A Brief Review of Strength and Ballistic Assessment Methodologies in Sport

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 i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sports medicine (Auckland) 2014-05, Vol.44 (5), p.603-623
Hauptverfasser: McMaster, Daniel Travis, Gill, Nicholas, Cronin, John, McGuigan, Michael
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung: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 M diff = ∣ X method 1 - X method 2 ∣ ( X method 1 + X method 2 ) × 100 and effect size (ES = [ X method2  −  X method1 ] ÷ SD method1 ) 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-and-reach 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  0.91; CV  0.82; CV 
ISSN:0112-1642
1179-2035
DOI:10.1007/s40279-014-0145-2