meaningful clinical advantages for essential activities of daily living, such as rising from a chair.
Need for Supplemental Flexibility: As dual-task resistance training at varying velocities did not significantly improve upper or lower body flexibility, it is essential to prescribe targeted stretching protocols alongside these programs to ensure a comprehensive improvement in overall functional fitness.
Clinical Implementation: Healthcare providers can utilize dual-task resistance training as a "distraction technique" to potentially lower perceived exertion and fear of movement in older adults, thereby increasing adherence to high-intensity strength protocols (70-75% 1RM).