Identifying Talent
Paula Jardine CSC- Calgary
Talent Identification and Systems Integration Manager
He/She’s a natural
• Gifted & Talented
• Wasted talent
• “God-given gifts”
• Parable of the Talents (Matthew 25: 14-30)
Jonah Ziff
The Champion Model
• Assumes an underlying genetic basis to performance • Identify attributes associated with Champions in a
given sport and test for those that are untrainable – e.g. you can’t train them tall
• Systematic screening of children and adolescents using tests of anthropometrical and physiological attributes in order to identify those with potential for success in a designated sport
• Previous involvement in the sport is not a pre-requisite for identification (otherwise not T-id – Talent Selection)
Talent Selection in the GDR
• “The effectiveness of sport selection in the GDR does not result from possession of a set of infallible (prognostic) indicators but from an extended process of conducting measurements and observations at subsequent stages of sports training. These measurements conducted over several years reveal the direction and pace of an individual’s development. As a consequence the adjustments are made regarding the most suitable sport and training methods.”
Dr Henryk Sozanski 1977
Talent Selection Phase I Children selected for sport
schools at age 12 and 13 via testing
Preliminary screening 250,000 children tested twice annually
Basic Preparation Training between 50,000 – 70,000 selected to train regularly
at the 9,000 training centers (500-700 in each) (age 10, 11, 12 – 270 training hours per year)
Build Up Training 25 sports schools 10,000 athletes
(age 13, 14, 15 – training hours 550, 650, 750)
Connecting Training Specialization phase
Assignment to specialist sport (age 16, 17, 18 - 8,000 in Jr national programs)
By 1973 funding for the training centres = 16 million marks / yr
Early selection for gymnastics, diving, figure skating
Talent Selection Phase II
Streaming towards speed, power or endurance –
redirection to other sports
Talent Selection Phase III
Late selection / specialisation
During the 1980s a total of 89,440 athletes participated in the GDR sports system
In total between 30-40,000 athletes attended sport schools
GDR Talent Selection System
The Australian Legacy
• One off testing for ‘untrainable’ attributes or those thought to have high heritability (e.g. VO2max)
• Gagné’s Differentiated Model of Giftedness and Talent asserts that the origins of talent begin with innate natural gifts or abilities that are transformed into expert performances via learning and practising throughout development.
• One cannot be talented without first being gifted • 10% of population have spontaneously occurring gifts • DMGT model also says that the easier or faster the
learning process, the greater the natural abilities
Continuum of Sports Demands
Gymnastics, Boxing, Judo
Nature
(Genetics)
Nurture
(Environment)
Swimming, Cycling, Rowing, Canoeing, Athletics, Triathlon, Speed Skating, x-country skiing
Demand: cyclical, repetitive: physical / physiological
Demand: Individual sports:
Physical / physiological / skill
Racket Sports
(Badminton, Tennis, Squash)
Shooting, Archery Demand: skill
Team ball sports Demand: Physical, physiological, skill and decision making
Adapted from Farrow
British Cycling Olympic Academy
• Started in 2004 – initial intake 6 athletes including Ed Clancy and Mark Cavendish
• 2005 – Geraint Thomas, Andy Tennant, Ben Swift, Lizzie Armistead
• Other successful products include: Jason Kenny, Dani King, Laura Trott, Emma Trott, Jess Varnish, Peter Kenaugh, and others
• Now take 25 athletes per year
British Cycling Olympic Academy
Cavendish on the Academy
“It was nice after 15 months,” Cavendish recalls. “I didn’t go on the road or track to the junior worlds and then there were a couple of people in the Academy, including Rod Ellingworth, who saw something I had. “That was what the Academy was about, it was more than lab tests and a physical thing. It was racing, it was learning to be a bike rider, that’s what he saw and it turned me from that into a world champion within 15 months. That was the process it was, it wasn’t just getting stronger it was learning everything about bike racing and living as a bike rider.”
Evidence Based Talent Identification
T-ID focused here: Tests of athletic performance that provide indicators of general fitness and trainability by selecting those with the highest levels of fitness in tested movements
Athletes fast – tracked into high performance environments
Tests must be highly diagnostic to improve selection decisions
Gagné / Gulbin and the 10 year rule
Table 2. Rate of development of high performance athletes, including ‘quick’ and ‘slow’ developers.
Start =>
Senior national level
(n=256)
Start =>
Junior national level
(n=382)
Junior national level =>
Senior national level
(n=179) Number of years Mean (SD) 7.5 (4.1) 5.7 (3.2) 2.7 (2.1) Quick;
≤ 4 years (n=72)
Slow;
≥ 10 years (n=78)
Quick;
≤ 3 years (n=113)
Slow;
≥ 8 years (n=117)
Quick;
≤ 1 years (n=64)
Slow;
≥ 4 years (n=61)
Type of sport: % Individual
(vs.team)
69% 44% ** 58% 28% *** 56% 51%
Age when began main sport 17.1 (4.5) 7.9 (2.5)*** 13.6 (3.1) 7.2 (1.6)*** 11.7 (3.3) 9.8 (3.1)** Number of sports before starting with main sport
3.3 (1.6) 0.9 (1.3)*** 3.1 (1.9) 0.8 (1.3)*** 2.2 (1.7) 1.5 (1.5)**
Number of sports after starting main
sport 0.2 (0.5) 2.4 (1.8)*** 0.4 (0.8) 2.1 (1.7)*** 0.9 (1.5) 1.6 (1.6)*
Significant differences: * p<.05; ** p<.01; *** p<.001.
