Intermittent ne-waza exercise leads to greater effort in uke compared to tori in prepubescent judo athletes

This study investigated physiological and perceptual responses between uke (the athlete receiving a technique) and tori (the athlete executing a technique) during intermittent osaekomi-waza exercises in prepubescent judo athletes. Fifteen child judo athletes (age: 10.8 ± 1.1 years) participated vol...

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Main Authors: Bayram Ceylan, Furkan Öztürk, Hasan Basri Taskin, Ugur Sarikaya, Sükrü Serdar Balci
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de León 2025-05-01
Series:Revista de Artes Marciales Asiáticas
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Online Access:https://revistas.unileon.es/index.php/artesmarciales/article/view/8505
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author Bayram Ceylan
Furkan Öztürk
Hasan Basri Taskin
Ugur Sarikaya
Sükrü Serdar Balci
author_facet Bayram Ceylan
Furkan Öztürk
Hasan Basri Taskin
Ugur Sarikaya
Sükrü Serdar Balci
author_sort Bayram Ceylan
collection DOAJ
description This study investigated physiological and perceptual responses between uke (the athlete receiving a technique) and tori (the athlete executing a technique) during intermittent osaekomi-waza exercises in prepubescent judo athletes. Fifteen child judo athletes (age: 10.8 ± 1.1 years) participated voluntarily. In this cross-over design with randomization (except for the first visit), athletes completed three sessions: anthropometric measurements and familiarization, followed by intermittent osaekomi-waza exercises as both uke and tori. The exercise protocol consisted of four sets of 20-second intermittent osaekomi-waza using kesa-gatame, interspersed with 10-second rest intervals (1:½ work-to-rest ratio), performed on separate days. Heart rate (HR) was measured at rest, immediately after exercise, and one minute after exercise. The rating of perceived exertion (RPE) was assessed using a 0–10 scale immediately after each exercise bout. While a two-way repeated measures ANOVA indicated a statistically significant main effect of role on HR, with higher values in the uke role compared to the tori role across all measurement times, Bayesian analysis did not provide substantial evidence supporting this role effect. Athletes also reported significantly higher RPE scores in the uke role than in the tori role, indicating greater perceptual demands in prepubescent judo athletes, despite similar heart rate patterns between roles.
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series Revista de Artes Marciales Asiáticas
spelling doaj-art-d53773af8d9a4d659e0740dc209fa40c2025-08-20T03:47:33ZengUniversidad de LeónRevista de Artes Marciales Asiáticas2174-07472025-05-01201Intermittent ne-waza exercise leads to greater effort in uke compared to tori in prepubescent judo athletesBayram Ceylan0Furkan Öztürk 1Hasan Basri Taskin 2Ugur Sarikaya3Sükrü Serdar Balci4Kastamonu UniversityDepartment of Coaching Education, Faculty of Sport Sciences, Düzce UniversityDepartment of Coaching Education, Faculty of Sport Sciences, Kastamonu UniversityDepartment of Physical Education and Sport, School of Physical Education and Sport, Harran UniversityDepartment of Coaching Education, Faculty of Sport Sciences, Selçuk University This study investigated physiological and perceptual responses between uke (the athlete receiving a technique) and tori (the athlete executing a technique) during intermittent osaekomi-waza exercises in prepubescent judo athletes. Fifteen child judo athletes (age: 10.8 ± 1.1 years) participated voluntarily. In this cross-over design with randomization (except for the first visit), athletes completed three sessions: anthropometric measurements and familiarization, followed by intermittent osaekomi-waza exercises as both uke and tori. The exercise protocol consisted of four sets of 20-second intermittent osaekomi-waza using kesa-gatame, interspersed with 10-second rest intervals (1:½ work-to-rest ratio), performed on separate days. Heart rate (HR) was measured at rest, immediately after exercise, and one minute after exercise. The rating of perceived exertion (RPE) was assessed using a 0–10 scale immediately after each exercise bout. While a two-way repeated measures ANOVA indicated a statistically significant main effect of role on HR, with higher values in the uke role compared to the tori role across all measurement times, Bayesian analysis did not provide substantial evidence supporting this role effect. Athletes also reported significantly higher RPE scores in the uke role than in the tori role, indicating greater perceptual demands in prepubescent judo athletes, despite similar heart rate patterns between roles. https://revistas.unileon.es/index.php/artesmarciales/article/view/8505Martial artscombat sportsjudoyoung athleteshigh-intensity intermittent exerciseHIIT
spellingShingle Bayram Ceylan
Furkan Öztürk
Hasan Basri Taskin
Ugur Sarikaya
Sükrü Serdar Balci
Intermittent ne-waza exercise leads to greater effort in uke compared to tori in prepubescent judo athletes
Revista de Artes Marciales Asiáticas
Martial arts
combat sports
judo
young athletes
high-intensity intermittent exercise
HIIT
title Intermittent ne-waza exercise leads to greater effort in uke compared to tori in prepubescent judo athletes
title_full Intermittent ne-waza exercise leads to greater effort in uke compared to tori in prepubescent judo athletes
title_fullStr Intermittent ne-waza exercise leads to greater effort in uke compared to tori in prepubescent judo athletes
title_full_unstemmed Intermittent ne-waza exercise leads to greater effort in uke compared to tori in prepubescent judo athletes
title_short Intermittent ne-waza exercise leads to greater effort in uke compared to tori in prepubescent judo athletes
title_sort intermittent ne waza exercise leads to greater effort in uke compared to tori in prepubescent judo athletes
topic Martial arts
combat sports
judo
young athletes
high-intensity intermittent exercise
HIIT
url https://revistas.unileon.es/index.php/artesmarciales/article/view/8505
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