Relationship between anaerobic power and start performance parameters in adolescent swimmers
Yücel İnaç, Şaban Ünver, Emre Şimşek, Hayati Arslan, Doğan Altun, Anıl Ulaç Atan, Tülin Akman

TL;DR
This study explores how anaerobic power relates to start performance in teenage swimmers, finding that age and gender are stronger predictors than anaerobic power.
Contribution
The study identifies age and gender as primary predictors of flight distance in adolescent swimmers, despite anaerobic power being correlated.
Findings
Anaerobic power correlates moderately with flight distance (r = 0.51, p < 0.001).
Age and gender are the strongest predictors of flight distance in adolescent swimmers.
Males outperformed females in body height, weight, vertical jump, flight distance, and anaerobic power.
Abstract
Start performance is a critical determinant of success in competitive swimming. This study investigated the relationships between anaerobic power (AP), vertical jump height (VJ), and flight distance (FD) in adolescent swimmers. Fifty-four Tier 2 adolescent swimmers (32 males, 22 females; age: 13.57 ± 1.31 years) participated in the study. Anaerobic power was calculated using the Lewis formula, and FD was measured via video analysis with Kinovea software. Statistical analyses included independent samples t-tests, Pearson correlations, and multiple regression models to identify performance predictors. Significant gender differences were observed in body height, weight, VJ, FD, and AP (all p < 0.05), with males outperforming females, while training experience was similar. FD showed a significant positive correlation with AP (r = 0.51, p < 0.001), representing a moderate effect size.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSports Performance and Training · Cardiovascular and exercise physiology · Sports injuries and prevention
