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Efficacy of potentiation of performance through overweight implement throws on male and female high-school weight throwers
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Efficacy of potentiation of performance through overweight implement throws on male and female high-school weight throwers

Lawrence W Judge, David Bellar and Mike Judge
Journal of strength and conditioning research, Vol.24(7), pp.1804-1809
07-2010
PMID: 20543727

Abstract

Adolescent Athletes Athletic Performance - physiology Exercise - physiology Female Humans Male Muscle Strength - physiology Muscle, Skeletal - physiology Resistance Training Weight Lifting - physiology
The purpose of the investigation was to determine the acute effects of heavy implements on weight throw performance. Ten high-school weight throwers were recruited to participate. A within-subjects design was used to compare the difference between mean and peak distances achieved with the regulation weight after warm-up with regulation weight (control), 1.37-kg overweight (OVRWGHT1) and 2.27-kg overweight implement (OVRWGHT2). Analysis via repeated-measures analysis of variance revealed main effects for Treatment (p = 0.021) and Attempt (p = 0.015). The mean after the OVRWGHT1 treatment was the highest (14.52 +/- 3.54 m) followed by OVRWGHT2 (14.22 +/- 3.15 m) and the competition weight implement (STAND; 13.38 +/- 2.98). Paired samples t-test for peak distance by treatment revealed that both OVRWGHT1 (p = 0.004) and OVRWGHT2 (p = 0.027) were significantly different from STAND. Post hoc testing revealed that both OVRWGHT1 (p = 0.025) and OVRWGHT2 (p = 0.007) resulted in a significant difference in perceived fatigue compared with STAND. The results suggest that using overweight implements as part of the warm-up may improve performance in high-school athletes.
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