During performance of a clustered repeated-sprint running protocol (4 sets of 4, 4-s sprints; i.e., RSR444) in a hypoxic environment (RSH), amateur team-sport athletes were unable to match the peak speed recorded in normoxia (RSN) during set 3 and set 4. Similarly, total distance covered during RSN could not be replicated during set 3 or set 4 during RSH. Acceleration was more, but not completely, resilient (i.e. only impaired during the final set) to a reduction in oxygen availability and/or the effects of fatigue during the clustered repeated-sprint running protocol in hypoxia. These results provide information that may be useful in designing clustered RSH training protocols, which may be altered depending on the intended training outcomes. The impairment in peak speed observed during sets 3 and 4 of the hypoxic trial in the present study is in contrast to the findings of our previous study (Morrison et al., 2015) that examined a traditional repeated-sprint running protocol (1 set of 10, 6-s sprints) in hypoxia (FiO2 = 0.140). Conversely, (Bowtell et al., 2013) reported similar findings to the present study stating that peak speeds during the ten, 6-s sprints was lower in hypoxic conditions. The variability in the construct (i.e., number/duration of sprints and/or recovery periods) of the repeated-sprint protocols among studies may explain the conflicting findings regarding peak speed achieved during performance in hypoxia compared with normoxia. In addition, the ability of an athlete to match the peak speeds achieved during repeated sprinting in normoxia when in a hypoxic environment could be dependent on their training status. Highly-trained team-sport athletes in the study by Morrison and colleagues (Morrison et al., 2015) are likely to have had the ability to compensate for hypoxia-induced reductions in aerobic energy provision. In contrast, it is possible that participants in the present study were unable to offset the reduced aerobic energy provision with an increase in anaerobic energy contribution. This is an important finding as an inability to match speed during RSH compared with RSN imposes a different training stimulus on the athlete. Therefore, athletes and coaches should be mindful that during RSH, desired contraction speeds may not be replicated, representing an alteration in the neuromuscular load which may affect neuromuscular adaptations (Buchheit and Laursen, 2013a). It should also be noted that despite a reduced running speed (i.e., sets 3 and 4 of RSH in the present study), RSH may result in superior training adaptations compared with RSN, given that training at a lower absolute intensity which elicits greater physiological/metabolic responses can evoke superior adaptations (Mohr et al., 2007). Therefore, a combination of RSH that elicits greater physiological/metabolic adaptations, and RSN, for the maintenance of contraction speeds, could be considered as a viable training intervention. In addition to reduced aerobic energy provision, another factor influencing the ability to maintain peak speed is the initial sprint speed i.e., the faster the first sprint, a larger decrement ensues. Nonetheless, the initial sprint speeds were comparable between the normoxic and hypoxic environments in the present study, thus excluding initial speed as an influence on speed decrement. Mean speed (Morrison et al., 2015), mean power output (Goods et al., 2014, Brosnan et al., 2000), and mechanical work (Smith and Billaut, 2010) measured in participants during repeated-sprinting have been previously compared between normoxic and hypoxic conditions. In the present study, we examined the distance covered during each running sprint in the RSR444 so as to improve the validity of the feedback for coaches and athletes. Nonetheless, the common purpose of these measurements is to quantify the average or total work performed during each sprint rather than a peak or instantaneous value. Markers of total work may provide additional information regarding the total metabolic demand of the repeated-sprint session. In addition to the importance of matching peak contraction speeds, replicating the metabolic cost of training in normoxia may also be an important consideration, depending on the intended training outcomes. In agreement with previous findings (Goods et al., 2014, Brosnan et al., 2000, Smith and Billaut, 2010), the present study demonstrated that total work performed (i.e., distance covered) was reduced during RSH compared with RSN. Goods and colleagues (2014) suggested that the decline in mean power output during RSH, compared with RSN, could be explained by the observed decline in oxygen saturation. This is corroborated by Billaut and Smith (2010), who demonstrated that a decline in mechanical output during prolonged repeated sprints in normoxia was related to a decline