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Billy T. Hulin

Researcher at University of Wollongong

Publications -  20
Citations -  1570

Billy T. Hulin is an academic researcher from University of Wollongong. The author has contributed to research in topics: Workload & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 20 publications receiving 1333 citations. Previous affiliations of Billy T. Hulin include Australian Catholic University & University of Queensland.

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The acute:chronic workload ratio predicts injury: high chronic workload may decrease injury risk in elite rugby league players

TL;DR: Higher workloads can have either positive or negative influences on injury risk in elite rugby league players, and players with a high chronic workload are more resistant to injury with moderate-low through moderate-high (0.85–1.35) acute:chronic workload ratios and lessresistant to injury when subjected to ‘spikes’ in acute workload.
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Spikes in acute workload are associated with increased injury risk in elite cricket fast bowlers

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that large increases in acute workload are associated with increased injury risk in elite cricket fast bowlers.
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Influence of physical qualities on post-match fatigue in rugby league players.

TL;DR: Post-match fatigue is lower in players with well-developed high-intensity running ability, and lower body strength, despite these players having greater internal and external match loads.
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High training workloads alone do not cause sports injuries: how you get there is the real issue

TL;DR: High chronic workloads (ie, intense training), combined with reductions in acute workloads before important competition (IE, taper), would be expected to improve sporting performance.
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Low chronic workload and the acute:chronic workload ratio are more predictive of injury than between-match recovery time: a two-season prospective cohort study in elite rugby league players

TL;DR: It is suggested that high and very-high chronic workloads may protect against match injury following shorter between-match recovery periods, and workloads can be manipulated to decrease the match-injury risk associated with shorter recovery time between matches.