Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5924627 Physiology & Behavior 2013 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Poor sleep before a sports competition is common, but has little effect on strength•Little is known about judgement and accuracy skills, as in tennis•Two studies of 5 h Vs usual sleep effects on serving accuracy; one with 80 mg caffeine•Both showed impairments with sleep loss, particularly for women•Caffeine did not counteract this impairment

Athletes often lose sleep on the night before a competition. Whilst it is unlikely that sleep loss will impair sports mostly relying on strength and endurance, little is known about potential effects on sports involving psychomotor performance necessitating judgement and accuracy, rather than speed, as in tennis for example, and where caffeine is 'permitted'. Two studies were undertaken, on 5 h sleep (33%) restriction versus normal sleep, on serving accuracy in semi-professional tennis players. Testing (14:00 h-16:00 h) comprised 40 serves into a (1.8 m × 1.1 m) 'service box' diagonally, over the net. Study 1 (8 m;8f) was within-Ss, counterbalanced (normal versus sleep restriction). Study 2 (6 m;6f -different Ss) comprised three conditions (Latin square), identical to Study 1, except for an extra sleep restriction condition with 80 mg caffeine vs placebo in a sugar-free drink, given (double blind), 30 min before testing. Both studies showed significant impairments to serving accuracy after sleep restriction. Caffeine at this dose had no beneficial effect. Study 1 also assessed gender differences, with women significantly poorer under all conditions, and non-significant indications that women were more impaired by sleep restriction (also seen in Study 2). We conclude that adequate sleep is essential for best performance of this type of skill in tennis players and that caffeine is no substitute for 'lost sleep'. 210

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