Litcius/Paper detail

Train the Engine or the Brakes? Influence of Momentum on the Change of Direction Deficit

Rebecca Fernandes, Chris Bishop, Anthony N. Turner, Shyam Chavda, Sean J. Maloney

2020International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE: Currently, it is unclear which physical characteristics may underpin the change of direction deficit (COD-D). This investigation sought to determine if momentum, speed-, and jump-based measures may explain variance in COD-D. METHODS: Seventeen males from a professional soccer academy (age, 16.76 [0.75] y; height, 1.80 [0.06] m; body mass, 72.38 [9.57] kg) performed 505 tests on both legs, a 40-m sprint, and single-leg countermovement and drop jumps. RESULTS: The regression analyses did not reveal any significant predictors for COD-D on either leg. "Large" relationships were reported between the COD-D and 505 time on both limbs (r = .65 to .69; P < .01), but COD-D was not associated with linear momentum, speed-, or jump-based performances. When the cohort was median split by COD-D, the effect sizes suggested that the subgroup with the smaller COD-D was 5% faster in the 505 test (d = -1.24; P < .001) but 4% slower over 0-10 m (d = 0.79; P = .33) and carried 11% less momentum (d = -0.81; P = .17). CONCLUSION: Individual variance in COD-D may not be explained by speed- and jump-based performance measures within academy soccer players. However, when grouping athletes by COD-D, faster athletes with greater momentum are likely to display a larger COD-D. It may, therefore, be prudent to recommend more eccentric-biased or technically focused COD training in such athletes and for coaches to view the COD action as a specific skill that may not be represented by performance time in a COD test.

Topics & Concepts

SprintMathematicsMomentum (technical analysis)AthletesCountermovementJumpLong jumpEccentricAnimal scienceStatisticsPhysical therapyMedicinePhysicsEconomicsBiologyQuantum mechanicsFinanceSports Performance and TrainingBalance, Gait, and Falls PreventionMotor Control and Adaptation