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Effects of Different Athletic Playing Surfaces on Jump Height, Force, and Power

    1. [1] University of Rhode Island

      University of Rhode Island

      Town of South Kingstown, Estados Unidos

    2. [2] University of Connecticut

      University of Connecticut

      Town of Mansfield, Estados Unidos

  • Localización: Journal of strength and conditioning research: the research journal of the NSCA, ISSN 1064-8011, Vol. 33, Nº. 4, 2019, págs. 965-973
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • Artificial turfs (ATs) have become more commonplace. Some aspects of performance such as speed seem to be better on ATs, but there are few published studies on the effects of playing surfaces on performance. Furthermore, there is no research that compares performance on ATs, hard surfaces (HSs), and different composite natural surfaces. Forty-three subjects, 21 men (age: 20 +/- 1.82 years; height: 177.53 +/- 5.87 cm; body mass: 78.44 +/- 11.59 kg; and body fat: 11.17 +/- 4.45%) and 22 women (age: 25 +/- 1.32 years; height: 161.37 +/- 6.47 cm; body mass: 60.94 +/- 10.24 kg; and body fat: 27.16 +/- 7.08%) performed a single countermovement jump (SCMJ), repeated CMJs (RCMJs), and single depth jump (SDJ) on 4 different playing surfaces (peat soil composition turf [NT1], sandy loam composition turf [NT2], 1 AT, and 1 HS. Repeated-measures analysis of variance with Bonferroni post hoc was used to calculate differences in performance across playing surfaces. Statistical significance was set at p <= 0.05. Force and jump height were not different across different surfaces. Men had significantly higher force, power, and jump height on all surfaces. Only SCMJ power was lower on NT1 compared with all other surfaces. The difference in power between surfaces was not reproduced when RCMJ and SDJ were performed, and may be due to the increased reactiveness of the stretch-shortening cycle during those jumps. Because of marginal differences between athletic performance and playing surface type, future research comparing playing surface type and other aspects of athletic success such as rate of injury should be considered.


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