Timothy A. McGuine
University of Wisconsin-Madison
89 Papers
155 Citations
Timothy A. McGuine is an academic researcher from University of Wisconsin-Madison. The author has contributed to research in topics: Athletes & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 76 publications. Previous affiliations of Timothy A. McGuine include University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics.
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Papers
Sport Specialization Characteristics Between Rural and Suburban High School Athletes.
David R. Bell,Eric G. Post,Stephanie M. Trigsted,Daniel A Schaefer,Timothy A. McGuine,Andrew M. Watson,M. Alison Brooks +6 more
TL;DR: High school athletes at suburban schools are more likely to exhibit sport participation patterns that are associated with increased risk of overuse injury, and efforts aimed at safe sport participation should target these groups.
The Association of Sport Specialization and Training Volume With Injury History in Youth Athletes.
Eric G. Post,Stephanie M. Trigsted,Jeremy W. Riekena,Scott Hetzel,Timothy A. McGuine,M. Alison Brooks,David R. Bell +6 more
TL;DR: High levels of specialization were associated with a history of injuries, independent of age, sex, and weekly organized sport volume, and athletes who exceeded volume recommendations were more likely to have overuse injuries.
High School Sports During the CoVID-19 Pandemic: The Impact of Sport Participation on the Health of Adolescents
Timothy A. McGuine,Kevin Biese,Scott Hetzel,Allison Schwarz,Claudia L. Reardon,David R. Bell,M. Alison Brooks,Andrew M. Watson +7 more
TL;DR: For example, this article found that adolescents who played a sport during the CoVID19 pandemic reported fewer symptoms of anxiety and depression, as well as higher physical activity and quality of life scores compared to adolescents who did not play a sport.
The Association Between Sport Specialization and Sport Motivation in Middle School-Aged Athletes.
Kevin Biese,Madeline Winans,Grace Rudek,Lisa Cadmus-Bertram,Susanne Andreae,M. Alison Brooks,Stephanie Kliethermes,Timothy A. McGuine,David R. Bell +8 more
TL;DR: In this article , sport specialization was defined using a modified 3-point scale (low, moderate, and high) and multisport versus single-sport athletes and sport specialization categories were not significantly associated with autonomous motivation, controlled motivation, or amotivation.
Sport specialization and sport participation opportunities and their association with injury history in female high school volleyball athletes.
Kevin M Biese,Timothy A. McGuine,Stephanie Kliethermes,David R. Bell,Eric G. Post,Andrew M. Watson,M. Alison Brooks,Pamela J Lang +7 more
TL;DR: Specialization was associated with injury history and year-round volleyball opportunities among female adolescent volleyball athletes and associations between sport specialization classification and other sport participation opportunities were found.