Evolution of Mental Fatigue With Consecutive Match Progression in Elite Fencing

Chao Bian, Suzanna Russell, Rafael Lima Kons, Steven Provyn, Jelle Habay, Špela Bogataj, Bart Roelands

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Purpose: On-field daily monitoring has investigated the acute and cumulative nature of mental fatigue (MF) across various sport training/competitions. However, the evolution of MF under congested 1-day match schedules and its relationship with competitive performance, particularly in elite fencing, remains underexplored. Methods: A longitudinal study monitored 31 (7 epee, 13 foil, 11 saber; 15 female) elite fencers’ subjective MF in the morning (MVAS0) and immediately after each match (MVASi, measurement point i coded as match order) throughout the national competition day until elimination. Weighted least-squares regression with sample-size-based weighting was applied to capture the evolution trend throughout the day. A linear mixed-effects model explored the potential influence of performance statistics (total hits; hits difference) per match and the progression (i) on dynamic changes in MF (MVASi vs MVASi-1). Results: The competition day of 31 fencers, totaling 153 matches, was analyzed. A downward, quadratic model showed that MF accumulated with a decelerating trend as the competition progressed (theoretical increase rate between matches reduced from +22.0% to +0.5%). In each match, only hits difference (estimate = −0.581, P < .001) negatively affected MF accumulation. Conclusions: The present findings regarding intraday MF evolution in elite fencing suggest that practitioners should explore the benefit of proactive countermeasures and recovery strategies from the early rounds of a competition day. Applying real-time monitoring and MF-targeted interventions along with other motivational, emotional adjustments is critical to mitigate MF buildup and maintain performance capacity, particularly when a fencer is successively receiving hits.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1572-1579
Number of pages8
JournalInternational Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance
Volume20
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2025

Keywords

  • accumulation
  • cognitive fatigue
  • combat sports
  • intraday monitoring
  • temporal nature

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