The session-RPE method has been developed and validated as a simple method to quantify training internal load in athletes in a variety of sports. The original method recommends that RPE measures should be taken approximately 30 minutes following exercises to avoid the temporal latency or recent effects of either easy or hard bouts of exercise within a training session (Foster et al., 2001). However, this delay in measurement is often impractical in many situations (Singh et al., 2007). Therefore, the purpose of this study was to verify if the timing of session-RPE measurement influenced athlete’s perception of session intensity when taken at 10 and 30 minutes following exercise. The main findings of this study showed that session-RPE measures were not statistically different when obtained after 10 or 30 minutes in boxing routines of the same intensity. A novel finding from this study was that session-RPE estimations were not significantly different when taken 10 or 30 minutes after easy, moderate and hard boxing sessions (Table 3). In contrast to our study, other groups had have shown previously that RPE taken at 5 and 10 minutes following resistance training sessions were different from the values obtained at 30 minutes (Singh et al., 2007). Besides the obvious differences in the exercise modes between these studies (i.e. boxing vs. resistance training), it is possible that differences in the number of familiarization sessions (1 vs. 20 in the present study) could explain the divergent results. Interestingly, the RPE values reported in the previous study were similar to the values observed in the hard sessions in the present study. As session-RPE is collected some time after a training bout, a hard or easy exercise component during the final part of intermittent activities or trainings performed in intervals could compromise the accuracy of this method (Foster et al., 2001; Singh et al., 2007). Thus, given its intermittent nature, boxing training routines are an ideal candidate for such interference (Kravitz et al., 2003). However, the present findings suggest that the overall session-RPE was not compromised by exercise performed in the last part of our boxing routines, Shadowing (Simulated Fight) (Table 4), which in the hard session had a similar heart rate behavior to ‘open’ sparring in an international amateur boxer, values above 180 bpm during the ‘open’ sparring were registered (Smith, 2006). These results indicate that, in Olympic boxing, 10 minutes is enough time to avoid the influence of a specific part of the training session on the session. Also, a recent study from Hornsby et al., 2013 strengthened the idea of session RPE as a global training session measurement that is not influenced by the terminal part of training bout. This observation has important implications, as the time demands for using the session-RPE method are reduced, further supporting the use of session-RPE as a practical method to quantify training load in athletes as opposed to more tedious objective measures which create obvious barriers. In this study, the training activities (Table 4) were designed both to replicate the demands of boxing and to allow good control of the external loads applied. Indeed, both the HR and lactate data demonstrated that the exercise protocol was well controlled and the external loads were applied as intended (i.e. easy, moderate or hard). Moreover, the results obtained with the push-up performance test demonstrated that similar fatigue levels were experienced between the sessions from which the RPE’s were taken at 10 and 30 minutes (Figure 1). Previous studies have shown that boxing requires high intensity exercise (Siegler and Hirscher, 2010) and that RPE values increase during both boxing-specific exercises and during sparring bouts (Kravitz et al., 2003; Siegler and Hirscher, 2010). In agreement with these observations, our HR data show an increment in the intensity measurements from the beginning to the end of Olympic boxing routines (Table 2). Additionally, these results corroborate recent studies in soccer that have reported metabolic inertia and tendency to increase HR, blood lactate and RPE values during the 4 x 4 minutes interval soccer small-sided games (Coutts et al., 2009). Lastly, the present work showed mean HR values similar to those previously reported in 3 minutes sparring bouts in trained boxers (Siegler and Hirscher, 2010) and blood lactate values (i.e. 4-6 mmol·L-1) during 1 minute boxing bout rounds (Faina et al., 1990). Thus, further studies must be performed in order to reinforce that session-RPE can replace physiological objective measurements as markers of the stress induced by exercise and consequently that session-RPE is useful to quantify training load in boxing. The TRIMP is the original HR-based measure of training load (Banister et al., 1975; Fitz-Clarke et al., 1991; Morton et al., 1990) and is commonly applied to monitor the training dose in many endurance sports (Borresen and Lambert, 2009). Despite its widespread use in endurance sports, HR-based TRIMP has been suggested to be limited in monitoring very high-intensity exercises (e.g. weight training, high-intensity interval training and plyometric training) (Foster et al., 2001). Nonetheless, the present study showed that the session-RPE measures followed the same pattern as the TRIMP measures, providing further evidence to support the validity of using session-RPE to quantify training load in boxing. |