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The Effects of Plyometric on Physical Fitness and Technical Skills of Football Players

R

Riphah International University

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Physical Fitness and Technical Skills

Treatments

Other: Conventional Exercises
Other: Plyometric Exercises

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05951582
REC/01413 Asim Abdul Rehman

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study aimed to assess the effectiveness of plyometric exercises on the physical fitness and technical skills of football players in Quetta, Baluchistan

Full description

Football (soccer) is a popular sport that is played both competitively and recreationally. It is acknowledged as a repeated exercise involving both aerobic and anaerobic metabolic systems (Beato et al., 2018). Youth are especially passionate about the sport (Di Salvo et al., 2006), being the fourth most popular sport for females in high schools and the fifth most popular sport for men (Brown, 2014). Football players spend the most of their time on the pitch, where there is a high risk of injury because it is a contact sport. Football players need to be both physically and mentally fit to manage the tremendous demands of the game, which call for exceptional levels of memory, planning, focus, and other mental abilities. On the other hand, having good balance is necessary for both a successful sporting career and the prevention of musculoskeletal injuries. (Sheppard & Young, 2006) Plyometric, also known as jump training, has gained significant recognition as a valuable training method for enhancing physical fitness and technical skills in football players. This specialized form of exercise involves explosive movements that activate fast-twitch muscle fibers, which are essential for producing the quick bursts of power required for running, jumping, and changing directions during game-play (Slimani, Chamari, Miarka, Del Vecchio, & Chéour, 2016). Plyometric workouts promote muscular growth and boost the ability to maintain high-intensity activities throughout a match because they put the muscles through repeated, powerful contractions. Football players can sustain their optimum performance level. Plyometric workouts require precise body control and coordination, which directly translate to improved balance and agility on the pitch. These abilities are necessary for football players to move through crowded spaces, evade opponents, and perform challenging maneuvers with grace (Markovic & Mikulic, 2010).

Athletes can use plyometric workouts to develop their lower-body strength, power, coordination, and agility. Examples include horizontal jumps over hurdles, standing long jumps, split squat jumps, diagonal jumps, 180-degree cone hops, and sprints while skipping. Athletes can thrive in sports that involve quick changes in direction by using these workouts, which are created to stress particular muscle groups and movement patterns. (Behm & Chaouachi, 2011)Plyometric exercise promotes agility which is crucial skill, allowing them to change direction rapidly while maintaining control and balance, by improving neuromuscular coordination and muscular power, leading to quicker and more precise movement execution. (Miller et al., 2006)Exercises such as lateral bounds, cone drills, and ladder drills are commonly used in plyometric training to enhance agility (Markovic & Mikulic, 2010).

Football players are more formidable in both offensive and defensive situations because to plyometric activities that boost the legs' explosive power and vertical leap. Football players who have improved their agility, balance, and jumping skills have a competitive advantage that allows them to excel in key situations and dramatically advance their team's chances of winning. (Faude, Koch, & Meyer, 2012) Plyometric training simulates these demands by promoting the development of fast-twitch muscle fibers, increasing reactive strength, and improving the ability to produce force quickly (Slimani et al., 2016). Additionally, plyometric exercises deliver an SSTS (sport-specific training stimulus) that closely mimics the motions made on a football pitch. Rather than taking a broad view of physical fitness and technical football skills, most previous study has focused on individual physical fitness components such as power or speed(Little, Williams, & Research, 2005). More research is needed to fully comprehend the impact of plyometric training on various aspects of physical fitness and technical football ability. Previous studies did not fully comprehend the potential benefits of plyometric training on football players' overall performance. That 'why this study is conducted to evaluate the effects of plyometric on physical as well technical skill among football players.

Enrollment

32 estimated patients

Sex

Male

Ages

18 to 32 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Participants falling in this category would be recruited into the study.

    1. Male football player
    2. Age between 18-32 years

Exclusion criteria

Participant failing to fall in this category would be excluded of the study.

  1. History of metabolic diseases.
  2. History of recent fractures.
  3. History of trauma / injury in last month

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

32 participants in 2 patient groups

Group A (Plyometrics)
Experimental group
Description:
This group will receive 8 weeks of upper and lower body plyometric exercises protocol. The session will last for 60 minutes and 3 time per week. 1-minute rest period is there between each exercise and each repetition and 3-5 minute for each set.
Treatment:
Other: Plyometric Exercises
Group B (Conventional)
Experimental group
Description:
This group will receive 8 weeks of upper and lower body strength exercises protocol. The session will last for 60 minutes and 3 times per week.
Treatment:
Other: Conventional Exercises

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Asim A Rehman, DPT; Waqar A Awan, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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