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Chapter 9 New - Sports Phys

The document discusses various principles and methods of exercise training. It describes different types of strength like muscular strength, power, and endurance. It also outlines several field tests to measure aspects like grip strength, vertical jump, and aerobic/anaerobic power. The principles of training discussed include individuality, specificity, reversibility, progressive overload, and variation. Various resistance training programs, modalities, and techniques are covered such as free weights, machines, eccentric training, plyometrics, core training, and power/HIIT training. Guidelines for intervals, repetitions/sets, and rest periods are provided for high intensity training.

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Jordan Louis
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
68 views6 pages

Chapter 9 New - Sports Phys

The document discusses various principles and methods of exercise training. It describes different types of strength like muscular strength, power, and endurance. It also outlines several field tests to measure aspects like grip strength, vertical jump, and aerobic/anaerobic power. The principles of training discussed include individuality, specificity, reversibility, progressive overload, and variation. Various resistance training programs, modalities, and techniques are covered such as free weights, machines, eccentric training, plyometrics, core training, and power/HIIT training. Guidelines for intervals, repetitions/sets, and rest periods are provided for high intensity training.

Uploaded by

Jordan Louis
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 9 – the principles of exercise training

Muscular strength
 strength  maximal force that a muscle can generate
 Static strength
 Dynamic strength (varies by speed and joint angle)
 1RM
 Start with proper warm-up  after this they can execute several repitions
 Add weight until only 1 repetition can be performed

Muscular power
 rate of performing work
 Explosive aspect of strength
 Power = force x (distance/time)
 power more NB than strength for many activities
 field tests no specific to power
 typically measured with electronic devices

Endurance
 number of repitions at given % 1RM
 increases through
 Gains in muscle strength
 Changes in local metabolic, cardiovascular function
 push up test  count the number of reps

Types of field tests:


Grip strength test  if weak in an older individual it can indicate the risk or potential cardiac
disease prevalence in the individual
Vertical jump test  not an accurate test but is an easy test

Biokinetics
 biodex and cybex isokinetic dynamometer measuring strength and power
 measures the force production using a multitude of isokinetic variables in
conjunction with different eccentric
 person is tightly strapped into the chair to not use the body
 set the piece of equipment to do eccentric and concentric contractions
 video  upper leg is fixed
 save patients data on the system

Aerobic power  rate of energy relates by oxygen-dependant metabolic processes


Anaerobic power  mean or peak power output in exercise last 30s or less
 maximal accumulated O2 deficit test
 critical power test  speed at which power/speed vs time graph reaches a plateau
 Wingate anaerobic test
Principles of training
 principle of individuality
 not all athletes are created equal
 genetics affects performance
 variations in cell growth rates, metabolism, and cardiorespiratory and
neuroendocrine regulation
 explains high versus low responders

 principle of specificity
 Training effect is specific to the muscle fibres involved
 Type of exercise
 Training program must stress most relevant physiological systems for given support
 Training adaptions highly specific to type of activity, training volume and intensity

 principle of reversibility
 Use it or lose it
 Training  improved strength and endurance
 Detraining reverses gains
 Gains are lost when overload is removed

 principle of progressive overload


 Must increases demand son body to make further improvements
 Muscle overload  muscles must be loaded beyond normal loading for
improvement
 Progressive training  as strength increases, resistance/repetitions must increases
to further increase strength
 Training effect occurs when a system is exercised at a level beyond which it is
normally accustomed

 principle of variation
 Also called principle periodization
 Systematically changes one or more variables to keep training challenging
o Intensity, volume and/or mode
o Increase volume, decrease intensity
o Decreases volume, increases intensity
 Macrocycles versus mesocycles

Resistance training programmes  strength, hypertrophy and power


 should involve concentric, eccentric and isometric contractions
 CON strength maximised by ECC
 ECC benefits action-specific movements
 exercise order
 Large muscle groups before small, multijoint before small joint, high intensity before
low intensity
 rest periods based on experience
 Novice, intermediate lifters  2-3 min between sets
 Advanced lifters  1-2 min between sets

 static-contraction resistance
 Muscle force without muscle shortening
 Also called isometric training
 Early evidence showed great promise
o Later evidence did not support early findings
o Isometric training nonetheless still popular
 Ideal for immobilized rehab situations

