Conditioning
(Konditionierung)
Exercise scientists have identified nine elements that comprise the definition of fitness. The following lists each of the nine elements
and an example of how they are used:-
Strength - the extent to which muscles can exert force by contracting against resistance (holding or restraining an object or
person)
Power - the ability to exert maximum muscular contraction instantly in an explosive burst of movements (lumping or sprint
starting)
Agility - the ability to perform a series of explosive power movements in rapid succession in opposing directions (ZigZag
running or cutting movements)
Balance - the ability to control the body's position, either stationary (e.g. a handstand) or while moving (e.g. a gymnastics
stunt)
Flexibility - the ability to achieve an extended range of motion without being impeded by excess tissue, i.e. fat or muscle
(Executing a leg split)
Local Muscle Endurance - a single muscle's ability to perform sustained work (Rowing or cycling)
Cardiovascular Endurance - the heart's ability to deliver blood to working muscles and their ability to use it (Running
long distances)
Strength Endurance - a muscle's ability to perform a maximum contracture time after time (Continuous explosive
rebounding through an entire basketball game)
Co-ordination - the ability to integrate the above listed components so that effective movements are achieved.
© Copyright 1997 Alle Rechte vorbehalten.
| Schlagworte: | |
|---|---|
| Notationen: | Trainingswissenschaft |
| Sprache: | Englisch |
| Veröffentlicht: |
1997
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| Online-Zugang: | http://www.brianmac.demon.co.uk/conditon.htm |
| Dokumentenarten: | elektronische Publikation |
| Level: | niedrig |