The Effects of Neuromuscular Training on Sand Versus Hard Surfaces on Physical Fitness in Young Male Tennis Players

Author:

Fernandez-Fernandez Jaime12ORCID,Nakamura Fábio Yuzo3ORCID,Boullosa Daniel12ORCID,Santos-Rosa Francisco Javier4ORCID,Herrero-Molleda Alba12ORCID,Granacher Urs5ORCID,Sanz-Rivas David6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physical Education and Sport Sciences, Universidad de León, León, Spain

2. AMRED, Human Movement and Sports Performance Analysis, Universidad de León, León, Spain

3. Research Center in Sports Sciences, Health Sciences and Human Development (CIDESD), University of Maia, Maia, Portugal

4. Faculty of Sport, Pablo de Olavide University, Seville, Spain

5. Department of Sport and Sport Science, Exercise and Human Movement Science, University of Freiburg, Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany

6. MEDAC, Professional Institute of Education, Malaga, Spain

Abstract

Purpose: To examine the effects of a neuromuscular training program combining plyometric exercises with acceleration, deceleration, and change-of-direction drills conducted on sand or hard surfaces on the fitness qualities of young male tennis players. Methods: Thirty-one young male players were allocated to a training group performing 12 training sessions on sand or hard surfaces, during a 6-week period. Tests included linear sprint (10-m acceleration with 5-m split times), change of direction (modified 5-0-5 test), vertical jumps (countermovement jump and the 10/5 repeated-jump test), isometric hip abduction and adduction strength, and dynamic balance (Y-balance test). Perceived training loads and muscle soreness were assessed during the intervention. Results: Both training strategies were similarly effective in improving the analyzed fitness components. Group × time interaction effects were noticed, with countermovement jump (P = .032), repeated-jump test (P = .029), and reactive strength index (P = .008) favoring hard surfaces and 5-m sprint (P = .009), dynamic balance (P < .05), adduction strength (P < .05), and abduction strength (P < .001) indices favoring sand. Furthermore, the sand group promoted greater perceived training loads and muscle soreness (P < .05) than the hard group across the intervention period. Conclusion: Neuromuscular training strategies characterized by a relatively low volume (∼35 min), conducted on sand or hard surfaces, promoted similar improvements in the fitness qualities of young tennis players, with selected surface-interaction effects. Training on sand can cause transiently higher training loads and persistently higher muscle soreness, suggesting the need for an adequate familiarization period.

Publisher

Human Kinetics

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation

Reference39 articles.

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2. Game activity and physiological responses of young tennis players in a competition with 2 consecutive matches in a day;Gallo-Salazar C,2019

3. Quantifying change of direction movement demands in professional tennis matchplay;Giles B

4. Sequencing effects of neuromuscular training on physical fitness in youth elite tennis players;Fernandez-Fernandez J,2018

5. A six-week neuromuscular training program for competitive junior tennis players;Barber-Westin SD,2010

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