Reliability of the force-velocity-power variables during ice hockey sprint acceleration.

Sports Biomech

Laboratory Sport, Expertise and Performance, Research Department, French Institute of Sport, Paris, France.

Published: January 2022

The aims of this study were to ensure that the skating velocity describes a mono-exponential function in order to determine the reliability of radar-derived profiling results from skating sprint accelerations applying sprint running force-velocity assessment approach. Eleven young highly-trained female ice hockey players performed two 40-m skating sprints on two separate days to evaluate inter-trial and test-retest reliability. The velocity-time data recorded by a radar device was used to calculate the kinetics variables of the skating sprint acceleration: maximal theoretical force (F), maximal theoretical velocity (V), maximal theoretical power (P) and the slope of the linear force-velocity relationship (S). S and S variables (the slope of the linear relationship between horizontal force relative to body mass and velocity) demonstrated ' to intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC). All other variables revealed inter-trial and test-retest reliability (ICC ≥ 0.75 and coefficient of variation [CV] ≤ 10%). Furthermore, test-retest reliability (ICC and CV) and sensitivity [Standard Error of Measurement (SEMs) ≤ Small Worthwhile Change (SWCs)] were higher when averaging the two trials compared to the best trial (40-m split time) only. These findings offer a promising and simple method to monitor training-induced changes in macroscopic mechanical variables of ice hockey skating performance.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14763141.2019.1648541DOI Listing

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