Curtis, M, Kupperman, N, Westbrook, J, Weltman, AL, Hart, J, and Hertel, J. Neuromuscular performance and the intensity of external training load during the preseason in National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I men's collegiate basketball players. J Strength Cond Res XX(X): 000-000, 2024-The aim of the study was to determine whether acute changes in neuromuscular performance can be detected through countermovement jumps (CMJs) conducted pre- and postpractice sessions in conditions of high or low intensity measured by microsensors technology. Using an observational repeated measures design, data were collected from 10 male collegiate basketball players. Countermovement jump data were collected before and after practice exposures over 4 weeks of preseason. Select CMJ kinetics were compared in conditions of high and low training load intensity to detect neuromuscular performance changes in displacement of the center of mass and kinetics. Kinetic measures were categorized as output, underpinning, and strategy-related variables. We investigated "output" defined as displacement (jump height [JH]), "underpinning" defined as force-related (mean eccentric force, mean concentric force, force at zero velocity), and "strategy" defined as time-related (countermovement depth [CMD], eccentric duration (EccDur), concentric duration [ConcDur]) variables. There were significant condition × time interactions in CMJ variables namely eccentric mean force (EccForce), force at zero velocity (Force@0), CMDepth, EccDur, and ConcDur. In conditions of high intensity, players had significant, but small decreases in EccForce and Force@0, with small increases in CMD, EccDur, and ConDur, respectively. However, there were no significant decreases in JH. High-intensity practice exposures did not impact neuromuscular performance specific to "output," suggesting that collegiate basketball athletes can maintain JH despite alterations in "underpinning" and "strategy-related" variables. This could have relevance in understanding how fatigue associated with higher-intensity training exposures may potentially alter jump strategy and force production capacities due to external load intensity in collegiate basketball athletes.
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