Abstract

The purpose of this pilot study was to investigate the effects of change-of-direction (CoD) angle (90° vs. 180°) and the inclusion of acceleration approach on total task time, CoD deficit, and agreement regarding inter-limb asymmetry direction across CoD tasks. The sample included 13 young male handball players (age: 22.4 ± 3.2 years). The CoD tasks were performed over a 10 m distance with 90° and 180° turns. Both CoD tasks were performed under two conditions: (1) from the standing start and, (2) with a 10 m prior acceleration approach. Linear sprint times over a 10 m distance were also recorded for the purpose of determining the CoD deficit. The differences between the outcomes of different test variants were assessed with pairwise t-tests and associated Cohen’s d effect size. The agreement in terms of inter-limb asymmetry direction was assessed descriptively, using percentage of agreement. Results showed that the inclusion of the 10 m approach reduced the total task time (mean differences ranging between 0.26 and 0.35 s; d = 2.27–4.02; p < 0.002). The differences between 90° and 180° turn times were statistically significant under both conditions: (a) without approach (0.44–0.48 s; d = 4.72–4.84; all p < 0.001), and (b) with approach (0.50–0.54 s; d = 4.41–5.03; p < 0.001). The agreement regarding inter-limb asymmetry direction among the tasks was 30.7–61.5%. The differences between the tasks could be explained by the angle–velocity trade-off. The results of this study imply that the CoD tasks should not be used interchangeably when assessing inter-limb asymmetries.

Highlights

  • Change-of-direction (CoD) ability is an important physical quality in several sports [1,2]

  • The purpose of this pilot study was to investigate the effects of change-of-direction (CoD) angle (90◦ vs. 180◦) and the inclusion of acceleration approach on total task time, CoD deficit, and agreement regarding inter-limb asymmetry direction across CoD tasks

  • In one of our studies conducted with volleyball players, we found very low agreement in inter-limb asymmetry direction and magnitude across different strength and power tests, including single-joint isometric strength tests, as well as horizontal and vertical jumps [14]

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Summary

Introduction

Change-of-direction (CoD) ability is an important physical quality in several sports [1,2]. It has been suggested that CoD ability should be distinguished from maneuverability, which is defined as the ability to maintain a high velocity of running through curvilinear movement patterns [5] According to this view, procedures such as the Illinois test are underpinned by maneuverability, while tasks such as the 505 test, which have sharper angle changes, are needed when truly assessing CoD ability [6]. Even across similar tasks (e.g., squat jump, counter-movement jump, and drop jump), or between unilateral and bilateral variants of the same tests, the agreement in inter-limb asymmetry is far from high [17,18]. It seems that inter-limb asymmetries should not be generalized across different tasks

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