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    Effect of tethered swimming as postactivation potentiation on swimming performance and technical, hemophysiological, and psychophysiological variables in adolescent swimmers

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    Date
    2021-02
    Author
    Abbes, Zied
    Haddad, Monoem
    Bibi, Khalid W.
    Mujika, Iñigo
    Martin, Cyril
    Chamari, Karim
    ...show more authors ...show less authors
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    Abstract
    Objectives: To investigate whether tethered swimming (TS) performed 8 minutes before a 50-m freestyle swimming sprint could be an effective postactivation potentiation method to improve performance in young swimmers. Methods: Fourteen regional-level male adolescent swimmers (age 13.0 [2.0] y; height 161.1 [12.4] cm; body mass 52.5 [9.5] kg) underwent 2 trial conditions in a randomized and counterbalanced order (1 experimental [TS], 1 control) on different days. During the experimental session, the participants performed a standard warm-up of 1200 m followed by a TS exercise, which consisted of 3 × 10-second maximal efforts of TS with 1-minute rests between bouts. In the control condition, the warm-up phase was immediately followed by 200 m at a moderate pace (same duration as the TS in the experimental session). Performance (time trial); biomechanical (stroke length), physiological (blood lactate concentrations), and psychophysiological (ratings of perceived exertion) variables; and countermovement-jump (CMJ) flight time were collected. Results: TS warm-up had no significant effect on 50-m swimming performance (P =.27), postexercise ratings of perceived exertion, stroke length, or CMJ flight time (P ≥.05). Blood lactate concentrations significantly increased at the end of the warm-up in the TS condition only (interaction effect: F1.91,29.91 = 4.91, P =.01, η2 =.27) and after the 50-m trial in both conditions (F1.57,20.41 = 62.39, P =.001, η2 =.82). Conclusions: The present study demonstrated that 3 × 10-second TS exercises performed 8 minutes prior to the event did not affect ratings of perceived exertion, stroke length, or CMJ flight time. In addition, tethered swimming did not affect 50-m freestyle sprint performance in young swimmers.
    URI
    https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85101206927&origin=inward
    DOI/handle
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/IJSPP.2019-0669
    http://hdl.handle.net/10576/48713
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    • Physical Education [‎138‎ items ]

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