Abstract

During sprint acceleration, step length, step rate, ground contact, and airtime are key variables for coaches to guide the training process and technical development of their athletes. In the field, three of these variables are easily obtained with inertial measurement units (IMUs), but, unfortunately, valid estimates of step length with IMUs currently are limited to low speeds (<50% max). A simple method is proposed here to derive step length during maximal sprint acceleration, using IMUs on both feet and two timing gates only. Mono-exponential velocity-time functions are fitted to the 30-m (split) and 60-m times, which in combination with IMU-derived step durations yield estimates of step length. To validate this approach, sixteen well-trained athletes with IMUs on the insteps of both feet executed two 60-m maximal sprints, starting from a three-point position. As a reference, step lengths were determined from video data. The reference step lengths combined with IMU-derived step durations yielded a time series of step velocity that confirmed the appropriateness of a mono-exponential increase of step velocity (R2 ≥ 0.96). The comparison of estimated step lengths to reference measurements showed no significant difference (p > 0.05) and acceptable agreement (root mean square error, RMSE = 8.0 cm, bias ± Limits of Agreement = −0.15 ± 16 cm). Step length estimations further improved (RMSE = 5.7 cm, −0.16 ± 11 cm) after smoothing the original estimated step lengths with a third order polynomial function (R2 = 0.94 ± 0.04). In conclusion, during maximal sprint acceleration, acceptable estimates of stride and step length were obtained from IMU-derived step times and 30-m (split) and 60-m sprint times.

Highlights

  • In many sports, sprint acceleration is essential for good performance

  • Ground contact time, and airtime are readily obtained with inertial measurement units (IMUs) that measure acceleration, angular velocity, and the magnetic field in three orthogonal axes

  • The thirty-two, video-based, step—velocity—time relations were very well described by mono-exponential functions (R2 = 0.99 ± 0.008)

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Summary

Introduction

Sprint acceleration is essential for good performance. Sprint speed is the product of step rate and step length [1]. These variables, together with the ground contact time and the time between ground contacts (airtime), are frequently measured [2,3,4,5,6,7,8] and used by coaches to guide the training process and technical development of their athletes. Ground contact time, and airtime are readily obtained with inertial measurement units (IMUs) that measure acceleration, angular velocity, and the magnetic field in three orthogonal axes. There are methodological challenges that prohibit accurate step length determination from IMU-signals [11,12]

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