 Free weights vs machines

 Free weights (constant resistance) – traditional resistance training modality that used
only barbells, dumbbells, and so on to provide resistance
 Tax muscles extremes but not midrange
 Recruit and stabilizing muscles
 Better for advanced weight lifters
 machines - may involve variable resistance
 Safer, easier and more stable  good for beginners
 Limit recruitment to targeted muscle groups

 dynamic eccentric training


 Emphasizes ECC phase of contraction
o In this phase, muscle’s ability to resist force greater than with CON training
o Theoretically produces increases strength gains vs CON
 Early ECC vs CON research equivocal
 More support from recent studies
o ECC + CON workouts maximize strength gains
o ECC important for muscle hypertrophy

 variable resistance training


 Resistance decreases in weakest ranges of motion and increases in stronger ranges
 Muscle works against higher % of its capacity at each point range of motion
 Basis for several popular machines

 isokinetic training
 Movements at a constant speed
o Angular velocity can range from 0° /s to 300° /s
o Strong force opposed by more resistance
o Weak force opposed by less resistance
 Resistance from electronics, air, or hydraulics
 Theoretically allows maximal contraction at all points in range of motion

 plyometrics
 Also known as stretch-shortening cycle exercise
o Uses stretch reflex to recruit motor units
o Stores energy during ECC, releases during CON
o E.g.  deep squat to jump to deep squat
 Proposed to bridge gap between speed and strength training

 electrical stimulation
 pass current across muscle or motor nerve
 Ideal for recovery from injury and surgery
 Reduces strength loss during
immobilization
 Restores strength and size during
rehab
 It eliminates the brain  which plays
a huge role in neuromuscular
adaptations
o It will not may you stronger
and doesn’t affect co-ord that
is

 EMS training
 Isometric muscle contractions: not functional; do not cause improvement in dynamic
muscle strength, speed and power
 Focus on specific muscles: more muscle soreness and muscle damage
 Trains muscle only superficially – not as effective as real exercise
 The brain is not involved: no improvement in balance, posture and coordination

 Core training
 Core  trunk muscles around spine and viscera
o Abdominal muscles
o Gluteal muscles, hip girdle
o Paraspinal, other accessory muscles
 Yoga, Pilates, tai chi, physioball
 Proximal stability aids distal mobility
 May decrease likelihood of injury
 Increases muscle spindle sensitivity
o Permits greater state of readiness for joint loading
o Protects body from injury
 Core musculature mostly type I fibers, responds well to multiple sets and high reps

 power training
 Train sport-specific metabolic systems
 Programs designed along a continuum from short sprints to long distances
o Sprints: ATP-PCr (anaerobic)
o Long sprint/middle distance: glycolytic (anaerobic)
o Long distance: oxidative system (aerobic)

 HIIT training
 Train sport-specific metabolic systems
 Programs designed along a continuum from short sprints to long distances
o Sprints: ATP-PCr (anaerobic)
o Long sprint/middle distance: glycolytic (anaerobic)
o Long distance: oxidative system (aerobic)
 Repeated bouts of high/moderate intensity interspersed with rest/reduced intensity
o More total exercise performed by breaking into bouts
o Same vocabulary as resistance training: sets, repetitions, time, distance,
frequency, interval, rest
 E.g
o Set 1: 6 x 400 m at 75 s (90 s slow jog)
o Set 2: 6 x 800 m at 180 s (200 s jog-walk)
 Appropriate for all sports and activities
 For given sport, first choose mode, then adjust
o Rate of exercise interval
o Distance of exercise interval
o Number of repetitions and sets per training session
o Duration of rest/active recovery
o Type of activity during active recovery
o Frequency of training per week
Exercise interval intensity
 Determined by duration/distance or % HRmax
 Duration and distance more practical
o One method: use best time at a set distance, adjust duration by desired
intensity
o Intensity depends on fitness, number sets/reps, etc.
o ATP-PCr system training ~90 to 98% intensity
o Anaerobic glycolytic training ~80 to 95% intensity
o Aerobic oxidative training ~75 to 85% intensity

Repetitions and sets per session


 largely sport specific
 short, intense intervals  more reps and sets
 longer intervals  fewer reps and sets

Duration of rest intervals


 Depends on how rapidly athlete recovers
 Based on HR recovery (fitness and age dependent)
 <30 years: HR should drop to 130 to 150 beats/min
 >30 years: subtract 1 beat for every year over 30
 For active recovery between sets, HR <120 beats/min
 Exercise intensity   recovery intensity 
 With better fitness,  intensity or  rest duration
 Land training: slow or rapid walk or jog
 Swimming: slow swimming or total rest

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