in SpO2. It is plausible that reduced arterial oxygen saturation could contribute to fatigue during repeated sprints, given that PCr resynthesis (Haseler et al., 1999) and H+ removal (Tomlin and Wenger, 2001) are oxygen dependent processes. A reduction in arterial oxygen saturation might then contribute to attenuated neuromuscular activity, and consequently a decrease in performance (Billaut and Smith, 2010) possibly via reflex inhibition of alpha motoneurons (Garland, 1991). Smith and Billaut (2010) demonstrated that a decrease in arterial oxygen saturation may also contribute to fatigue during RSH via a reduction in cerebral oxygenation. Hence, the decline in average peak speeds and total work performed (average distance covered during sprints) in the present study, could be explained in part by the ~19% difference in SpO2 estimated following the final sprint. Finally, a decline in peak speed and total work during RSH, compared with RSN, could also be partly explained by reduced contribution from aerobic metabolism ((Bowtell et al., 2013, Calbet et al., 2003, Balsom et al., 1994), although a compensatory increase in contribution from anaerobic metabolism has previously been reported (Calbet et al., 2003). In the present study, the higher [La-] measured following the final sprint in RSH, compared with RSN, may be due to an increase in anaerobic glycolysis in response to a reduced oxygen uptake. It should also be noted that this observed increase may have been due to impaired lactate clearance. Athletes were unable to match acceleration during set 4 in RSH compared with RSN in the present study. Given that peak speed and distance covered were reduced compared with RSN after set 2 during RSH, this suggests that peak acceleration can be maintained for longer when oxygen availability is reduced. Distance covered is dependent on the entire 4-s effort and peak speed is typically achieved at the end of 4-s. In contrast, peak acceleration is typically achieved in the first second of the sprint (see Figure 1). Given the shorter duration in which peak acceleration is found in comparison with peak speed and maximum distance, acceleration might be less dependent on aerobic energy production, and/or less affected by ionic disturbances that result in fatigue. The ability to match acceleration for more sprint repetitions during RSH, when compared with RSN, provides coaches with a framework with which to prescribe RSH. Indeed, Serpiello and colleagues (2011), demonstrated that clustered repeated-sprint running training in normoxia evoked improvements in acceleration that were up to four times greater than improvements in peak speed. Training protocols that stimulate a high rate of PCr breakdown and glycolysis as well as demanding a high rate of H+ and K+ removal are likely to result in adaptations to the anaerobic energy systems. In traditional repeated-sprint protocols with inadequate recovery between sprints, the rate of glycolysis can be reduced by 90% with a concomitant increase in aerobic energy production (Gaitanos et al., 1993). Thus, the final sprints of a repeated-sprint protocol with inadequate recovery may result in reduced performance and an altered training focus. The RSR444 not only more closely replicates team-sport repeated-sprint patterns compared with traditional repeated-sprint protocols (i.e., multiple vs single set), it allows for manipulation of sprint and recovery durations in accordance with the desired physiological response / neuromuscular strain (Buchheit and Laursen, 2013b). For example, the prescription of longer recovery periods between sprints and/or sets would increase the emphasis on anaerobic energy production/neuromuscular strain (Buchheit and Laursen, 2013b), with each subsequent sprint attainable. In the present study, although the recovery time between sprints was slightly longer in duration (26 vs 20 s) than that in the study by Serpiello and colleagues (2011), the recovery time between sets was much shorter in duration (146 vs 270 s). Hence, it is probable that an inadequate recovery time between sets in the present study contributed to the decline in peak speed, acceleration (and therefore reduced neuromuscular strain) and distance that was observed in RSH, compared with RSN. Another important consideration to make when designing RSH training protocols for team-sport athletes is practicality. The RSR444 was designed so that four athletes could complete the protocol at one time using the same treadmill. Although the specificity of the protocol to team-sports is reduced by having a passive recovery, such a design is advantageous in that it reduces the time necessary for a squad to complete a training session (many hypoxic chambers are only large enough to fit 4-6 treadmills), whilst also providing the necessary motivation for “all-out” sprinting. |