DOI: 10.3390/sports14070261 ISSN: 2075-4663

Exploring a Mental Fatigue Signal Hidden in GPS Data: Acute Pre-to-Post-Match Psychomotor Performance and Exploratory Associations with External Load in Professional Soccer

Andreas Stafylidis, Walter Staiano, Athanasios Mandroukas, Yiannis Michailidis, Mert Isbilir, Lazaros Vardakis, Andreas Fousekis, Konstantinos Chatzinikolaou, Lluis Raimon Salazar Bonet, Ana Ferri-Caruana, Nikolaos Tsigilis, Marco Romagnoli, Thomas I. Metaxas

This study examined acute pre- to post-match changes in perceived mental fatigue, subjective workload, and psychomotor performance in professional male soccer players, and whether cognitive changes were associated with GPS-derived external-load metrics, match outcome, and playing position. The dataset comprised 101 player–match measurements from 40 elite players, with paired pre–post psychomotor assessments yielding n = 202 total measurements. Pre–post comparisons were analysed using repeated-measures ANOVA, supplemented by linear mixed-effects models with a random intercept for player. Soccer matches produced large increases in perceived exertion, mental fatigue, mental demand, physical demand, and effort (all p < 0.001), and significant deteriorations in reaction time, accuracy, processing speed, and response variability (all p ≤ 0.005), confirmed in the mixed-effects analyses (all p ≤ 0.014). In the initial player–match-level analyses, high-intensity accelerations (>3 m·s−2) were weakly associated with greater Δreaction-time slowing (r = 0.203), increased response variability (r = 0.276), and reduced Rate Correct Score (r = −0.242), while high metabolic load distance was weakly associated with post-match perceived mental fatigue but not with psychomotor-performance changes. One-way ANOVAs indicated greater post-match psychomotor decrements following losses than draws. Once within-player dependence was modelled, the effects of match outcome, playing position, and most external-load metrics were attenuated, except for a residual match-outcome effect on accuracy and a high-intensity deceleration effect on accuracy. These findings indicate that competitive soccer match play is followed by acute psychomotor-performance decrements and increased perceived mental fatigue, whereas the contributions of mechanical load, match outcome, and playing position appear modest and partly reflect stable between-player differences.

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