This study aimed to investigate the effect of antagonist static stretching applied between sets during resistance training on the number of repetitions of leg press exercise in young volleyball players. For this purpose, a total of 16 female active volleyball players (age 15.50 ± 0.52 years; height 167.25 ± 6.10; body mass 57.00 ± 5.98) participated voluntarily. The athletes participating in the study visited the laboratory five times. In the first session, anthropometric measurements were taken. In the second session, their 10 repetition maximums (RTs) were recorded, and in the third session, 10 control RTs were recorded. In the other two sessions, athletes were randomly assigned to two experimental protocol treatments in accordance with the crossover experimental design. In the traditional application, leg press exercise was performed as four sets with their own maximums and 2 min of passive rest between sets. In the experimental application, the participants performed four sets of leg press exercise with ten repetitions of their own maximums until concentric exhaustion, and static hamstring stretching was applied continuously for 30 s over 2 min between sets. All participants participated in both application protocols in different sessions. SPSS 20.0 package programed and GraphPad Prizm 8 graphics program were used for the analysis of all data. Data were analyzed at 0.05 significance level. In the findings obtained, Group* application interaction was found to be statistically significant according to the application and groups (F = 4.198, p = 0.016, p 2 = 0.219). In the leg press repetitions, statistical significance was found in favor of the experimental treatment in the third and fourth sets. This study shows that antagonist static stretching applied between sets positively affects resistance training performance by increasing the number of repetitions in leg press exercise in young female volleyball players.
Antagonist Static Stretching Between Sets Improves Leg Press Repetition Performance in Adolescent Female Volleyball Players: A Randomized Crossover Within-Subject Design
Migliaccio, Gian Mario
;Russo, Luca
2025-01-01
Abstract
This study aimed to investigate the effect of antagonist static stretching applied between sets during resistance training on the number of repetitions of leg press exercise in young volleyball players. For this purpose, a total of 16 female active volleyball players (age 15.50 ± 0.52 years; height 167.25 ± 6.10; body mass 57.00 ± 5.98) participated voluntarily. The athletes participating in the study visited the laboratory five times. In the first session, anthropometric measurements were taken. In the second session, their 10 repetition maximums (RTs) were recorded, and in the third session, 10 control RTs were recorded. In the other two sessions, athletes were randomly assigned to two experimental protocol treatments in accordance with the crossover experimental design. In the traditional application, leg press exercise was performed as four sets with their own maximums and 2 min of passive rest between sets. In the experimental application, the participants performed four sets of leg press exercise with ten repetitions of their own maximums until concentric exhaustion, and static hamstring stretching was applied continuously for 30 s over 2 min between sets. All participants participated in both application protocols in different sessions. SPSS 20.0 package programed and GraphPad Prizm 8 graphics program were used for the analysis of all data. Data were analyzed at 0.05 significance level. In the findings obtained, Group* application interaction was found to be statistically significant according to the application and groups (F = 4.198, p = 0.016, p 2 = 0.219). In the leg press repetitions, statistical significance was found in favor of the experimental treatment in the third and fourth sets. This study shows that antagonist static stretching applied between sets positively affects resistance training performance by increasing the number of repetitions in leg press exercise in young female volleyball players.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


