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Biomechanical Features of Backstroke to Breaststroke Transition Techniques in Age-Group Swimmers

Authors :
Phornpot Chainok
Karla de Jesus
Luis Mourão
Pedro Filipe Pereira Fonseca
Rodrigo Zacca
Ricardo J. Fernandes
João Paulo Vilas-Boas
Repositório Científico do Instituto Politécnico do Porto
Source :
Frontiers in Sports and Active Living. 4
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Frontiers Media SA, 2022.

Abstract

This study aimed to identify the biomechanical features of backstroke to breaststroke transition techniques (open, somersault, bucket, and crossover) in age-group swimmers. Eighteen preadolescent swimmers (12.2 ± 0.4 years old and 3–4 Tanner stages) underwent 4 weeks of systematic contextual interference training, comprising 16 sessions (40 min·session−1). Soon after, experimental testing was conducted where swimmers randomly performed 12 × 15m maximal turns (composed of 7.5m turn-in and 7.5m turn-out of the wall segments), three in each transition technique. Kinematical, kinetic, and hydrodynamic variables were assessed with a dual-media motion capture system (12 land and 11 underwater cameras), triaxial underwater force plates, and inverse dynamics. Variables were grouped in turn-in (approach and rotation) and turn-out (wall contact, gliding, and pull-out) phases, with factor analysis used to select the variables entering on multiple regressions. For the turn-in phase, 86, 77, 89, and 87% of the variance for open, somersault, bucket, and crossover turning techniques, respectively, was accounted by the 7.5 and 2.5m times, mean stroke length, and rotation time. For the turn-out phase, first gliding distance and time, second gliding depth, turn-out time, and dominating peak_Z push-off force accounted for 93% in open turn, while wall contact time, first gliding distance, breakout distance and time, turn-out time, dominating peak_Y push-off force, and second gliding drag coefficient accounted for 92% in a somersault turn. The foot plant index, push-off velocity, second gliding distance, and turn-out time accounted for 92% in bucket turn while breakout and turn-out time, non-dominating peak_Y and peak_Z push-off force, first and second gliding drag force and second gliding drag coefficient accounted for 90% in crossover turn, respectively. The findings in this study were novel and provided relevant biomechanical contribution, focusing on the key kinematic–temporal determinant during turn-in, rotation, and push-off efficacy, and the kinetic and hydrodynamic during turn-out, which would lead to improved backstroke to breaststroke transition techniques in 11–13 years-old age-group swimmers.<br />This study was supported by the Faculty of the Sport Science, Burapha University, Thailand (grant number 062/2554). RZ was founded by Research Center in Physical Activity, Health and Leisure—CIAFEL—Faculty of Sports, University of Porto—FADEUP (FCT UID/DTP/00617/2020 and Laboratory for Integrative and Translational Research in Population Health (ITR), Porto, Portugal (LA/P/0064/2020).

Details

ISSN :
26249367
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Sports and Active Living
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7357c632725f92a047ff4e383bc218b9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fspor.2022.802967