VERTICAL OR HORIZONTAL FORCE-VELOCITY PROFILE: WHICH ONE IS MORE SENSITIVE TO DETECT THE FATIGUE INDUCED BY A BASKETBALL-SEPCIFIC PROTOCOL?
Keywords:
jump, monitoring, sprint, team sport, testingAbstract
This study aimed to determine which task (jumping or sprinting) and which force-velocity (F-V) relationship parameter (maximal force [F0], maximal velocity [v0], or maximal power [Pmax]) is the most sensitive indicator of fatigue induced by a basketball-specific protocol. Following a familiarization session, 19 junior male basketball players completed an experimental session in which both vertical (jumping) and horizontal (sprinting) F-V profiles were measured before, during and after undergoing a basketball-specific fatigue protocol (modified version of the Loughborough Intermittent Shuttle Test). All F-V relationship parameters, except horizontal F0 (p = .328), were significantly reduced after fatigue (p ≤ .042). The vertical Pmax (ES = -0.48 to -0.80), horizontal Pmax (ES = -0.58 to -1.28), and horizontal v0 (ES = -0.81 to -0.98) showed larger reductions compared to the pre-fatigue assessment than the vertical v0 (ES = -0.19 to -0.27), vertical F0 (ES = -0.16 to -0.25), and horizontal F0 (ES = -0.11 to -0.30). When the percentage changes with respect to the pre-fatigue assessment were compared between the jumping and sprinting tasks, no significant differences in their magnitude (p ≥ .364) and trivial to small correlations (-0.23 ≤ r ≤ 0.19) were detected. The results suggest that Pmax is the most suitable parameter to detect fatigue following a basketball-specific fatigue protocol, while the lack of significant correlations for the changes in F-V relationship parameters highlight the importance of measuring both the vertical and horizontal F-V profiles to gain comprehensive understanding of the changes in the mechanical properties of lower-body muscles following fatigue protocols.
Keywords: jump; monitoring; sprint; team sport; testing
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
At Faculty of Kinesiology we recognize that access to quality research is vital to the scientific community and beyond. Kinesiology is non-profit journal and all costs of publishing and peer review process are covered by the publisher itself or other funding sources like Ministry of Science and Education of the Republic of Croatia. Full text papers are also available free of charge at http://hrcak.srce.hr/kineziologija. There are no restrictions on self archiving of any form of paper (preprint, postprint and publisher's version).
Articles are distributed under the terms of the CC BY - NC 4.0
Kinesiology does not charge any fees to authors to submit or publish articles in our journal.