Mostrando 1 - 19 Resultados de 19 Para Buscar '"Tight end"', tiempo de consulta: 0.49s Limitar resultados
  1. 1
    “…Ten Division I college football players were enrolled [soft-shell padding (SHELL) included four defensive linemen and one tight end; non-soft-shell (CONTROL) included two offensive linemen, two defensive linemen, and one tight end]. …”
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    “…The sample included 2 quarterbacks (QB), 7 running backs (RB), 13 wide receivers (WR), 1 tight end (TE), 18 defensive backs (DB), 8 linebackers (LB), and 13 offensive and defensive linemen (LM). …”
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  3. 3
    “…The majority of players were linemen (86%): 16 defensive, 15 offensive, and 1 tight end. The injury took place while blocking or being blocked in 29 players (78%) and while tackling or being tackled in 5 players (14%). …”
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    “…Players were divided into 3 groups: line players (offensive and defensive linemen, defensive end), skill players (defensive back, wide receiver, running back, and quarterback), and hybrid players (linebacker and tight end). Labral tear location and size were recorded using the clockface method and categorized into 6 zones: superior, anterosuperior, anteroinferior, inferior, posteroinferior, and posterosuperior. …”
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  7. 7
    “…Ten metrics were gathered for healthy control players from eight positions (defensive back, wide receiver, running back, linebacker, tight-end, defensive line, offensive line, and quarter back. …”
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  8. 8
    “…The rate of these ankle injuries varied by player position: offensive linemen, running backs, and tight ends had the highest overall rates, while special teams players had the lowest. …”
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  9. 9
    “…The odds for repeat concussion were elevated for wide receivers, tight ends, and linebackers but lower than in the earlier period. …”
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  10. 10
    “…Only 2.3% of team games were injury free. Wide receivers, tight ends, and defensive backs had the highest incidence of injury and concussion. …”
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  11. 11
    “…The injury rate was lower in quarterbacks and wide receivers but significantly higher in tight ends during the second 6 years. The most frequent symptoms were headaches and dizziness; the most common signs were problems with information processing and immediate recall. …”
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  12. 12
    “…We prospectively studied college football players during the 2017–2021 football seasons across representative playing positions (15 offensive and defensive linemen, 11 linebackers and tight ends, and 15 defensive backs, running backs, and receivers). …”
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  13. 13
    “…Posterior hip instability was predominantly sustained by offensive players (64.3%), with tight ends being the most affected (31.3%). Half of the injuries occurred during the regular season, 43.8% in the preseason, and 6.2% in the offseason. …”
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  14. 14
    “…METHODS: A retrospective review of all NFL quarterbacks (QB), running backs (RB), wide receivers (WR), and tight ends (TE) who sustained an isolated, unilateral ACL injury from 1988 to 2017 was conducted. …”
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  15. 15
    “…Receivers (wide receivers and tight ends) and backs (linebackers, fullbacks, and halfbacks) had significantly greater injury risk than the rest of the NFL players, while perimeter linemen (defensive ends and offensive tackles) had significantly lower injury risk than the rest of the players. …”
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    “…Instability events were most often anterior among linebackers and wide receivers (50% and 100%, respectively), while posterior instability was most common in defensive linemen (66.7%), defensive secondary players (58.6%), quarterbacks (100.0%), running backs (55.6%), and tight ends (75.0%). CONCLUSION: The majority of non–missed time shoulder instability injuries (97.4%) were subluxations, which were likely excluded from or underreported in previous shoulder instability studies due to the inherent difficulty of detecting and diagnosing shoulder subluxation.…”
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  17. 17
    “…Instability events were most often anterior among linebackers and wide receivers (50% and 100%, respectively), while posterior instability was most common for defensive linemen (66.7%), defensive secondary (58.6%), quarterbacks (100.0%), running backs (55.6%), and tight ends (75.0%). CONCLUSIONS: Shoulder instability injuries that do not result in missed time beyond the date of injury are much more common among collision-sport athletes than previously thought, accounting for approximately 30% of all instability events in the NFL. …”
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    “…Outcomes data collected for offensive players (running backs, wide receivers, tight ends) included time to return to competition and yearly total yards and touchdowns. …”
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