Delayed Effect of Dry-Land Strength Training Sessions on Swimming Performance

Author:

Tsoltos Alexandros1,Arsoniadis Gavriil2ORCID,Tsolakis Charilaos13ORCID,Koulouvaris Panagiotis1,Simeonidis Theocharis1,Chatzigiannakis Alexandros4,Toubekis Argyris23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sports Excellence, 1st Orthopedics Department, School of Health Sciences, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 12462 Athens, Greece

2. Division of Aquatic Sports, School of Physical Education and Sports Science, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 17237 Dafne, Greece

3. Sports Performance Laboratory, School of Physical Education and Sports Science, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 17237 Dafne, Greece

4. Pesristeri Swimming Club, 12137 Peristeri, Greece

Abstract

The purpose of the study was to examine the effects of dry-land strength endurance (SE) and maximum strength (MS) sessions on next-day swimming performance. Eight swimmers (age: 18.6 ± 2.9 years) performed evening training sessions (19:00–19:40), including: (i) SE (2 × 15 − 20 repetitions, 50% of 1-RM), (ii) MS (2 × 5 repetitions, 90% of 1-RM), (iii) control (CON: no dry-land training). All sessions were followed by a 90-min swimming training (20:00–21:30). Medicine ball throw and countermovement jump, free countermovement jump and squat jump were evaluated before and after the dry-land training session and 12 h later, before a 100-m front crawl sprint (next day at 8:30 a.m.). Performance time, RPE, blood lactate and biomechanical variables in 100-m sprint were no different between conditions (time, MS: 64.70 ± 7.35, SE: 63.81 ± 7.29, CON: 64.52 ± 7.71 s, p > 0.05). Jump height was not changed before and after dry-land and before the 100-m sprint in all conditions (p > 0.05). Medicine ball throw was lower in MS compared to CON before the 100-m sprint (MS: 4.44 ± 1.11, vs. CON: 4.66 ± 1.21 m, p < 0.05). Upper-body but not lower- body muscle function may be affected by MS training. However, performance in a 100-m test is not affected by dry-land training performed 12 h earlier.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Histology,Rheumatology,Anatomy

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