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EFFECTS OF CONCURRENT ECCENTRIC OVERLOAD AND HIGH-INTENSITY INTERVAL TRAINING ON TEAM SPORTS PLAYERS' PERFORMANCE

Authors

Sanchez-Sanchez, Javier , GONZALO SKOK, OLIVER, Carretero, Manuel , Pineda, Adrian , Ramirez-Campillo, Rodrigo , Yuzo Nakamura, Fabio

External publication

Si

Means

Kinesiology

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

1.225

SJR Impact

0.454

Publication date

01/06/2019

ISI

000475846400014

Abstract

The aim of the study was to compare the effects of an in-season five weeks of high-intensity training (HIT) with a concurrent HIT eccentric overload training (CT) program on male amateur team-sports players' fitness performance. Twenty-two athletes were randomly assigned to either HIT (n=10) or CT (n=12). Both groups completed a HIT program. The CT group also completed two-three sets of six repetitions of eccentric overload training. Before and after training, performance was assessed for change of direction ability (COD), repeated sprint ability for best time (RSA(b)), mean time (RSA(m)) and slowest time (RSA(s)), jumping, and shuttle-run performance. Within-group analyses in both groups showed substantial better scores on COD, RSAb and RSAm and shuttle-run performance. Between-group analyses showed greater improvements in COD, RSAb, RSAm, RSAs, and jumping after the additional CT compared to solely HIT. In conclusion, compared to HIT alone, concurrent eccentric overload and HIT training within the same session improved COD, RSA, jump, and shuttle-run performance in basketball and soccers amateur players.

Keywords

repeated sprint; maximal aerobic power; resistance training; change of direction; plyometrics; basketball; soccer

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