The main aim of the present research was to determine the importance of the RAE in the professional male elite football of the ten best National UEFA Leagues during the 2016/2017 season, as well as to verify the possible differences and correlations between the RAE and the playing-position and the final classification in the championship. The relative age effect is significant in the UEFA confederation, with a greater number of players born in the first quarter of the year (Q1). This fact can induce that coaches´ decisions and selection were reached attending primarily to anthropometric, physical and physiological variables, closely related to the RAE, since Q1 players will have these qualities more developed than those born in any of the remaining quarters. This circumstance coincides, in part, with Williams study (2010), over U-17 players, where RAE appears present in all FIFA Confederations, except in the national teams of the African continent, where the effect observed is the opposite, an overrepresentation of Q4 belonging players. Our study about the RAE over the variable League, revealed that this phenomenon is present in a significant way in all leagues analyzed, except in the Eerste Klasse A (Belgium). This idea of the significant effect of the RAE in the European professional leagues is demonstrated by Helsen et al., (2012), during the 2010-2011 season for all leagues analyzed (England, Germany, Belgium, Netherlands, Spain, France, Italy, Denmark and Sweden) except the Portuguese. Padrón-Cabo et al., (2016) revealed in turn, that this phenomenon is present in all leagues observed (Spain, Germany, Italy, France, Portugal, Holland, Belgium, Ukraine, South Africa, Australia, Mexico and Brazil), except in the Premier League (England) and the K-League Classic (South Korea). From these studies, low participation or popularity of soccer, cannot be ascribe as reasons for the no-RAE-influence in these leagues. Reasons often argued as explanation for the non-appearing relative age effect. Regarding professional football, one of the sports that requires the presence and participation of experienced players along with ice hockey, this same effect is confirmed, but with studies referring only to the league of a certain country. In Spain, several studies confirm a greater representation of players born in Q1 (Prieto et al., 2015; Pérez Jiménez and Pain, 2008; Salinero et al., 2014). While comparing these studies, it seems that in Spain this relative age effect suffers fluctuations, with an important increase since the beginning of the 90s and, while currently there´s a tendency to decrease. In Turkey, Mulazimoglu (2014) certifies in an investigation with 2936 soccer players, the existence of the RAE in the professional category teams and in the young elite players of the best clubs. In other countries, several studies´ data, resemble to described in our present investigation related to this variable, such as those performed in Belgium (Helsen et al., 2005; Vaeyens et al., 2005), in Germany (Auguste and Lames, 2011; Cobley et al., 2008), in Australia (Van den Honert, 2012). The relative age effect has also been studied in other sports. Finding both, coincidences and mismatches with our present study. Thus, Delorme et al. (2009), in a study of the french basketball league evince the relative age effect, as well as Schorer et al. (2009) do, in men’s elite Handball in Germany, and Grondin and Koren (2000) in professional baseball players in Japan. However, Nakata and Sakamoto (2012) did not find significant differences in terms of the RAE in male players of the Japanese V-League (volleyball), although they did in women, attributing this cause to the popularity of volleyball within female gender. The analysis by playing position reveals the significance of the RAE. In our study, the positions more affected by the RAE were the midfielders and defenders. This may be because in these positions, more developed physical qualities may represent a competitive advantage. Specifically, the defender position requires having specific anthropometric characteristics as suggested in some research (Delorme et al., 2010; Reilly et al., 2000; Shephard, 1999; Salinero et al., 2013). Such data are coincident with the studies of Salinero et al. (2014) and to a lesser extent, with those of Padrón-Cabo et al. (2016), who conclude that the RAE affects all positions, being defenders the most affected position, and goalkeeper the least. However, there is a significant disagreement with Prieto et al. (2015), who appreciate the existence of RAE in the positions of defender and striker, not so in goalkeepers and midfielders. In our study, the midfielder is the playing position with a stronger effect, possibly because it is a position with important physical needs and continuous physiological demands, as well as, wide external and internal added-load in their performance in relation to others positions. Consulted bibliography consider the defenders unanimously, the most affected position by the RAE, with certain discrepancy within the other playing positions. However, the small influence of the RAE on the goalkeeper is surprising, except for the study carried out by Lesma et al. (2011), since it is a position that requires a considerable height for a good performance (Reilly et al., 2000). On the other hand, an approach to the incidence of the RAE on the final classification of the teams in their corresponding leagues, shows that the relative age effect occurs both in low-level teams, medium and top-level ones. Significant differences were found, in the three groups studied, when comparing Q1 vs Q4, Q2 vs Q4 and Q3 vs Q4. However, our results do not suggest that the odd ratio Q1 vs Q4 is higher in the teams that have a better classification, nor that they have a higher relative age in their players. Williams (2010) reveals the same results after appreciating the existence of RAE in the teams of his studio (with young players), regardless of the final classification in the league. On the other hand, also with young players, Auguste and Lames (2011) discovered a positive correlation between the RAE and the final classification, reinforcing the interpretation that success in the first German league U-17 may be due, to some extent, to a higher relative age of the players. Based on the foregoing, it seems that knowing about the relative age effect is crucial for coaches and sports professionals. Some studies related to RAE and sport, indicate the possibility of, that recruitment and selection processes came influenced by this phenomenon. This fact can suppose and cause a loss of natural talent among the subjects that does not belong to the first quartile of the year (Q1), which leads us to suggest a possible revision of the current processes of recruitment and selection of players, thus avoiding harm to those born in the last months of the year. In order to limit the RAE, the scientific literature has addressed this issue, highlighting the relevance and conclusions of the proposals of the study by Hurley et al., (2001) in the Minor Hockey sport in Canada and the one proposed by Romann and Cobley (2015) for sprinters. In soccer, sport of our study, several authors (Helsen et al., 2005; Saavedra et al., 2016; Padrón-Cabo et al., 2016; Pancorbo, 1996) have suggested some solutions to be adopted by the sports clubs and institutions that manage football. In first place, the number of categories could be expanded (one per year), or even split the calendar year into two periods of six months. This would provide a smaller age difference between the players belonging to the same category and therefore, an evident minor difference in anthropometric values and physical maturation. A second option could be the presence of specialists from various fields (coaches, doctors and researchers) in the selection of talents, since it is a complex process that requires transversal information. The third solution, would pose the assumption by the coaches of a long-term vision in the selection process of football players, considering as long as possible, their potential and ability to develop in all areas susceptible to performance. This point, invites to revert to a beforehand, but currently renewed proposal, the “bio-banding” (Cumming et al., 2017). This strategy consists of grouping athletes according to the attributes related to growth and maturational development, instead of using the chronological age as the only selection criterion. In addition, this idea proposes to use the psychological and technical skills of the players as evaluative items of the recruitment and selection process´. This hybrid approach would preserve the positive effects of grouping subjects by age, such as competitiveness among them, while reducing or mitigating the negative consequences of such criteria. Otherwise, with the prospect of immediate results, it will continue to be the physically more developed athletes, who will receive more opportunities and the relative age effect will persist. Finally, a possible solution could be to swap the cut-off dates from time to time, so that the youth football players, at some point in his sporting life, has the chance to benefit from competing with a higher relative age, although changes in age policy have turned out to be only partially successful (Haycraft et al., 2018). Finally, a last promising measure (Mann and van Ginneken, 2017) showed that RAE could be overcome if information about the age of the players is transmitted in an optimal way, bias can be eliminated making sure that playing-shirt numbers of athletes during the match would be ordered according to their age. |