Int J Sports Med 2012; 33(08): 647-653
DOI: 10.1055/s-0032-1304588
Training & Testing
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Comparison of Ground Reaction Forces and Contact Times Between 2 Lateral Plyometric Exercises in Professional Soccer Players

D. P. Wong
1   Department of Health and Physical Education, The Hong Kong Institute of Education, Hong Kong
,
A. Chaouachi
2   Tunisian Research Laboratory “Sport Performance Optimisation”, National Center of Medicine and Science in Sports, Tunis, Tunisia
,
A. Dellal
2   Tunisian Research Laboratory “Sport Performance Optimisation”, National Center of Medicine and Science in Sports, Tunis, Tunisia
3   Department of Fitness Training and Research, Olympique Lyonnais FC (Soccer), Lyon, France
,
A. W.. Smith
1   Department of Health and Physical Education, The Hong Kong Institute of Education, Hong Kong
› Author Affiliations
Further Information

Publication History



accepted after revision 16 January 2012

Publication Date:
17 April 2012 (online)

Abstract

There are no studies which have examined the differences in kinetics between lateral plyometric exercises and the selection of these exercises is largely based on the experience and observation of coaches. This study aimed to compare ground reaction forces (GRF) and contact times (GCT) between 2 lateral plyometric exercises: lateral alternative leg hopping (HOP), and speed lateral footwork (SPEED). 16 professional male soccer players (age: 24.6±5.5 years; and BMI: 21.7±2.2 kg.m − 2) participated in this within-participant repeated measures study. 3-dimensional GRF data were measured by force platform. Our study revealed significant differences between the 2 lateral plyometric exercises in all kinetics parameters (F=573.7, P<0.01). HOP produced significantly longer GCT (0.45 s vs. 0.23 s, P<0.01, large effect), significantly higher values (P<0.05, large effect) in peak force (3.31 vs. 2.47 Body Weight [BW]), peak rate of force development (0.94 vs. 0.29 BW/s), and impulse (0.76 vs. 0.31 BW.s) except for peak force in the medial-lateral (P<0.05, medium effect) and impulse in the anterio-posterior direction (not significant, small effect). Therefore, SPEED is an exercise that aims to increase step frequency because of its short GCT (< 0.25 s) while HOP increases leg strength and power.

 
  • References

  • 1 Ball NB, Stock CG, Scurr JC. Bilateral contact ground reaction forces and contact times during plyometric drop jumping. J Strength Cond Res 2010; 24: 2762-2769
  • 2 Barnes JL, Schilling BK, Falvo MJ, Weiss LW, Creasy AK, Fry AC. Relationship of jumping and agility performance in female volleyball athletes. J Strength Cond Res 2007; 21: 1192-1196
  • 3 Bloomfield J, Polman R, O’Donoghue P, McNaughton L. Effective speed and agility conditioning methodology for random intermittent dynamic type sports. J Strength Cond Res 2007; 21: 1093-1100
  • 4 Brughelli M, Cronin J, Levin G, Chaouachi A. Understanding change of direction ability in sport: a review of resistance training studies. Sports Med 2008; 38: 1045-1063
  • 5 Chaouachi A, Brughelli M, Chamari K, Levin GT, Ben Abdelkrim N, Laurencelle L, Castagna C. Lower limb maximal dynamic strength and agility determinants in elite basketball players. J Strength Cond Res 2009; 23: 1570-1577
  • 6 Cohen J. (ed.). Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences. New Jersey: Erlbaum Associates; 1988: 567
  • 7 Gabbett TJ. A comparison of physiological and anthropometric characteristics among playing positions in sub-elite rugby league players. J Sports Sci 2006; 24: 1273-1280
  • 8 Gabbett TJ. Physiological and anthropometric correlates of tackling ability in rugby league players. J Strength Cond Res 2009; 23: 540-548
  • 9 Gil SM, Gil J, Ruiz F, Irazusta A, Irazusta J. Physiological and anthropometric characteristics of young soccer players according to their playing position: relevance for the selection process. J Strength Cond Res 2007; 21: 438-445
  • 10 Harriss DJ, Atkinson G. Update – Ethical standards in sport and exercise science research. Int J Sports Med 2011; 32: 819-821
  • 11 Hopkins WG. Measures of reliability in sports medicine and science. Sports Med 2000; 30: 1-15
  • 12 Jovanovic M, Sporis G, Omrcen D, Fiorentini F. Effects of speed, agility, quickness training method on power performance in elite soccer players. J Strength Cond Res 2011; 25: 1285-1292
  • 13 Jullien H, Bisch C, Largouët N, Manouvrier C, Carling CJ, Amiard V. Does a short period of lower limb strength training improve performance in field-based tests of running and agility in young professional soccer players?. J Strength Cond Res 2008; 22: 404-411
  • 14 Little T, Williams AG. Specificity of acceleration, maximum speed, and agility in professional soccer players. J Strength Cond Res 2005; 19: 76-78
  • 15 Potach DH, Chu DA. Plyometric training. In: Baechel TR, Earle RW. (eds.). Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning. Illinois: Human Kinetics; 2008: 414-485
  • 16 Reilly T, Williams AM, Nevill A, Franks A. A multidisciplinary approach to talent identification in soccer. J Sports Sci 2000; 18: 695-702
  • 17 Serpell BG, Young WB, Ford M. Are the perceptual and decision-making components of agility trainable? A preliminary investigation. J Strength Cond Res 2011; 25: 1240-1248
  • 18 Sheppard JM, Young WB. Agility literature review: classifications, training and testing. J Sports Sci 2006; 24: 919-932
  • 19 Steven S, Plisk MS. Speed, agility, and speed-endurance development. In: Baechel TR, Earle RW. (eds.). Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning. Illinois: Human Kinetics; 2008: 457-486
  • 20 Veale JP, Pearce AJ, Carlson JS. Reliability and validity of a reactive agility test for Australian football. Int J Sports Physiol Perform 2010; 5: 239-248
  • 21 Wilderman DR, Ross SE, Padua DA. Thigh muscle activity, knee motion, and impact force during side-step pivoting in agility-trained female basketball players. J Athl Train 2009; 44: 14-25