SportLogia
          Vol. 8, Issue 1, June 2012.
          EFFECTS OF A SPECIFIC MODEL OF TRAINING ON BODY   
COMPOSITION OF JUDO ATHLETES OF YOUNGER SENIOR AGE 
Nenad Rađević1
            1The Government of  the Republic of Srpska, Ministry of family, youth and sports, Banja Luka, Bosnia  and Herzegovina 
SHORT SCIENTIFIC PAPER 
            doi: 10.5550/sgia.120801.en.079R 
            COBISS.BH-ID:  2936856 
            UDK: 796.853.23 
Summary
The goal of a coach is to prepare an  appropriate model of training for their athletes and provide adequate and  healthy way of regulating their body weight. 
            On a sample of 32 judo athletes of younger  senior age on the territory of the city of BanjaLuka  and municipality   of Laktaši, a specific  model of training was applied for a period of ten weeks and the judo athletes  were divided into two groups. One group was the control group, and other was  experimental. The experimental group has implemented 60 training sessions, of  which 40 judo trainings (25 technical-tactical and 15 situational judo  trainings-randoria) and 20 trainings with the load (50-80% of 1 RM). 
            In this period, the control group worked only  judo trainings or 40 training sessions. Statistical analysis of the results is  divided into two segments - the descriptive statistics and application of  methods of the inferential statistics. The initial and final measurements of  body composition of groups were conducted by the bioelectrical impedance(BIA  method), and the two-component(2C) model was used for this work - which divides  the whole body in total body fat (fat mass) and non-fat body mass (fat-free  mass). From the field of descriptive statistics on the level of the entire  sample, the central and dispersion parameters were calculated. The methods of  inferential statistics used in this study were t-test for dependent and  independent samples and analysis of covariance. 
            The values of percentage of body fat in the  experimental group, which was exposed to a specific training process for a  period of ten weeks, were notably statistically reduced during this  period.Value of body fat from an initial 23.10% after the training protocol,  decreased to 20.41%, on the .01 level of significance. Values of the percentage  of body fat in the control group were kept on the same, higher level than  recommended for judo, even after the training, pointing to the effects of their  less successful training protocol. 
Key words: body fat, non-fat body mass, specific training model.
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