Inter-limb differences in upper quarter mobility/stability are not associated with performance in competitive swimmers
Katharina Borgmann, Stefan Panzer, Sam Limpach, Thomas Muehlbauer

TL;DR
This study found that differences in upper body mobility between limbs in swimmers are not linked to better swimming performance and may even worsen it in some cases.
Contribution
The study reveals that upper quarter inter-limb asymmetry does not correlate with swimming performance and may even negatively impact it in intermediate swimmers.
Findings
Inter-limb differences in upper quarter mobility/stability are not influenced by expertise level.
Greater reach distances in the YBT–UQ correlated with lower swimming performance in B-squad swimmers.
YBT–UQ performance varied significantly between swimmer groups but not their inter-limb differences.
Abstract
The Y Balance Test–Upper Quarter (YBT–UQ) is a cost-effective, well-established, closed kinetic chain test to assess inter-limb asymmetries in the upper quarter that could negatively affect swimming performance. Thus, the aim of the present study was to determine YBT–UQ performances and inter-limb differences as well as its association with swimming performance in athletes with diverging levels of expertise. Forty female and male competitive swimmers (age range: 10–22 years) with different expertise levels (A-squad: n = 9, B-squad: n = 12, C-squad: n = 19) were tested (reach distances for the YBT–UQ) and swimming performance was calculated using the ratio of individual to world best time. YBT–UQ performances (i.e., inferolateral reach direction for the dominant arm: p = .027, ηp2 = .12 and the non-dominant arm: p = .031, ηp2 = .17) but not YBT–UQ inter-limb differences significantly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSports Performance and Training · Muscle activation and electromyography studies · Sports injuries and prevention
