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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Plyometric muscular action tests in judo- and non-judo athletes

Vicent CarratalaLuís MassuçaJorge ProençaJosé Manuel García GarcíaLuís Monteiro

subject

medicine.medical_specialtybiologyAthletesBiophysicsPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationConcentricbiology.organism_classificationMuscle actionPeak velocitySquat jumpPhysical therapymedicineJumpEccentricPlyometricsOrthopedics and Sports Medicinehuman activitiesMathematics

description

The majority of explosive actions during the Judo fight occur when the athlete is trying to overcome his/her adversary via rapid execution(s) of (isolated or chained) technical manoeuvres. The aim of this study was to compare the results of two plyometric muscular action tests (i.e., Squat Jump – SJ, and Countermovement Jump – CMJ) between judoand non-judoathletes. The investigation involved a cross-sectional examination of 102 subjects (age, 21.9 ± 3.4 years) divided into 3 performance groups: a) Senior top elite judo athletes (n = 50), b) Junior elite judo athletes (n = 26) and c) Adult non-judo athletes (n = 26). Thirteen biomechanical variables (including jump height, velocity, power, force in SJ and CMJ; time to peak force, to peak power and between peaks) were examined. The dataset was analysed using a Univariate analysis of variance. No significant differences in anthropometric variables were observed between groups. However, significant differences were observed in: a) jump height and peak velocity (SJ, CMJ), b) peak power and peak force (SJ), and c) peak eccentric force, peak eccentric power and peak concentric power (CMJ). We conclude that: a) the center of mass displacement achieved in the CMJ is higher than in the SJ; b) the optimisation of coordination between the eccentric and concentric phases of muscle action is not the primary determinant of performance of Judo athletes; and c) the main pre-requisite for success in elite judo athletes is superior peak eccentric power.

https://doi.org/10.3233/ies-2011-0429