A Brief Review of Strength and Ballistic Assessment Methodologies in Sport

被引:193
作者
McMaster, Daniel Travis [1 ,2 ]
Gill, Nicholas [1 ,3 ]
Cronin, John [1 ,4 ]
McGuigan, Michael [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] AUT Univ, Sport Performance Res Inst New Zealand, Auckland 1020, New Zealand
[2] Canadian Sport Inst Pacific, Whistler, BC V0N 1B1, Canada
[3] New Zealand Rugby Union, Wellington 6140, New Zealand
[4] Edith Cowan Univ, Sch Exercise Biomed & Hlth Sci, Joondalup, WA, Australia
关键词
ELITE RUGBY UNION; REPEATED-SPRINT ABILITY; ONE-REPETITION MAXIMUM; BENCH-PRESS PERFORMANCE; MECHANICAL POWER OUTPUT; RAPID HUMAN MOVEMENTS; WHOLE-BODY VIBRATION; VERTICAL JUMP HEIGHT; LINEAR POSITION TRANSDUCER; INTERMITTENT RECOVERY TEST;
D O I
10.1007/s40279-014-0145-2
中图分类号
G8 [体育];
学科分类号
04 ; 0403 ;
摘要
An athletic profile should encompass the physiological, biomechanical, anthropometric and performance measures pertinent to the athlete's sport and discipline. The measurement systems and procedures used to create these profiles are constantly evolving and becoming more precise and practical. This is a review of strength and ballistic assessment methodologies used in sport, a critique of current maximum strength [one-repetition maximum (1RM) and isometric strength] and ballistic performance (bench throw and jump capabilities) assessments for the purpose of informing practitioners and evolving current assessment methodologies. The reliability of the various maximum strength and ballistic assessment methodologies were reported in the form of intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) and coefficient of variation (% CV). Mean percent differences Mdiff= [vertical bar X-method1-X-method2 vertical bar/(X-method1-X-method2) X 100)and effect size (ES = [X-method2 -X-method1] divided by SDmethod1) calculations were used to assess the magnitude and spread of methodological differences for a given performance measure of the included studies. Studies were grouped and compared according to their respective performance measure and movement pattern. The various measurement systems (e. g. force plates, position transducers, accelerometers, jump mats, optical motion sensors and jump-andreach apparatuses) and assessment procedures (i.e. warm-up strategies, loading schemes and rest periods) currently used to assess maximum isometric squat and mid-thigh pull strength (ICC[0.95; CV < 2.0 %), 1RM bench press, back squat and clean strength (ICC[0.91; CV < 4.3 %), and ballistic (vertical jump and bench throw) capabilities (ICC[0.82; CV < 6.5 %) were deemed highly reliable. The measurement systems and assessment procedures employed to assess maximum isometric strength [M-Diff = 2-71 %; effect size (ES) = 0.13-4.37], 1RM strength (M-Diff = 1-58 %; ES = 0.01-5.43), vertical jump capabilities (M-Diff = 2-57 %; ES = 0.02-4.67) and bench throw capabilities (M-Diff = 7-27 %; ES = 0.49-2.77) varied greatly, producing trivial to very large effects on these respective measures. Recreational to highly trained athletes produced maximum isometric squat and mid-thigh pull forces of 1,000-4,000 N; and 1RM bench press, back squat and power clean values of 80-180 kg, 100-260 kg and 70-140 kg, respectively. Mean and peak power production across the various loads (body mass to 60 % 1RM) were between 300 and 1,500 W during the bench throw and between 1,500 and 9,000 W during the vertical jump. The large variations in maximum strength and power can be attributed to the wide range in physical characteristics between different sports and athletic disciplines, training and chronological age as well as the different measurement systems of the included studies. The reliability and validity outcomes suggest that a number of measurement systems and testing procedures can be implemented to accurately assess maximum strength and ballistic performance in recreational and elite athletes, alike. However, the reader
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页码:603 / 623
页数:21
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