viernes, 11 de junio de 2021

Maximizing acceleration and change of direction in sport

Compartimos la nueva publicación de nuestros compañeros de la Red Pleokinetic Andrés Baena, Manuel Rodríguez, Pedro Jiménez y Alberto Soriano del Laboratorio de la Universidad de Almería (España) en la revista Environmental Research and Public Health.

   



 Abstract

Sprint running and change of direction (COD) present similar mechanical demands, involving an acceleration phase in which athletes need to produce and apply substantial horizontal external force. Assessing the mechanical properties underpinning individual sprint acceleration might add relevant information about COD performance in addition to that obtained through sprint time alone. The present technical report uses a case series of three athletes with nearly identical 20 m sprint times but with different mechanical properties and COD performances. This makes it possible to illustrate, for the first time, a potential rationale for why the sprint force-velocity (FV) profile (i.e., theoretical maximal force (F0), velocity (V0), maximal power output (Pmax), ratio of effective horizontal component (RFpeak) and index of force application technique (DRF)) provides key information about COD performance (i.e., further to that derived from simple sprint time), which can be used to individualize training. This technical report provides practitioners with a justification to assess the FV profile in addition to sprint time when the aim is to enhance sprint acceleration and COD performance; practical interpretations and advice on how training interventions could be individualized based on the athletes’ differential sprint mechanical properties are also specified.

Keywords: acceleration; mechanical properties; explosive performance; assessment; team sports

Disponible en: https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/18/11/6140