Multivariate assessment of selected performance indicators in relation to the type and result of a typical set in men’s elite volleyball

Citation:

Drikos, S., & VAGENAS, G. E. O. R. G. E. (2011). Multivariate assessment of selected performance indicators in relation to the type and result of a typical set in men’s elite volleyball. International Journal of Performance Analysis in Sport, 11, 85-95. Copy at http://www.tinyurl.com/2ztos9xa

Abstract:

The aim of this study was to identify volleyball performance indicators that best discriminate between winning and losing teams in a set according to set final score differences. The data were collected from teams’ performances (N=350) in all sets played during the 2009 Men’s European Volleyball Championship in Turkey. Clusters analysis established three different groups of sets according to set final score difference: 2 points (ambivalent), 3-5 points (safe), >5 points (unbalanced). A 3x2 MANOVA (type of set x type of result) was then performed on 9 performance indicators reflecting % expressions of four basic skills of the game (serve, pass, attack, block). The analysis revealed significant multivariate differences in type of set, in type of results, and in their interaction. A follow-up Discriminant Analysis showed that effectiveness of attack is the most important performance indicator for all types of sets, far more for the ambivalent ones. The discriminant function correctly classified increasing % of cases with increase in score difference. Especially for ambivalent sets 67.3% were correctly classified, letting some space for further improving the critical performance indicators. The results suggest that training of a men’s volleyball team should emphasize more to improve offensive abilities.