Time-Motion Analysis of Match Play
Time-motion analysis quantifies the physical demands of competition by classifying a player's continuous movement into discrete categories — standing, walking, jogging, running, sprinting — and measuring how much time and distance is spent in each. Thomas Reilly and V. Thomas's 1976 study of professional footballers established the template: hand-tracking players through a match, classifying their locomotion into movement bands, and showing that different positional roles impose different work-rates, with midfielders covering the most ground. The method matured through video-based work such as Bloomfield, Polman and O'Donoghue's 2007 analysis of physical demands by position in the Premier League, and has since been transformed by GPS and optical tracking that record position continuously and automatically. Across these technologies the analytical logic is constant: turn continuous locomotion into categorized time-and-distance metrics that characterize the locomotor demands of the sport.
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- Carling, C., Bloomfield, J., Nelsen, L., & Reilly, T. (2008). The role of motion analysis in elite soccer: contemporary performance measurement techniques and work rate data. Sports Medicine, 38(10), 839-862. · DOI 10.2165/00007256-200838100-00004
- Bloomfield, J., Polman, R., & O'Donoghue, P. (2007). Physical demands of different positions in FA Premier League soccer. Journal of Sports Science and Medicine, 6(1), 63-70. · URL
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