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Eight Weeks of Kettlebell Swing Training Does not Improve Sprint Performance in Recreationally Active Females

The kettlebell swing (KBS), emphasizing cyclical, explosive hip extension in the horizontal plane, aligns with movement- and velocity-specificity of sprinting. The present study examined the effect of an eight-week KBS intervention on sprinting in recreationally-active females, in comparison to an e...

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Autores principales: HOLMSTRUP, MICHAEL E., JENSEN, BROCK T., EVANS, WILLIAM S., MARSHALL, EMILY C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Berkeley Electronic Press 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5065320/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27766131
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author HOLMSTRUP, MICHAEL E.
JENSEN, BROCK T.
EVANS, WILLIAM S.
MARSHALL, EMILY C.
author_facet HOLMSTRUP, MICHAEL E.
JENSEN, BROCK T.
EVANS, WILLIAM S.
MARSHALL, EMILY C.
author_sort HOLMSTRUP, MICHAEL E.
collection PubMed
description The kettlebell swing (KBS), emphasizing cyclical, explosive hip extension in the horizontal plane, aligns with movement- and velocity-specificity of sprinting. The present study examined the effect of an eight-week KBS intervention on sprinting in recreationally-active females, in comparison to an eight-week intervention using the stiff-legged deadlift (SDL). Following a pre-testing session measuring 30 meter sprint and countermovement vertical jump performance, participants were divided evenly by sprint time into KBS (n=8) and SDL (n=10) cohorts. Following familiarization with the exercises, KBS met twice weekly to perform swings using the Tabata interval (20s work, 10s rest, 8 rounds), stressing a rapid, explosive tempo. In contrast, the SDL group performed their Tabata stiff-legged deadlifts at a conventional resistance training tempo (2 seconds concentric, 2 seconds eccentric). Following eight weeks and greater than 95% training adherence, the SDL group only had a slightly greater average training volume (~3%) than KBS. No significant differences in pre-test values, or changes were noted in sprint performance from pre- to post-intervention in either group. An improvement in vertical jump performance was noted across groups. Potential explanations for the lack of sprint improvement compared to previous studies include differences between recreationally-active and athletic females, and low exercise volume (~46% of a comparable study with improvements in vertical jump). Future studies should seek to determine the appropriate volume and intensity for KBS components of sprint programming.
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spelling pubmed-50653202016-10-18 Eight Weeks of Kettlebell Swing Training Does not Improve Sprint Performance in Recreationally Active Females HOLMSTRUP, MICHAEL E. JENSEN, BROCK T. EVANS, WILLIAM S. MARSHALL, EMILY C. Int J Exerc Sci Original Research The kettlebell swing (KBS), emphasizing cyclical, explosive hip extension in the horizontal plane, aligns with movement- and velocity-specificity of sprinting. The present study examined the effect of an eight-week KBS intervention on sprinting in recreationally-active females, in comparison to an eight-week intervention using the stiff-legged deadlift (SDL). Following a pre-testing session measuring 30 meter sprint and countermovement vertical jump performance, participants were divided evenly by sprint time into KBS (n=8) and SDL (n=10) cohorts. Following familiarization with the exercises, KBS met twice weekly to perform swings using the Tabata interval (20s work, 10s rest, 8 rounds), stressing a rapid, explosive tempo. In contrast, the SDL group performed their Tabata stiff-legged deadlifts at a conventional resistance training tempo (2 seconds concentric, 2 seconds eccentric). Following eight weeks and greater than 95% training adherence, the SDL group only had a slightly greater average training volume (~3%) than KBS. No significant differences in pre-test values, or changes were noted in sprint performance from pre- to post-intervention in either group. An improvement in vertical jump performance was noted across groups. Potential explanations for the lack of sprint improvement compared to previous studies include differences between recreationally-active and athletic females, and low exercise volume (~46% of a comparable study with improvements in vertical jump). Future studies should seek to determine the appropriate volume and intensity for KBS components of sprint programming. Berkeley Electronic Press 2016-10-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5065320/ /pubmed/27766131 Text en
spellingShingle Original Research
HOLMSTRUP, MICHAEL E.
JENSEN, BROCK T.
EVANS, WILLIAM S.
MARSHALL, EMILY C.
Eight Weeks of Kettlebell Swing Training Does not Improve Sprint Performance in Recreationally Active Females
title Eight Weeks of Kettlebell Swing Training Does not Improve Sprint Performance in Recreationally Active Females
title_full Eight Weeks of Kettlebell Swing Training Does not Improve Sprint Performance in Recreationally Active Females
title_fullStr Eight Weeks of Kettlebell Swing Training Does not Improve Sprint Performance in Recreationally Active Females
title_full_unstemmed Eight Weeks of Kettlebell Swing Training Does not Improve Sprint Performance in Recreationally Active Females
title_short Eight Weeks of Kettlebell Swing Training Does not Improve Sprint Performance in Recreationally Active Females
title_sort eight weeks of kettlebell swing training does not improve sprint performance in recreationally active females
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5065320/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27766131
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