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Acute and Long-Term Effects of Concurrent Resistance and Swimming Training on Swimming Performance

Gavriil G. Arsoniadis, Petros G. Botonis, Gregory C. Bogdanis, Gerasimos Terzis, Argyris G. Toubekis

2022Sports18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Dry-land resistance exercise (RT) is routinely applied concurrent to swimming (SWIM) training sessions in a year-round training plan. To date, the impact of the acute effect of RT on SWIM or SWIM on RT performance and the long-term RT-SWIM or SWIM-RT training outcome has received limited attention. The existing studies indicate that acute RT or SWIM training may temporarily decrease subsequent muscle function. Concurrent application of RT-SWIM or SWIM-RT may induce similar physiological alterations. Such alterations are dependent on the recovery duration between sessions. Considering the long-term effects of RT-SWIM, the limited existing data present improvements in front crawl swimming performance, dry-land upper and lower body maximum strength, and peak power in swim turn. Accordingly, SWIM-RT training order induces swimming performance improvements in front crawl and increments in maximum dry-land upper and lower body strength. Concurrent application of RT-SWIM or SWIM-RT training applied within a training day leads in similar performance gains after six to twelve weeks of training. The current review suggests that recovery duration between RT and SWIM is a predisposing factor that may determine the training outcome. Competitive swimmers may benefit after concurrent application with both training order scenarios during a training cycle.

Topics & Concepts

Training (meteorology)Resistance trainingDuration (music)Physical medicine and rehabilitationDry landMedicinePhysical therapyBiologyMeteorologyPhysicsAgronomyAcousticsSports Performance and TrainingCardiovascular and exercise physiologySports injuries and prevention
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