Scientists Put Sprinting and Jumping Head to Head. It Wasn't Close
Research Shorts di Research Shorts Editorial
Note sull'episodio
What if the most sophisticated athletic training tool in the world was something you've been doing since you were five years old?
A group of researchers in France just published a study that should make every strength and conditioning coach stop and pay attention. They strapped 16 athletes to force plates sampling at 2000 times per second and made them do everything — drop jumps, hurdle jumps, ankle rebounds, skipping — and then had them sprint flat out.
The results weren't even close.
Sprinting produced 20% more ground reaction force than drop jumps. Contact times were 50% shorter. And here's the part that's genuinely surprising — you don't even need to go full speed. Running at 90% of max produced basically identical results to an all-out sprint.
That means coaches are putting athletes through complex, equipment-heavy ju ...