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Keith Stokes

Professor at Department for Health

University of Bath

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United Kingdom

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Research Interests

Epidemiology

10%

Statistics

10%

Salud Pública

10%

Athlete Development

10%

Medical Science

10%

Talent Identification

10%

Medical Statistics

10%

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Positions1

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Sean Williams

University Name
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University of Bath

Addressing Selection Biases and Injury Risk in English Youth Cricket: A Growth and Maturation Research Programme

The University of Bath is offering a funded PhD position focused on addressing selection biases and injury risk in English youth cricket, commencing September 2026. The project is supervised by Dr Sean Williams, Professor Keith Stokes, Professor Sean Cumming, and Dr Nick Peirce (Chief Medical Officer, ECB), and is anticipated to be conducted in collaboration with the England & Wales Cricket Board (ECB), subject to final agreement. This research aims to tackle the challenges of talent identification, training programme design, and injury prevention in youth cricket, where children are grouped by chronological age despite significant differences in biological maturation. The project will investigate how relative age effects and maturation status impact selection, development, and injury risk among elite academy cricketers. Early maturing players often gain physical advantages and are more likely to be recruited, while late maturing players may be overlooked, a phenomenon well documented in other sports but less understood in cricket. Injury risk is also influenced by maturation, with growth-related and overuse injuries common during adolescence. Evidence-based interventions such as neuromuscular training and bio-banding, which groups athletes by maturation status, are recommended by both the International Olympic Committee and ECB. However, their implementation across English cricket remains unclear. The student will be based at the University of Bath's UK Collaborating Centre on Injury and Illness Prevention in Sport (UKCCIIS), an IOC Research Centre of Excellence, and will spend time at ECB academies and the National Cricket Performance Centre. Collaboration with ECB departments, regional academy coaches, and medical staff is expected, with opportunities to engage with the International Cricket Council and other sports organizations. The project will be conducted in three phases: (1) quantifying physical and technical development and maturation in ECB academy systems using longitudinal anthropometric data and maturity estimation methods; (2) examining the relationship between maturation and injury risk by integrating growth and injury surveillance data; and (3) developing and evaluating maturity-specific neuromuscular training interventions in collaboration with coaches and medical staff. Applicants must have or be about to obtain at least an Upper Second-Class UK Honours degree (or international equivalent) in a relevant area such as Sports Science, Sports Medicine, Performance Analysis, Medical Statistics, or Public Health. A Master’s degree is preferred. Non-UK applicants must meet the English language entry requirement. Funding is provided through a University of Bath studentship for 3 years, covering tuition fees (Home and Overseas rate), a stipend (£21,805 p/a, 2026/7 rate), and a training support budget. International applicants should note that funding does not cover relocation, visa, or UK healthcare surcharge costs. Applications must be submitted via the University of Bath’s online application form for a PhD in Health before the closing date of 19 April 2026. Applicants should select 'University of Bath URSA' as the studentship and quote the project title and lead supervisor's name. Please avoid submitting applications between 11 April and 15 April 2026 due to system downtime. Informal enquiries can be directed to Dr Sean Williams at [email protected]. The University of Bath values diversity and encourages applications from under-represented groups. Applicants are invited to share any relevant circumstances affecting their educational attainment in their personal statement.

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