The present study investigated the relationship among game performance, injury rate, and practice exposure in a professional male basketball team. The main finding of the study was that successful and unsuccessful seasons were not affected by the rate of injury. However, in successful years, the season was prolonged and there were a greater total number of practices, games and number of injuries. The 2012/2013 and 2013/2014 seasons had the highest training and competition exposure (5364 and 5063 hours respectively) and the team achieved 2 main performance outcomes, rating 2nd and 3rd in rankings (92.75 and 93.84 respectively). During the best performing season (2009/2010) the team had its highest ranking (94.81), with a total exposure of 4438 hours. During the 2007/2008 season, total exposure was 4540 hours, only one title was achieved and the lowest ranking (77.4) was observed. High exposure are generally associated with better performance, but is important to note that there was also success in seasons where the total exposure time, number of injuries and team ranking were below the average. The data presented suggest that practice load can lead to improved levels of performance, being high enough to reach adaptations to competition demands and success. Successful seasons were associated with a higher number of practices and games (longer seasons), but also with a greater number of injuries. These findings are consistent with those reported by other authors, who have reported higher injury rates associated with increased volumes of exposure in team sports as related to soft tissue injuries in rugby (Gabbett and Ullah, 2012) or minor injuries in football (Eirale et al. 2013), but not for total injuries as observed in this study.. However, no previous studies have reported the injury rates associated with exposure in professional basketball or throughout several seasons. During the 2009/2010 and 2011/2012 seasons, when exposure to practice and games was lower, the total injuries incidence per 1000h of exposure (4.9 and 4,2 per season, respectively) was under or on the mean of injury incidence considering the entire study period (4.9 1000h of exposure per season). Similarly, seasons 2012/2013 and 2013/2014 had the highest exposure to games and practice and the highest number of injuries (6.9 and 5.7, see Table 2). There is a considerable variability in the total number of games and length of season clearly dependent on team performance. A clear example occurs when teams get further in the Euroleague, as it entails an addition of up to 10 games to regular season (from 2012/2013). The total number of injuries may be associated with the length of season, as players are more exposed to situations where they may potentially get injured (practice and games). Hence, the better a team performs, the more games a team plays (because the team continues on competition) and the more injuries may occur (Gabbett and Ullah 2012). The positive correlation between injury rates and performance indicates that player injuries are most likely to occur in the best players; however they are not detrimental as detrimental to season team success in elite basketball as hypothesized. This has been also observed by other authors in football (Ekstrand et al. 2011; Eirale et al. 2013; Hagglund et al. 2013). McGill et al. (2012) relate more back injuries in basketball trend to more games played (28.60 ± 9.29), more minutes (21.72 ± 11.63), and greater number of rebounds (3.16 ± 2.61), and steals per game (0.67 ± 0.34). At professional level (NBA), Podlog et al. (2015) found a negative relationship between team performance (number of winning games) and injury rates (r = -0.29; p < 0.001). The challenge is therefore to provide adequate training loads to improve performance and fitness but with enough protective effect against injuries (Drew and Finch, 2016; Gabbett, 2016). It should be noted that injuries may have a negative effect on season performance in case of short rosters, or rosters where main roles (in terms of minutes played and rotations) and team structure and playbook have less flexibility than in Europe. Thus, well-funded European teams have large rosters to prevent a negative effect of injuries on team goals. This implies trying to have at least 12 top players, which is the maximum number of player that can participate on a match, regardless the number of injuries. This availability of player replacement may therefore have a confounded our ability to measure the impact of injury on team outcomes. The findings of the present study indicate that the there is an elevated risk of injury during competition compared to practice. This observation is consistent with those reported with other team sports like European football (Ekstrand et al., 2011), rugby (Gabbett and Ullah, 2012), or Gaelic football (Murphy et al., 2012). Load management by reduction in the number of practices and its duration has been shown to reduce injury rates and fatigue (Gabbett, 2004; Frisch et al., 2011). However, a reduction of hours of practices to reduce the number of injuries does not seem a good strategy to improve team performance. Therefore, an adequate balance between training load and fatigue recovery and overload prevention is required in order to assure an adequate overall team performance requirements (Gabbett, 2016). In other words, there should be an optimal balance between competition and practice exposure time and time to recover (Ekstrand et al., 2011; Mendiguchia and Brughelli, 2011). In addition, efforts to reduce high-risk activity during practice, optimally replaced with injury prevention training might help sport performance and reduce injury risk. The overall season design and planning should take into account the need for increased practice and competition time to improve performance (Rogalski et al., 2013). While the season planning is determined by the in-season performance (the more a team wins, the more the team plays), the optimal training (Krustrup et al., 2003) should consider some of the findings of the present study: the positive relationships between injury incidence and mean player ranking, and between total injuries and exposure to practice. It is important to note that a specific intervention on offensive players may be required, as these players have usually a higher physical pressure by opponent defenders and the need for scoring itself, that make them potentially exposed to a higher risk of injury (Kazimierz et al., 2013; Lago-Penas et al., 2010; Oliver, 2005). The present study has some limitations. First, the results of the present study only refer to one professional basketball team. However, data correspond to 7 consecutive seasons and may therefore truly represent injury patterns in elite basketball. Second, the exposure has only been measured as hours of exposition, and has not involved a comprehensive quantification of external and internal loads. Further studies may be conducted to investigate the association between external and internal loads and injury rates. Third, performance was only quantified using the team ranking. Although this is a well-established performance parameter, other indicators of performance could have been used. However, the strength of this study is to report data on the association between training load, injury rates, and team performance over a 7-season period in a professional basketball team. The study highlights the need for a correct balance between team and individual planning on training loads and in-season recovery periods after games. Further research should be conducted to determine the optimal balance between training load, season performance and injury prevention, and to investigate other factors that may be related to team performance. |