Publication | Closed Access
Relationship Between Countermovement Jump Performance and Multijoint Isometric and Dynamic Tests of Strength
390
Citations
30
References
2008
Year
Functional Movement ScreeningIso SquatPhysical ActivityPeak PowerOrthopaedic SurgeryKinesiologyExerciseHuman Performance MeasuringDynamic TestsApplied PhysiologyCmj Peak PowerSport PhysiologySport ScienceStatisticsFitness MeasureHealth SciencesPhysical FitnessMultijoint IsometricMusculoskeletal FunctionExercise ScienceHigh-performance SportExercise PhysiologyHuman MovementAthletic Training
The study aimed to examine how countermovement jump performance relates to various isometric and dynamic multijoint strength assessments. Twelve Division I‑AA male athletes performed 1RM squat and power clean tests in one session and, in a second session, had peak force, power, velocity, jump height, and isometric force and RFD measured during CMJ, maximal isometric squat, and mid‑thigh pull. Relative 1RM squat and power clean values correlated strongly with CMJ peak power, velocity, and height, whereas absolute strength measures did not, indicating that body‑mass‑normalized dynamic strength best predicts explosive lower‑body performance and should be emphasized in training.
The purpose of this investigation was to determine the relationship between countermovement vertical jump (CMJ) performance and various methods used to assess isometric and dynamic multijoint strength. Twelve NCAA Division I-AA male football and track and field athletes (age, 19.83 +/- 1.40 years; height, 179.10 +/- 4.56 cm; mass, 90.08 +/- 14.81 kg; percentage of body fat, 11.85 +/- 5.47%) participated in 2 testing sessions. The first session involved 1 repetition maximum (1RM) (kg) testing in the squat and power clean. During the second session, peak force (N), relative peak force (N x kg(-1)), peak power (W), relative peak power (W x kg(-1)), peak velocity (m x s(-1)), and jump height (meters) in a CMJ, and peak force and rate of force development (RFD) (N x s(-1)) in a maximal isometric squat (ISO squat) and maximal isometric mid-thigh pull (ISO mid-thigh) were assessed. Significant correlations (P < or = 0.05) were found when comparing relative 1RMs (1RM/body mass), in both the squat and power clean, to relative CMJ peak power, CMJ peak velocity, and CMJ height. No significant correlations existed between the 4 measures of absolute strength, which did not account for body mass (squat 1RM, power clean 1RM, ISO squat peak force, and ISO mid-thigh peak force) when compared to CMJ peak velocity and CMJ height. In conclusion, multijoint dynamic tests of strength (squat 1RM and power clean 1RM), expressed relative to body mass, are most closely correlated with CMJ performance. These results suggest that increasing maximal strength relative to body mass can improve performance in explosive lower body movements. The squat and power clean, used in a concurrent strength and power training program, are recommended for optimizing lower body power.
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