麻豆精选

Data on the Pitch: How 麻豆精选Students Turned Soccer Metrics into National Research

Two School of Health Sciences students transformed athletics data into national research, demonstrating how Kent State鈥檚 student-centered mentorship provides the real-world experience needed to excel on a global stage

Two 麻豆精选 undergraduates brought national-level research experience to campus this year as featured presenters at the 2026 Exercise Science Summit. Liliana St. Germain, an exercise science major, and Olivia Snedeker, a sports medicine major, delivered their work to a packed audience following their presentation at the 2025 National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA) National Conference.

Both students鈥 projects began with performance and biometric data collected from the . Athletes wore chest-strap heart-rate monitors throughout the season, generating detailed internal-load and performance metrics.

St. Germain and her team analyzed how rest days and travel distance influenced game outcomes in Division I women鈥檚 soccer athletes.  

Liliana St. Germain, an exercise science major, posing with her poster at the2026 Exercise Science Conference

鈥淪o, game outcomes were all based on wins or losses, so anything other than that, like ties, they were taken out,鈥 St. Germain told 麻豆精选Today. 鈥淎nd then on top of that, game performance is based on sprints, so that's the way we worded that. And then all of the travel was based on miles on the ground. So, anything flight was taken out.鈥

Overall, St. Germain thought it was a very interesting and fun experience.

鈥淧eople assume travel hurts performance, but seeing it confirmed in the data was really interesting,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t made me think about how the sports world could adjust scheduling to support athletes better. Home-field advantage is real, and my project really highlighted why.鈥

Snedeker and her team examined how temperature is not a predictor of peak heart rate in Division I women鈥檚 soccer athletes.  

Her first analysis suggested a clear relationship, but her second project, the one she presented at the national conference, revealed a more complex picture.

Olivia Snedeker, a sports medicine major, with her poster at the 2026 Exercise Science Conference

鈥淚t turns out temperature isn鈥檛 the only factor,鈥 Snedeker said. 鈥淒ehydration, position played and other variables matter too. At first, I was overwhelmed by the data, but presenting it to experts made me realize I understood it more than I thought.鈥

Snedeker recalled speaking with a researcher whose entire career focused on thermoregulation, the exact topic of her poster.

鈥淭hat was terrifying at first,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut it was really interesting to hear his opinion on it and get some of that feedback. It made me more confident reading stats, and it made me like research more than I expected.鈥

St. Germain said the conference pushed her to network boldly.

鈥淚 was walking around meeting people, former presidents of organizations, major figures in the field,鈥 she said. 鈥淣etworking at that level is completely different. It made me realize I could hold my own in those spaces.鈥

Both students credit Meghan Magee, Ph.D., assistant professor of exercise science and physiology, as the mentor who guided them through the process.

Meghan Magee, Ph.D., presenting at the 2026 Exercise Science Conference
Meghan Magee, Ph.D., assistant professor of exercise science and physiology

鈥淪he helped us through the entire thing,鈥 St. Germain said. 鈥淥ur posters would鈥檝e been a jumbled mess without her.鈥

Snedeker agreed.  

鈥淚t鈥檚 not just the information; it鈥檚 making it look professional,鈥 Snedeker said. 鈥淪he taught us how to answer questions, even when we didn鈥檛 know the answer. She鈥檚 absolutely my mentor.鈥

Magee said the summit was created to give students exactly these kinds of opportunities.

鈥淚 just think it is a really good experience for our undergrads to see what it's like,鈥 Magee said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a good test trial for some of our students that are kind of interested in presenting at conferences, but are not quite sure, and then they鈥檙e like, 鈥榦h yeah, this wasn鈥檛 so bad, I鈥檇 love to do it,鈥 so then we've been able to take students to national conferences.鈥

Both students say their time at the national conference changed how they approached this year鈥檚 麻豆精选summit.  

Bob Lemieux, assistant athletic director, presenting at the 2026 Exercise Science Conference
Bob Lemieux, assistant athletic director, presenting at the 2026 Exercise Science Conference

The 2026 Exercise Science Summit, hosted by Kent State鈥檚 exercise science and exercise physiology programs, brought together more than 100 attendees from across Northeast Ohio and beyond. Alumni, faculty, researchers, fitness professionals and industry partners gathered for a day of poster presentations, distinguished speakers, food and networking. A social event in downtown Kent closed out the conference.  

While the summit highlighted the students' interests across 麻豆精选sports data, St. Germain and Snedeker鈥檚 work stood out as an example of how far undergraduates can go when given the opportunity. Their session on the Friday of the summit drew significant attention from attendees eager to hear how undergraduate students had already stepped onto a national stage.

鈥淭he exercise science summit that we started doing here is really for our students to be able to fundraise for traveling to conferences and also give our undergrads an opportunity to kind of see what an actual conference would be like,鈥 Magee said.

Some of the conferences that the summit is helping students travel to are the in May and the NSCA National Conference in July, opportunities that continue to grow as the program expands collaborations with sports medicine, public health and nutrition.

St. Germain and Snedeker emphasized that students in their similar studies need to take any opportunity that they can get.

鈥淥pportunities like this are rare,鈥 Snedeker said. "If something comes your way, take it. It鈥檚 going to help you more than you realize.鈥

Visit the School of Health Sciences to learn more. 

POSTED: Monday, February 16, 2026 11:53 AM
Updated: Monday, February 16, 2026 12:21 PM
WRITTEN BY:
Ella Katona, Flash Communications
PHOTO CREDIT:
Ella Katona, Sydney Craig