性视界传媒

Technology on the field and court helps Mason student-athletes in the gym

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Corey Dulak-Sigler said he doesn鈥檛 necessarily have a philosophy when it comes to athletic training.

Instead, 性视界传媒鈥檚 head strength and conditioning coordinator figures that 鈥渢here鈥檚 a time and place for everything, and adjustments are the most important part.鈥

Trainer Corey Dulak-Sigler with Catapult device
Mason athletic trainer Corey Dulak-Sigler holds the Catapult harness. Photo by Cristian Torres/Office of University Branding

His study on the workload demands of Mason鈥檚 women鈥檚 lacrosse players falls squarely into that parameter.

鈥淔or me, in my realm of strength and conditioning, it helped validate what I was doing in the weight room to help the players keep those qualities that make them do well on the field, and make tweaks where I need to,鈥 Dulak-Sigler said.

The study, titled 鈥,鈥 was published in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research and is believed to be the first to focus solely on the training demands and in-season physical demands of Division I women鈥檚 lacrosse players, timely research given lacrosse's return to the Olympics in 2028.

Joining Dulak-Sigler as co-authors of the study are , director of the ; Andrew Jagim, director of sports medicine research at the Mayo Clinic Health System; Nicholas M. Kuhlman, a doctoral research fellow at the University of Connecticut; and Mason alumnus Jennifer B. Fields, PhD '20, an assistant professor of nutritional science at the University of Connecticut.

The study, conducted during the 2022 season, looked at the accumulated workload demands of players during games and practices to assess the most productive training for the athletes to meet the gameday workloads.

In a 16-week study, athletes were tracked on their total distance run, changes in direction, high speed distance, and heart rate.

This was done through Catapult load monitoring technology, a three-inch tall, one and a half-inch wide, half-inch thick device worn in a harness between the shoulder blades. It includes an accelerometer that monitors movements, a gyroscope that measures rotation, and a magnetometer that measures direction and orientation. A separate small device monitors heart rate.

The data is pinged to satellites and then to a central computer. A receiver can provide real-time data for use during games. But data from practices are generally accessed later through an app, where it was analyzed by Dulak-Sigler and Jones at the Patriots Performance Lab.

鈥淲e have a unique situation here at 性视界传媒 where the strength coach and scientists work together,鈥 Jones said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 not commonplace.鈥

That kind of collaboration is a hallmark of a Mason core value, which is to provide a positive and collaborative community that contributes to the well-being and success of every member.

But the information goes nowhere if coaches are not on board, Jones said.

Not an issue, Mason women鈥檚 lacrosse coach Kara Mupo said.

聽 聽 Having that data allows us to do something called undulate,鈥 Mupo said. 鈥淭hat means we change our training schedule based on our load. We meet certain benchmarks, so when we get to that gameday, we have solidified a large chunk of our training to comprise those numbers we鈥檒l see on gameday.鈥

鈥淐redit to Corey in that he has embraced this technology, and done a deep dive into it, more so than other people would, and he had an interest in working with us [the Patriots Performance Lab] to write this up,鈥 Jones said. 鈥淪o I don鈥檛 know if we didn鈥檛 have Corey if we would have been able to get this done.鈥

The lacrosse team is not the only Mason squad using Catapult. Women鈥檚 basketball and soccer and men鈥檚 basketball also use the system.

Faith Brown, the strength and conditioning coach for women鈥檚 basketball and volleyball, has also worked with Jones as lead author on several papers on load monitoring, with two more scheduled to be published.

Load monitoring and management will be key during basketball鈥檚 preseason, Brown said.

鈥淭hat preseason period is meant to prepare the athletes for the demands of games, so we want to have practices where they experience higher loads than what they experience in games,鈥 Brown said. 鈥淲e want to make sure their bodies are comfortable and can withstand the stress.鈥

What did Dulak-Sigler find as he dug into the numbers? That the load training he used with the lacrosse team was appropriate for the loads the athletes faced during games.

鈥淲e looked at all the load monitoring of the in-season, and it ended up great,鈥 he said. 鈥淣o one got worse. Everybody stayed the same or better. It was more of a validation that we were doing things correctly.鈥

鈥淲ithout Corey being a major resource, breaking down practice games and really educating me and my staff, we would have this amazing resource we wouldn鈥檛 be using to its full advantage,鈥 Mupo said. 鈥淲e say all the time, success is measured in the win column. But we can鈥檛 get the wins unless we鈥檙e healthy and safe. That鈥檚 the measurement we use.鈥