The Effects of Plyometric Jump Training on Jumping and Swimming Performances in Prepubertal Male Swimmers

Swimming performance can be improved not only by in-water sport-specific training but also by means of dry land-training (e.g., plyometric jump training [PJT]). This study examined the effects of an 8-week PJT on proxies of muscle power and swimming performance in prepubertal male swimmers. Particip...

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Main Author: Senda Sammoud, Yassine Negra, Helmi Chaabene, Raja Bouguezzi, Jason Moran, Urs Granacher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Uludag 2019-12-01
Series:Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jssm.org/hf.php?id=jssm-18-805.xml
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spelling doaj-3b03c82f91da4e69b494f694f78c35a32020-11-25T02:39:27ZengUniversity of UludagJournal of Sports Science and Medicine1303-29682019-12-01184805811The Effects of Plyometric Jump Training on Jumping and Swimming Performances in Prepubertal Male SwimmersSenda Sammoud, Yassine Negra, Helmi Chaabene, Raja Bouguezzi, Jason Moran, Urs Granacher0Research Unit (UR17JS01) "Sport Performance & Health" Higher Institute of Sport and Physical Education of Ksar Said, University de “La Manouba”, Manouba, TunisiaSwimming performance can be improved not only by in-water sport-specific training but also by means of dry land-training (e.g., plyometric jump training [PJT]). This study examined the effects of an 8-week PJT on proxies of muscle power and swimming performance in prepubertal male swimmers. Participants were randomly allocated to a PJT group (PJT; n = 14; age: 10.3 ± 0.4 years, maturity-offset = -3±0.3) or a control group (CG; n = 12; age: 10.5 ± 0.4 years, maturity-offset = -2.8 ± 0.3). Swimmers in PJT and CG performed 6 training sessions per week. Each training session lasted between 80 and 90 minutes. Over the 8 weeks in-season training period, PJT performed two PJT sessions per week, each lasting between 25 to 30 minutes (~1 hour per week) in replacement of sport-specific swimming drills. During that time, CG followed their regular sport-specific swimming training (e.g., coordination, breathing, improving swimming strokes). Overall training volume was similar between groups. Pre- and post-training, tests were conducted to assess proxies of muscle power (countermovement-jump [CMJ]), standing-long-jump [SLJ]) and sport-specific swimming performances (15-, 25-, and 50-m front-crawl, 25-m kick without push [25-m kick WP], and 25-m front-crawl WP). No training or test-related injuries were detected over the course of the study. Between-group analyses derived from magnitude-based inferences showed trivial-to-large effects in favour of PJT for all tests (ES = 0.28 to 1.43). Within-group analyses for the PJT showed small performance improvements for CMJ (effect-size [ES] = 0.53), 25-m kick WP (ES = 0.25), and 50-m front crawl (ES = 0.56) tests. Moderate performance improvements were observed for the SLJ, 25-m front-crawl WP, 15-m and 25-m front-crawl tests (ES = 0.95, 0.60, 0.99, and 0.85, respectively). For CG, the within-group results showed trivial performance declines for the CMJ (ES=-0.13) and the 50-m front-crawl test (ES = -0.04). In addition, trivial-to-small performance improvements were observed for the SLJ (ES = 0.09), 25-m kick WP (ES = 0.02), 25-m front-crawl WP (ES = 0.19), 25-m front-crawl (ES = 0.2), (SLJ [ES = 0.09, and 15-m front crawl (ES = 0.36). Short-term in-season PJT, integrated into the regular swimming training, was more effective than regular swimming training alone in improving jump and sport-specific swimming performances in prepubertal male swimmers.https://www.jssm.org/hf.php?id=jssm-18-805.xmlstretch-shortening cycleyoung athletesrate of force developmentsport-specific performance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Senda Sammoud, Yassine Negra, Helmi Chaabene, Raja Bouguezzi, Jason Moran, Urs Granacher
