Residual Effects of Same Day Lower Extremity Strength Trainingon Countermovement Jump Performancein Collegiate Women Athletes
(Bryan L. Riemann, Matthew J. Johnson, George J. Davies, Andrew A. Flatt)

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Authors
Bryan L. Riemann, Matthew J. Johnson, George J. Davies, Andrew A. Flatt
Abstract

Balancing of strength programming intensity with sport demands is necessary to avoid excessive workloads that could inhibit performance. To expand previous jump height focused literature, this study evaluated whether countermovement jump (CMJ) movement strategies, including eccentric characteristics, might reveal CMJ execution strategy shifts to achieve similar afternoon CMJ height following a morning resistance training session (RTS). Fifteen collegiate women’s soccer and volleyball athletes (18–24 years, 73.6 ± 8.4 kg, 1.74 ± 0.19 m) participating in an offseason RTS completed five CMJs during two afternoon sessions (48 h apart), one 4–6 h post morning RTS, and one on a rest day. The RTS consisted of 2 sets of 10 repetitions at 70–80% 1RM for the back squat, the front squat, and the forward lunge. Vertical ground reaction forces were recorded from which 13 outcome measures describing elements of the eccentric and concentric CMJ phases were computed. No significant differences in jump height (p = 0.427, d = 0.17) or outcome measures (p = 0.091–0.777, d = −0.07–0.21) between sessions with exception of a significant concentric phase time decrease (p = 0.026, d = 0.23) following the RTS were identified. Given the magnitude of the mean concentric phase time change (0.01 s), the result likely has limited practical meaning. As these results confirm previous CMJ height literature, practitioners have further evidence that a morning RTS does not interfere or enhance afternoon CMJ performance in athletic women.
DOI
DOI: 10.5114/jhk/185439
Citation
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Key words
vertical jump, neuromuscular strategy, athlete monitoring,

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