Effect of an 8-week training program on the rebalancing of functional asymmetry in young footballers

Background. Functional asymmetries in youth football players represent significant performance limitations and injury risk factors requiring targeted intervention strategies. Elite youth athletes frequently demonstrate bilateral imbalances across multiple neuromuscular domains. Objective. This st...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Walid Bouzid, Omar Ben Rakaa, Aziz Chokri, Aziz Eloirdi, Abdelmoujoud Elhaboussi, Mohamed Barkaoui
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: FEADEF 2025-08-01
Series:Retos: Nuevas Tendencias en Educación Física, Deportes y Recreación
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Online Access:https://www.revistaretos.org/index.php/retos/article/view/117056
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Summary:Background. Functional asymmetries in youth football players represent significant performance limitations and injury risk factors requiring targeted intervention strategies. Elite youth athletes frequently demonstrate bilateral imbalances across multiple neuromuscular domains. Objective. This study evaluated the effectiveness of an individualized 8-week neuromuscular training program in reducing functional asymmetries among elite youth football players across different age categories (U16, U17, U18). Methods. This 8-week experimental intervention aimed to reduce functional asymmetries in balance, unilateral strength, and jump performance among elite youth footballers. Conducted in addition to their regular weekly schedule (five sessions, 8–10 hours football-specific practice + 2–3 hours strength and conditioning), the program comprised two 30–40 min neuromuscular sessions per week. Each session included four blocks: activation & mobility, unilateral strengthening, plyometrics & single-leg jumps, and balance & postural control. Progression was applied systematically through increased load, instability, movement complexity, and football-specific demands, following the principle of progressive overload. Individualization strategies targeted the weaker limb when interlimb differences exceeded 10%, with adjustments based on RPE, mid-term, and final assessments. Results. Significant reductions in functional asymmetries were observed across all variables and age groups. Y-Balance Test asymmetries decreased by 46-60%, Single Leg Hop Test asymmetries reduced by 39-46%, and quadriceps strength asymmetries diminished by 42-47%. Younger players (U16) demonstrated greater magnitude improvements compared to older athletes. Strong correlations existed between different asymmetry measures, supporting multidimensional assessment approaches. Effect sizes ranged from moderate to large across all variables. Conclusion. The individualized neuromuscular training intervention effectively reduced functional asymmetries in youth football players, with age-related response variations supporting developmentally appropriate program design for optimizing athletic performance and injury prevention.
ISSN:1579-1726
1988-2041