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Longitudinal Changes in Strength and Explosive Performance Characteristics in NCAA Division I Women’s Volleyball AthletesKavanaugh, Ashley A. 01 May 2014 (has links)
The purpose of this dissertation was to determine if a periodized strength and conditioning program resulted in long-term adaptations in NCAA Division I women’s volleyball athletes, and if these changes related to the team’s competitive performance. Specifically, this dissertation serves to: 1.) describe the changes in body composition and performance variables of 2 female volleyball athletes over a 4-year collegiate career, 2.) determine the degree and magnitude of change in performance variables after about 1, 2, and 3 years of periodized resistance training, and 3.) infer if volleyball performance characteristics are related to a team’s competitive success. The following are major findings of this dissertation. 1.) Positive changes in vertical jump height, strength, and explosiveness may be possible throughout 4 years of collegiate volleyball training even with increased body mass and percent body fat. Moreover, impaired ability to perform heavy lower-body resistance training exercises due to chronic injury negatively impacts long-term physical performance adaptations over 4 years. 2.) A combination of traditional resistance training exercises and weightlifting variations at various loads, in addition to volleyball practice, appear to be effective at increasing maximal strength by 44% and vertical jump height by 20%-30% in NCAA Division I women’s volleyball athletes after about two and half years of training. Furthermore, these characteristics can be improved in the absence of additional plyometric training outside of normal volleyball-specific practice. 3.) A rating percentage index RPI ranking ratio and unweighted match score ratio appear to be better predictors of overall team competitive season success than a weighted match score ratio. On the contrary, a weighted match score ratio may be better for determining an association between team match performance and volleyball-specific fitness. A considerable amount of research is needed to develop a volleyball-specific performance index that best quantifies team performance and whether or not a measurable association exists between improved fitness characteristics and increased overall team competitive success. The findings of this dissertation provide evidence that analyzing and monitoring volleyball-related performance variables over time can assist the sport performance group in making training based decisions as well as promote the successful development of an athlete.
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Relationship of Isometric Peak Force and RateKraska, Jenna M., Kinser, Ann M., Whitted, C. B., Keller, J. E., Ramsey, Michael W., Haff, G. Gregory, Sands, William A., Stone, Michael H. 18 May 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Return-To-The-Platform: The Case of a Collegiate Level Weightlifter Recovering from a Meniscus InjuryHarden, Nicholas 01 December 2022 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to observe physiological metrics relative to training-induced adaptations in conjunction with laboratory- and competition-based performances in a super-heavyweight weightlifter recovering from a meniscus injury. A retrospective analysis was conducted on a collegiate level male weightlifter (23.2 yrs; 131.9 kg; 187.3 cm) over the course of 21-weeks post-meniscus surgery. Body mass, body fat percentage, hydration status, vastus lateralis muscle cross-sectional area, jump performance, and isometric midthigh pull were regularly assessed as part of an ongoing athlete monitoring program. Pre-injury baseline (T0) measurements were collected relative to a major national competition (COMP1). Post-injury measurements took place at the end of sequential training blocks: strength-endurance training block 1 (T1), basic strength block 2 (T2), and transmutation block 3 (T3). The final measurement session (T4) was conducted three-days post-local competition (COMP2). Only statistically significant increases were observed from T0-T4 for muscle CSA (p=0.0367), isometric peak force (pp=0.0367), and rate of force development at 250ms (p=.0367). While non-significant changes were observed for jumping performance, jump height and net impulse did, however, return to baseline. Competition based performances also showed marked improvements from pre-to-post injury via an increase in weightlifting total (3.2%∆, +9kg) and Sinclair score (1.8%∆, +5.3au). Thus, based on these findings, implementing an evidence-based training program along with a sound athlete monitoring protocol can aid with reducing an athlete’s return-to-train timeline while improving physiological, laboratory- and competition-based performance outcomes.
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