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A comparison of head-hand coordination patterns during squash forehand strokes in expert and less-skilled squash players

Objective: To compare head and hand movement patterns during squash forehand motions between experts and less-skilled squash players. Method: Four experts and four less-skilled squash players participated in this study. They performed squash forehand swings and a VICON motion analysis system was used to obtain displacement and velocity data of the head and right hand during the movement. Mann-Whitney U-tests were performed to compare head and hand range of motion and peak velocity, and cross-correlation was performed to analyze the head-hand coordination pattern between groups in three movement directions. Results: In terms of head and hand kinematic data, experts had greater head range of motion during down swings than less-skilled squash players. Experts seemed to reach peak hand velocity at impact by reaching peak head velocity followed by hand peak velocity within a given temporal sequence. In terms of head-hand coordination patterns, both groups revealed high positive correlations in the medial-lateral direction, indicating a dominant allocentric coordination pattern. However, experts had uncoupled coordination patterns in the vertical direction and less-skilled squash players had high positive correlations. These results indicate that the head-hand movement pattern likely an important factor squash forehand movement. Conclusion: Analysis of head and hand movement patterns could be a key variable in squash training to reach expert-level performance.
© Copyright 2018 Korean Journal of Sport Biomechanics. Korean Society of Sport Biomechanics. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:sport games
Tagging:Vorhand
Published in:Korean Journal of Sport Biomechanics
Language:English
Published: 2018
Online Access:http://www.e-kjsb.org/archive/detail/105
Volume:28
Issue:2
Pages:109-117
Document types:article
Level:advanced