Search

Your search keyword '"Oliver, Jon L."' showing total 36 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Oliver, Jon L." Remove constraint Author: "Oliver, Jon L." Topic soccer Remove constraint Topic: soccer
36 results on '"Oliver, Jon L."'

Search Results

1. The Effects of Strength, Plyometric and Combined Training on Strength, Power and Speed Characteristics in High-Level, Highly Trained Male Youth Soccer Players: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

2. Epidemiology of injuries in male and female youth football players: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

3. A Novel Method to Categorize Stretch-Shortening Cycle Performance Across Maturity in Youth Soccer Players.

4. Impaired Stretch-Shortening Cycle Function Persists Despite Improvements in Reactive Strength After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction.

5. Reliability, validity, and maturation-related differences of frontal and sagittal plane landing kinematic measures during drop jump and tuck jump screening tests in male youth soccer players.

6. External Cueing Influences Drop Jump Performance in Trained Young Soccer Players.

7. Asymmetry Thresholds for Common Screening Tests and Their Effects on Jump Performance in Professional Soccer Players.

8. The 6-m Timed Hop Is Not a Suitable Clinical Assessment Tool for Use Following Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction.

9. Using machine learning to improve our understanding of injury risk and prediction in elite male youth football players.

10. Utility of the anterior reach Y-BALANCE test as an injury risk screening tool in elite male youth soccer players.

11. Seasonal variation in neuromuscular control in young male soccer players.

12. Comparison of Drop Jump and Tuck Jump Knee Joint Kinematics in Elite Male Youth Soccer Players: Implications for Injury Risk Screening.

13. A Review of Field-Based Assessments of Neuromuscular Control and Their Utility in Male Youth Soccer Players.

14. Altered landing mechanics are shown by male youth soccer players at different stages of maturation.

15. An audit of injuries in six english professional soccer academies.

16. Injury prevention in male youth soccer: Current practices and perceptions of practitioners working at elite English academies.

17. The Impact of Soccer Match Play on the Muscle Damage Response in Youth Female Athletes.

18. Landing Kinematics in Elite Male Youth Soccer Players of Different Chronologic Ages and Stages of Maturation.

19. The Effects of Maturation on Measures of Asymmetry During Neuromuscular Control Tests in Elite Male Youth Soccer Players.

20. Hopping and Landing Performance in Male Youth Soccer Players: Effects of Age and Maturation.

21. Leg Stiffness in Female Soccer Players: Intersession Reliability and the Fatiguing Effects of Soccer-Specific Exercise.

22. The scientific foundations and associated injury risks of early soccer specialisation.

23. Consistency of Field-Based Measures of Neuromuscular Control Using Force-Plate Diagnostics in Elite Male Youth Soccer Players.

24. Neuromuscular Risk Factors for Knee and Ankle Ligament Injuries in Male Youth Soccer Players.

25. Reliability of the Tuck Jump Injury Risk Screening Assessment in Elite Male Youth Soccer Players.

26. The influence of playing surface on physiological and performance responses during and after soccer simulation.

27. Relationships between functional movement screen scores, maturation and physical performance in young soccer players.

28. Altered neuromuscular control of leg stiffness following soccer-specific exercise.

29. Reliability and validity of a soccer-specific test of prolonged repeated-sprint ability.

30. The 6-m Timed Hop Is Not a Suitable Clinical Assessment Tool for Use Following Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction.

31. Comparison of Drop Jump and Tuck Jump Knee Joint Kinematics in Elite Male Youth Soccer Players: Implications for Injury Risk Screening.

32. Impaired Stretch-Shortening Cycle Function Persists Despite Improvements in Reactive Strength After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction

33. Plyometric-Jump Training Effects on Physical Fitness and Sport-Specific Performance According to Maturity: A Systematic Review with Meta-analysis.

34. Kinetic Responses to External Cues Are Specific to Both the Type of Cue and Type of Exercise in Adolescent Athletes.

35. Seasonal Monitoring of Sprint and Jump Performance in a Soccer Youth Academy.

36. Maturity Has a Greater Association than Relative Age with Physical Performance in English Male Academy Soccer Players.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources