Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/11000/30757

Acute and Time-Course Effects of Traditional and Dynamic Warm-Up Routines in Young Elite Junior Tennis Players


Thumbnail

View/Open:
 Acute and Time-Course Effects of Traditional.pdf

698,54 kB
Adobe PDF
Share:
Title:
Acute and Time-Course Effects of Traditional and Dynamic Warm-Up Routines in Young Elite Junior Tennis Players
Authors:
Ayala, Francisco
Moreno Pérez, Víctor
Vera-Garcia, Francisco J  
Moya, Manuel  
Sanz-Rivas, David  
Fernández-Fernandez, Jaime  
Editor:
Public Library of Science
Department:
Departamentos de la UMH::Ciencias del Deporte
Issue Date:
2016-04-12
URI:
https://hdl.handle.net/11000/30757
Abstract:
Despite the large number of studies that have examined the acute effects of different warm up modalities (WU) on physical performance, none of them have documented the time course of potential performance recovery in tennis players. The aim of this study was twofold: (a) to analyze and compare the acute effects of two different WU modalities (traditional WU [TWU] and dynamic WU [DWU]) on physical performance (i.e., CMJ, sprint, serve speed and accuracy) in elite junior players, as well as (b) to monitor the time course of any WU-induced changes after 30 and 60 min of simulated match-play. Twelve junior elite players completed both WUs modalities (TWU and DWU) in a counterbalanced order on separate days. In each experimental session, counter movement jump (CMJ), 20-m sprint, tennis serve speed and accuracy tests were performed before (immediately after TWU or DWU) during (30 min) and after 60 min of a simulated match play. Measures were compared via four factorial (WU intervention and time) repeated measures ANOVAs. There were main effects of WU (TWU and DWU) throughout the time for all the variables analysed. The results indicate that DWU routine led to significantly faster 20 m sprint times and higher CMJs as well as faster and more accurate tennis serves at both post warm-up and 30 min match-play testing moments in comparison with the scores reported by the TWU routine (p < 0.05; positive effects with a probability of >75–99%). No significant intergroup differences were found at 60-min match-play testing moment in any variable (except for the 20 m sprint). Therefore, the findings of this study recommend for optimal performance in these elite tennis players, DWU routines should be performed prior to formal training and competition rather than TWU routines.
Type of document:
application/pdf
Access rights:
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152790
Appears in Collections:
Artículos Patología y Cirugía



Creative Commons ???jsp.display-item.text9???