| Literature DB >> 30404420 |
Katherine M Steele1,2,3, Eugene Y Roh1, Gordhan Mahtani1,2, David W Meister4, Amy L Ladd1, Jessica Rose1,2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate if shoulder and pelvic angular velocities differ at impact or peak magnitude between professional and amateur golfers. Golf swing rotational biomechanics are a key determinant of power generation, driving distance, and injury prevention. We hypothesize that shoulder and pelvic angular velocities would be highly consistent in professionals.Entities:
Keywords: Angular velocity; Back pain; Benchmark; Biomechanics; Golf swing
Year: 2018 PMID: 30404420 PMCID: PMC6246863 DOI: 10.5535/arm.2018.42.5.713
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Rehabil Med ISSN: 2234-0645
Participants’ characteristics
| Professional (n=11) | Amateur (n=5) | |
|---|---|---|
| Height (m) | 1.83±0.07 | 1.78±0.03 |
| Mass (kg) | 85.9±11.5 | 77.3±8.9 |
| Age (yr) | 31.0±5.9 | 28.4±6.9 |
Values are presented as average±standard deviation.
Fig. 1.The golf swing of each subject was normalized to the golf swing cycle, with values ranging from 0–140, with impact at 100.
Fig. 2.The position (left), velocity (center), and global orientation (right) of the professional and amateur golfers. The gray area shows average±one standard deviation of the hard swing of the professionals. The dashed lines show average kinematics of each amateur golfer at different handicaps.
Peak rotational velocities (deg/s) of the professional golf swing
| Upper torso | Pelvis | X-prime | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Avg | COV | Avg | COV | Avg | COV | |
| Down swing | 551.7±47.6 | 0.086 | 415.2±32.9 | 0.079 | -183.4±41.4 | -0.23 |
| Impact | 458.5±73.0 | 0.159 | 288.8±70.9 | 0.245 | -170.3±63.0 | -0.37 |
| Follow-through | 929.2±185.1 | 0.199 | 309.8±42.1 | 0.136 | -729.4±160.8 | -0.22 |
Values are presented as average±standard deviation.
COV, coefficient of variation.
Fig. 3.Comparison of upper torso rotational velocity (top), pelvic rotational velocity (center), and X-prime rotational velocity (bottom) of the professionals and amateurs. The peak value during down swing, the value at impact, and the peak value in follow-through of each variable is shown. Since skill level varied between amateurs, the individual values of each amateur are shown for each variable. The average±one standard deviation of professionals’ hard swings is shown in the horizontal striped bar and gray shaded area. * indicates significant difference between the average value of professional hard swing (gray) and amateurs (diagonal striped bar).
Fig. 4.Change in upper torso rotational velocity (top), pelvic rotational velocity (center), and X-prime rotational velocity (bottom) with swing speed. The amateur’s velocity upper torso rotational (dashed) was similar to the slow swing of the professionals (light gray), rather than the medium swing (medium gray) or hard swing (dark gray).