Assessing the Magnitude and Direction of Asymmetry in Unilateral Jump and Change of Direction Speed Tasks in Youth Female Team-Sport Athletes

Author:

Arboix-Alió Jordi1,Bishop Chris2,Benet Ariadna13,Buscà Bernat1,Aguilera-Castells Joan1,Fort-Vanmeerhaeghe Azahara134

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sports Sciences, Ramon Llull University, FPCEE Blanquerna ( Barcelona , Spain )

2. London Sport Institute, Middlesex University ( London , United Kingdom )

3. Segle XXI Female Basketball Team, Catalan Federation of Basketball ( Esplugues de Llobregat , Spain )

4. School of Health Sciences, Ramon Llull University, FCS Blanquerna ( Barcelona , Spain )

Abstract

Abstract The direction of inter-limb asymmetries and the change of direction (COD) deficit are two aspects that have increased in recent years. The main objective of the present study was to assess the magnitude of neuromuscular asymmetries in an elite youth female team-sports sample and determine its directionality. Secondary objectives were to evaluate the relationship between COD deficit, linear speed and COD time performance. Elite female youth basketball and handball players (n = 33, age = 16 ± 1.17 y) performed the Single Leg Countermovement Jump in vertical (SLCJ-V), horizontal (SLCJ-H), and lateral (SLCJ-L) directions, the COD and the 10-m sprint. Results showed statistical differences between limbs in all the neuromuscular tests (p < 0.001). The Kappa coefficient showed poor to fair levels of agreement between tasks (K range = -0.087 to 0.233), indicating that asymmetries rarely favoured the same limb between skills. Additionally, small and non-significant correlations were found between the linear sprint capacity and the COD ability. The findings of the present study highlight the independent directionality of asymmetries across tests. The COD deficit does not appear to be much more advantageous than COD total time to measure asymmetry. Practitioners are encouraged to use a fitness testing battery to detect existing side differences and each ability should be specifically trained with functional tasks.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation

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