Horizontal Force Influences on Pickup Acceleration

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Background/Objectives: Pickup acceleration refers to acceleration initiated from a non-static start, and can be described as a function of approach, transition, and pickup steps. Given the forward-leaning posture adopted during the transition and pickup steps, it was hypothesized that step horizontal force (SFh) production would be a key determinant of pickup acceleration ability. Methods: Forty-eight male athletes performed four 30 m pickup sprints at LED-guided entry velocities of 1.5 m/s-1 (walking) and 3.0 m/s (jogging), with spatiotemporal data collected via a horizontal linear position transducer. Athletes were grouped as “fast” or “slow” based on maximal acceleration (amax) and were compared at time points/steps using independent t-tests. Results: Across both entries, faster athletes achieved significantly higher amax (~13-17%) and maximum velocity (vmax; ~7-8%). At 1.5 m/s, the faster group produced significantly greater SFh during the Transition and Pickup steps (~34-41%), resulting in longer step lengths (SL; ~12%), higher step acceleration (Sa; ~17-32%), and higher step velocities (Sv; ~4-9%). At 3.0 m/s, SFh and Sa remained greater (p ≤ 0.05) in the faster group (~23-41%; 25-32% respectively) but produced fewer significant kinematic differences. It would seem that “faster” pick-up acceleration is associated with greater SFh across the transition and first pick-up steps; this increase in force clearly influences kinematics during a walking entry, but its influence is less apparent during a jogging entry. It is possible that at higher entry velocities, other technical/mechanical determinants become more important, necessitating a more advanced technological approach to studying pickup acceleration than the one used in this study.

Article activity feed