“It can be concluded that the ‘10-year rule’ is not applicable to sports development. 69% of novice athletes develop into senior elite representatives in <10 years. Furthermore, it is possible to transfer previous
sporting experiences at a late age in order to make a quick transition to elite level”
Oldenziel, Gagne, Gulbin (2002)
Nagorni 1978
• Diversified development: vast majority of best Soviet athletes had a strong multi-lateral foundation
• Started to practice sport at 7-8 years • Specialised programmes began at age 15 -17 • Best performances came after 5 – 8 years of
specialisation • Athletes who specialised younger – best
performances at jr age level • Most top class Soviet international athletes were
never jr champions or held a jr national record
Jennifer Suhr
In 2006 won her first World Athletics Finals medal (bronze) (Training age 2)
Her season’s best jump in 2006 was 93% of World Record
PB set in 2008 was 98% of World Record (Training age 4)
Won silver medal in Beijing (TA 4) and gold medal in London (TA 8)
College all-star basketball player, NY state high school pentathlon champion
Factors effecting athlete development
• Core Knowledge --The more you know the more readily you can learn ( Bompa 1994, Matveyev 1981)
• An athlete who is pre-elite in one sport has a higher probability of becoming an elite athlete in another
• “There is no question that early specialisation, especially before puberty, has little benefit for later success” Magill (1988)
• Expert performance in sports where peak performance occurs after the age of 20 has been achieved with 3,000 to 4,000 hours of specific training (Cote, Baker, Abernethy)
• The number of hours of deliberate practice needed to acquire expertise is inversely related to the number of other sport activities undertaken during the sampling years prior to specialisation (M=3,939 hours) (Abernethy et al 2003)
Kim Crow • Jr International hurdler – silver at
World Youth Championships in 2001
• Finished 2nd behind 2x world champion Jana Pitman in 400mh at Australian National Championships
• Started rowing erg as part of rehab programme in 2004
• Switched to rowing in 2005 at the Melbourne University (age 20)
• Coaches used to have her row in the bow seat of the men’s 8 at Melbourne Uni
• 2006 – World Championship Bronze medal, women’s 8
• 2007 – 4th World Championships 2-
• 2008 – 10th Olympic Games
• London 2012 – Silver medal – 2x
• London 2012 – bronze medal 1x
Practice histories of elite players
investing sampling specialising
initiation athletic formation specialisation high performance (Bompa)
(Côté)
The Operating System
Rate of Improvement
• Experimental studies in the USSR in the 1970s found little predictive value on the basis of a single series of tests
• highlighted the importance of the rate of improvement • Youngsters who made fast progress during the first 18
months of training were most successful later. • Athletes, whose initial performance levels were only
average but who improved at a rapid rate, often passed those with excellent initial levels.
• It is generally considered that the improvement rate in speed and power events is good when it reaches 10.5 to 12.5% at the end of 18 months.
Long Track Speed Skating - Rate of Improvement
R² = 0.8261
68
70
72
74
76
78
80
82
age 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27
tim
e in
se
con
ds
1000m seasons bests by age
WR
Nesbitt
Schussler
Remple
Poly. (Nesbitt)
Nesbitt – 1.5 years from specialisation to National team selection / Season’s best at age 20 was 97% of World Record time 3 years to first Olympic medal / 8 years to World Record
Talent ID – What can you do?
So what can you do?
• Late specialisation / Early diversification • Performance across a number of different sports • Testing - Top performances on tests of physical abilities are
more correlative than causative and can be misleading • General preparation: improve movement patterns to
reduce injury risk & enhance long term ability to acquire advanced skills - this requires a focus on individual needs not on short term performance gains
• Rate of improvement • Quick developers need suitably challenging training
An East Bloc view on talent
• “It is a popularly held belief that genetic or geographic origin brings with it athletic advantage. This belief sees nature as more important than nurture in determining performance potential.” … “To acknowledge the dominance of athletes on genetic and geographic grounds a priori and to take it for granted, is a non-scientific and counter-productive point of view. Of course we each have this or that genetic advantage or disadvantage – be that anatomical, physiological, psychological, emotional and so on. The fact is however, that such advantage or giftedness – or lack of it – is only one factor in achievement of top performance. Of at least equal, but almost certainly greater importance in producing top performance is the athletes commitment to and pursuit of a training process designed to meet his or her development needs.” Dr Ekkart Arbeit, 1997
Thank You