spellingShingle Senda Sammoud, Yassine Negra, Helmi Chaabene, Raja Bouguezzi, Jason Moran, Urs Granacher
The Effects of Plyometric Jump Training on Jumping and Swimming Performances in Prepubertal Male Swimmers
Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
stretch-shortening cycle
young athletes
rate of force development
sport-specific performance
author_facet Senda Sammoud, Yassine Negra, Helmi Chaabene, Raja Bouguezzi, Jason Moran, Urs Granacher
author_sort Senda Sammoud, Yassine Negra, Helmi Chaabene, Raja Bouguezzi, Jason Moran, Urs Granacher
title The Effects of Plyometric Jump Training on Jumping and Swimming Performances in Prepubertal Male Swimmers
title_short The Effects of Plyometric Jump Training on Jumping and Swimming Performances in Prepubertal Male Swimmers
title_full The Effects of Plyometric Jump Training on Jumping and Swimming Performances in Prepubertal Male Swimmers
title_fullStr The Effects of Plyometric Jump Training on Jumping and Swimming Performances in Prepubertal Male Swimmers
title_full_unstemmed The Effects of Plyometric Jump Training on Jumping and Swimming Performances in Prepubertal Male Swimmers
title_sort effects of plyometric jump training on jumping and swimming performances in prepubertal male swimmers
publisher University of Uludag
series Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
issn 1303-2968
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Swimming performance can be improved not only by in-water sport-specific training but also by means of dry land-training (e.g., plyometric jump training [PJT]). This study examined the effects of an 8-week PJT on proxies of muscle power and swimming performance in prepubertal male swimmers. Participants were randomly allocated to a PJT group (PJT; n = 14; age: 10.3 ± 0.4 years, maturity-offset = -3±0.3) or a control group (CG; n = 12; age: 10.5 ± 0.4 years, maturity-offset = -2.8 ± 0.3). Swimmers in PJT and CG performed 6 training sessions per week. Each training session lasted between 80 and 90 minutes. Over the 8 weeks in-season training period, PJT performed two PJT sessions per week, each lasting between 25 to 30 minutes (~1 hour per week) in replacement of sport-specific swimming drills. During that time, CG followed their regular sport-specific swimming training (e.g., coordination, breathing, improving swimming strokes). Overall training volume was similar between groups. Pre- and post-training, tests were conducted to assess proxies of muscle power (countermovement-jump [CMJ]), standing-long-jump [SLJ]) and sport-specific swimming performances (15-, 25-, and 50-m front-crawl, 25-m kick without push [25-m kick WP], and 25-m front-crawl WP). No training or test-related injuries were detected over the course of the study. Between-group analyses derived from magnitude-based inferences showed trivial-to-large effects in favour of PJT for all tests (ES = 0.28 to 1.43). Within-group analyses for the PJT showed small performance improvements for CMJ (effect-size [ES] = 0.53), 25-m kick WP (ES = 0.25), and 50-m front crawl (ES = 0.56) tests. Moderate performance improvements were observed for the SLJ, 25-m front-crawl WP, 15-m and 25-m front-crawl tests (ES = 0.95, 0.60, 0.99, and 0.85, respectively). For CG, the within-group results showed trivial performance declines for the CMJ (ES=-0.13) and the 50-m front-crawl test (ES = -0.04). In addition, trivial-to-small performance improvements were observed for the SLJ (ES = 0.09), 25-m kick WP (ES = 0.02), 25-m front-crawl WP (ES = 0.19), 25-m front-crawl (ES = 0.2), (SLJ [ES = 0.09, and 15-m front crawl (ES = 0.36). Short-term in-season PJT, integrated into the regular swimming training, was more effective than regular swimming training alone in improving jump and sport-specific swimming performances in prepubertal male swimmers.
topic stretch-shortening cycle
young athletes
rate of force development
sport-specific performance
url https://www.jssm.org/hf.php?id=jssm-18-805.xml
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