The relationship between tethered swimming, anaerobic critical velocity, dry-land strength, and swimming performance
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Ruiz Navarro, Jesús Juan; Gay Párraga, Ana; Cuenca Fernández, Francisco; López Belmonte, Óscar; Morales Ortiz, Esther; López Contreras, Gracia; Arellano Colomina, RaúlMateria
Kinematics sprint power assessment evaluation performance analysis
Fecha
2022-05-05Referencia bibliográfica
Ruiz-Navarro, J. J., Gay, A., Cuenca-Fernández, F., López-Belmonte, Ó., Morales-Ortíz, E., López-Contreras, G., & Arellano, R. (2022). The relationship between tethered swimming, anaerobic critical velocity, dry-land strength, and swimming performance. International Journal of Performance Analysis in Sport, 22(3), 407-421.
Patrocinador
This study was supported by the Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (Spanish Agency of Research) and the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF); PGC2018-102116-B-I00 “SWIM II: Specific Water Innovative Measurements: Applied to the performance improvement” and the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport: FPU16/02629, FPU17/02761 and FPU19/02477 grant. This article is a part of an international thesis belonging to the Program of PhD in Biomedicine (B11.56.1), from the University of Granada, Granada (Spain)Resumen
This study aimed to 1) examine the associations between two swim- specific measures of anaerobic performance and dry-land strength- based variables; 2) study the association between the aforemen- tioned variables with swimming performance and its kinematics; 3) analyse sex-induced differences. Twenty-three regional-national swimmers performed five countermovement-jumps and pull-ups, 50-m front crawl, two 30-s tethered-swimming tests at 0 and 1.124 m·s−1 water flow speed. Moreover, 10, 15, 20, and 25-m maximal front crawl were performed to determine anaerobic critical velocity (AnCV). The AnCV was positively correlated with tethered swimming variables in both conditions and dry-land-based vari- ables in both sexes (p < 0.05). Tethered-swimming variables in both conditions were correlated with pull-ups’ average propulsive force in males (p < 0.05). 50-m swimming performance was posi- tively associated with AnCV, tethered-swimming variables, counter- movement-jump height, and pull-ups’ average propulsive force for both sexes (p < 0.05). Stroke rate (SR) was positively associated with AnCV in males and females (p < 0.05). Stroke length was correlated with tethered-swimming variables in males (p < 0.05). Except for SR, males presented higher values than females (p < 0.05). Depending on the conditions of their training environment, coaches might use the AnCV and tethered-swimming variables as interchangeable tools