@Article{Marzouki2026,
journal="Biology of Sport",
issn="0860-021X",
volume="43",
number="1",
year="2026",
title="Inter-limb asymmetry across multiple soccer tasks varies with 
maturity status in young players: a cross-sectional study",
abstract="Biological maturation is one of the determinants influencing physical performance, yet its impact on asymmetry in soccer-specific tasks remains poorly understood. This cross-sectional study investigated the effects of biological maturation on inter-limb asymmetry in lower limb muscle volume (LLMV), linear and changeof-direction (COD) sprints (with and without the ball), jump performance, and dynamic balance. The agreement between asymmetry indices in dribbling tasks was assessed using Kappa coefficients to determine the consistency of asymmetry direction across tasks. Eighty-three young male soccer players (Pre-PHV:  n  = 42, Circa-PHV:  n  = 30, Post-PHV:  n  = 11) performed (1) 10-m sprint and 90° COD tests with- (S10 drib  and COD drib , respectively) and without the ball (S10 run  and COD run , respectively), (2) bilateral and unilateral countermovement jumps, and (3) the Y-balance test. Asymmetry indices were calculated for all performance measures. The Pre-PHV players showed greater asymmetry in S10 drib , COD drib , and COD drib -Deficit than Circa- and Post PHV ( p  < 0.05). The S10 drib -Deficit asymmetry was higher in Pre-PHV players than that of Circa-PHV players ( p  = 0.038), while Post-PHV players had lower COD drib  asymmetry than Circa-PHV players ( p  = 0.016). Balance asymmetry was greater in Post-PHV players than their counterparts ( p  < 0.05). Kappa coefficients showed fair to moderate agreement between asymmetry directions in S10 drib  and COD drib , and between their respective deficits, indicating task-specific asymmetry consistency. These findings underscore the need for maturation-specific training strategies, with early-maturing players benefiting from targeted neuromuscular training, while older players should focus on balance and sport-specific drills to manage asymmetry and injury prevention.",
author="Marzouki, Hamza
and Cherni, Bilel
and Sassi, Alâa Edine
and Bouassida, Anissa
and Bouhlel, Ezdine
and Chen, Yung-Sheng
and Chamari, Karim",
pages="369--378",
doi="10.5114/biolsport.2026.154159",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.5114/biolsport.2026.154159"
}