Acute Effects of Plyometric Intervention—Performance Improvement and Related Changes in Sprinting Gait Variability

ABSTRACTMaćkała, K and Fostiak, M. Acute effects of plyometric intervention—Performance improvement and related changes in sprinting gait variability. J Strength Cond Res 29(7)1956–1965, 2015—The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of a short high-intensity plyometric program on the impr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of strength and conditioning research 2015-07, Vol.29 (7), p.1956-1965
Hauptverfasser: Maćkała, Krzysztof, Fostiak, Marek
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:ABSTRACTMaćkała, K and Fostiak, M. Acute effects of plyometric intervention—Performance improvement and related changes in sprinting gait variability. J Strength Cond Res 29(7)1956–1965, 2015—The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of a short high-intensity plyometric program on the improvement of explosive power of lower extremities and sprint performance as well as changes in sprinting stride variability in male sprinters. Fourteen healthy male sprinters (mean ± SDage18.07 ± 0.73 years, body mass73 ± 9.14 kg, height180.57 ± 8.16 cm, and best 100 m10.89 ± 0.23) participated in the experiment. The experimental protocol included vertical jumping such as squat jump, countermovement jump, and horizontal jumps; standing long jump and standing triple jumps to assess lower-body power, maximal running velocity; a 20-m flying start sprint that evaluated variability of 10 running steps and 60-m starting block sprint. All analyzed parameters were obtained using the new technology of OptoJump–Microgate (OptoJump, Italy). The short-term plyometric training program significantly increased the explosive power of lower extremities, both vertical and horizontal jumping improvement. However, the vertical jumps increased much more than the horizontal. The 20-m improvements were derived from an increase of stride frequency from 4.31 to 4.39 Hz because of a decrease of ground contact time from 138 to 133 milliseconds. This did not translate into step length changes. Therefore, the significantly increased frequency of stride (1.8%), which is a specific expression of ground contact time reduction during support phase, resulted in an increase of speed. The training volume of 2 weeks (with 6 sessions) using high-intensity (between 180 and 250 jumps per session) plyometric exercises can be recommended as the short-term strategy that will optimize oneʼs probability of reaching strong improvements in explosive power and sprint velocity performance.
ISSN:1064-8011
1533-4287
DOI:10.1519/JSC.0000000000000853