Youth motor performance changes are not strictly linear during their sports career, and within-year birth timing may introduce relative age differences, known as the relative-age effect. In a cross-sectional study of 170 male young soccer players (8–12 years old), field tests were compared between adjacent age groups and within each of them: countermovement jump (with and without arm swing); 15 m linear sprint and agility test with and without the ball. Non-parametric tests with post hoc comparisons revealed significant differences between consecutive birth years in physical skills, particularly between the youngest and oldest groups. Specifically, differences were noted in the jumping test between U12 and U11, and between U10 and U9. Additionally, linear sprint and agility tests showed significance in U13 versus U12 and U10 versus U9. Finally, dribbling skills mature later (in both tests, U13 v U12, U12 v U11; with the ball, U10 v U9). Differences were found within the groups based on the semester, but not the trimester of birth, confirming a progressive yet non-linear pattern and semester-level within-year differences. These findings suggest the key role of motor skillsd evelopment trajectories in creating individualized training programs tailored to the needs of individual young soccer players.

Does Birth Month Matter? Effects of Birth Subgroupings on Motor Performance and Ball-Involving Tests in a Youth Soccer Academy / Marcelli, Lorenzo; Silvestri, Fioretta; Di Pinto, Gianluca; Colombo, Andrea; Marzoli, Federica; Gallotta, Maria Chiara; Guidetti, Laura; Perroni, Fabrizio; Curzi, Davide. - In: SPORTS. - ISSN 2075-4663. - 13:11(2025). [10.3390/sports13110382]

Does Birth Month Matter? Effects of Birth Subgroupings on Motor Performance and Ball-Involving Tests in a Youth Soccer Academy

Gallotta, Maria Chiara;
2025

Abstract

Youth motor performance changes are not strictly linear during their sports career, and within-year birth timing may introduce relative age differences, known as the relative-age effect. In a cross-sectional study of 170 male young soccer players (8–12 years old), field tests were compared between adjacent age groups and within each of them: countermovement jump (with and without arm swing); 15 m linear sprint and agility test with and without the ball. Non-parametric tests with post hoc comparisons revealed significant differences between consecutive birth years in physical skills, particularly between the youngest and oldest groups. Specifically, differences were noted in the jumping test between U12 and U11, and between U10 and U9. Additionally, linear sprint and agility tests showed significance in U13 versus U12 and U10 versus U9. Finally, dribbling skills mature later (in both tests, U13 v U12, U12 v U11; with the ball, U10 v U9). Differences were found within the groups based on the semester, but not the trimester of birth, confirming a progressive yet non-linear pattern and semester-level within-year differences. These findings suggest the key role of motor skillsd evelopment trajectories in creating individualized training programs tailored to the needs of individual young soccer players.
2025
football; relative age effect; young players; chronological age; talent identification; agility; CMJ; dribbling; technical skills; player development
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Does Birth Month Matter? Effects of Birth Subgroupings on Motor Performance and Ball-Involving Tests in a Youth Soccer Academy / Marcelli, Lorenzo; Silvestri, Fioretta; Di Pinto, Gianluca; Colombo, Andrea; Marzoli, Federica; Gallotta, Maria Chiara; Guidetti, Laura; Perroni, Fabrizio; Curzi, Davide. - In: SPORTS. - ISSN 2075-4663. - 13:11(2025). [10.3390/sports13110382]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1754401
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