| Literature DB >> 31794578 |
Adam Czaplicki1, Paulina Szyszka2, Jarosław Sacharuk2, Janusz Jaszczuk1.
Abstract
The primary aim of the current study was to determine the time curves of changes in the record scores in the snatch and its variations during a two-year training cycle in young weightlifters. This study also aimed at assessing the ratios between these scores and at predicting the snatch record scores at the end of the subsequent annual training macrocycle. The final purpose was to compare the record scores with the isometric peak torque values of the trunk and knee extensors. The study involved 16 weightlifters who were tested seven times at three-month intervals. The overall mean ratios of the record scores in the hang snatch to those in the snatch and the record scores in the hang power snatch to those in the snatch were approximately constant and amounted to 0.95 and 0.79, respectively. The overall mean ratio between the scores in the power snatch to those in the snatch was approximately 0.88. Statistically significant differences (p < 0.05) between the individual time trajectories of record scores in the snatch and its derivatives were identified in two consecutive annual training macrocycles. The error in predicting record results at the end of the following annual training macrocycle was 6.7 ± 4.7% or 8.1 ± 3.4% depending on the way the measurement data were modeled. The results of the study also indicate that the measurements of the isometric peak torque of the trunk extensors performed in laboratory conditions can be useful in diagnosing the strength capacity of young weightlifters.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31794578 PMCID: PMC6890263 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0225891
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Mean body mass of weightlifters during the study in kg (± SD).
| Measurement | M1 | M2 | M3 | M4 | M5 | M6 | M7 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Date | March | June | September | December | March | June | September |
| 73.38 | 74.28 | 75.75 | 76.51 | 77.34 | 78.91 | 79.41 |
Fig 1Relative training volume during the period analyzed.
Fig 2Measurement of peak torque of trunk extensors (left) and knee extensors (right) in isometric conditions.
Fig 3Mean record scores in the snatch and its derivatives; double arrows indicate the closest statistically significant differences.
Estimation of model parameters.
| Parameter | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coefficient (SE) | |||
| Intercept ( | 121.02 | 108.85 | 108.84 |
| Time ( | 23.10 | 23.10 | |
| Time2 ( | −6.34 | −6.34 | |
| 9.37 | |||
| Variance (SD) | |||
| Level-1 residual ( | 204.81 (14.31) | 11.98 (3.46) | 11.92 (3.46) |
| Level-2 residuals | |||
| Intercept ( | 90.13 (9.49) | 340.95 (18.47) | 384.56 (19.61) |
| Slope ( | 35.95 (5.99) | 37.76 (6.15) | |
| Quadratic term ( | 4.66 (2.16) | 5.48 (2.34) | |
| 867.2 | 707.7 | 703.6 | |
* p < 0.05
*** p < 0.001
LL–log likelihood
Fig 4Estimated individual time trajectories in the snatch (left) and average time trajectories of the snatch and its derivatives (right) in the two-year training cycle; thin lines mark 95% confidence intervals.
Fig 5Root mean square errors between snatch record scores and isometric peak knee extensor torque (Snatch_KT) and between snatch record scores and isometric peak trunk extensor torque (Snatch_TT).