Subject- and joint-specific strategies used by male basketball players to maximize countermovement jump height

The purpose of this project was to study the subject- and joint-specific strategies that male basketball players use to increase countermovement jump (CMJ) height. Lower extremity joint kinematics and kinetics were recorded as 11 male, NCAA Division I basketball players performed 8-10 CMJ with increasing effort. Correlations between maximal potential energy of players` centre-of-mass (surrogate for CMJ height) and the amount of eccentric and concentric work done at the hip, knee, and ankle joint Singlesubject and group-average analyses were used to study. The group-average analysis showed that all joint work variables predicted potential energy, whereas the singlesubject analysis revealed varying levels of subject-specific correlations (i.e., joint-specific CMJ strategies) that did not necessarily reflect the group-average data.
© Copyright 2017 ISBS Proceedings Archive (Michigan). Northern Michigan University. Published by International Society of Biomechanics in Sports. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:training science sport games
Published in:ISBS Proceedings Archive (Michigan)
Language:English
Published: Cologne International Society of Biomechanics in Sports 2017
Online Access:https://commons.nmu.edu/isbs/vol35/iss1/69
Volume:35
Issue:1
Pages:362-365
Document types:congress proceedings
Level:advanced