Movement efficiency in taekwondo side kick (Yop Chagi): a kinematic comparison between novice and experienced practitioners
Rahmat Hidayat, Xianzhi Jin, Chengji Dou, Benyao Yang

TL;DR
This study compares how experienced and novice taekwondo practitioners perform a side kick, finding that experienced ones are more efficient in their movements.
Contribution
The study reveals specific kinematic differences in Yop Chagi execution between novice and experienced taekwondo practitioners, highlighting movement efficiency gains from training.
Findings
Experienced practitioners showed significantly larger hip abduction and knee flexion angles during the chamber phase.
The experienced group had a 28% higher peak linear velocity of the foot and shorter total kick execution time.
Long-term training optimizes the proximal-to-distal kinematic sequence, enhancing kick performance.
Abstract
This study aimed to kinematically compare the Yop Chagi execution between novice and experienced university Taekwondo practitioners, focusing on movement efficiency. Forty university students were allocated into two groups: Novice (n = 20; ≤6 months experience) and Experienced (n = 20; ≥3 years of competitive experience). Participants performed maximal effort side kicks targeting a pad at trochanter height. Movement was captured using two high-speed cameras (120 Hz). Kinematic variables included hip and knee joint angles at peak flexion/extension, peak angular velocities, linear velocity of the foot, and total kick execution time. Between-group differences were analysed using independent t-tests or Mann-Whitney U tests, with effect sizes (Cohen’s d) reported. The experienced group demonstrated significantly larger hip abduction and knee flexion angles during the chamber phase (p <…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSports Performance and Training · Martial Arts: Techniques, Psychology, and Education · Sports injuries and prevention
