Alejandro Javaloyes, Cristóbal Sánchez-Muñoz, José-Antonio Salas-Montoro, Manuel Moya-Ramón, Manuel Mateo-March
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引用次数: 0
摘要
最大有氧力量(MAP)和MAP的耗竭时间是自行车运动表现的关键,然而最大下体力量在提高自行车运动员跨性别、类别和学科的这些指标中的作用仍未得到充分研究。本研究调查了69名来自同一国家队的高水平和职业自行车运动员的1RM, MAP和MAP到疲劳时间之间的关系,按性别,类别和学科分层。骑车者接受了为期两天的方案,通过分级运动测试评估MAP,通过MAP的疲劳时间评估MAP,通过基于速度的平行后蹲测试评估1RM。Spearman相关性、混合模型、广义加性模型、结构方程建模和聚类分析检查了强度-性能关系,并对协变量进行了调整。1RM强预测MAP (r=0.73, β=0.86, p0.05)。女性表现出较低的MAP (-71.67 W, p
Strength as a Predictor of Aerobic Power in Competitive Cyclists: National Team Insights.
Maximal aerobic power (MAP) and time-to-exhaustion at MAP are critical for cycling performance, yet the role of maximal lower-body strength in enhancing these metrics across sex, category, and discipline in cyclists remains underexplored. This study investigated the relationships between 1RM, MAP, and time-to-exhaustion at MAP in 69 high-level and professional cyclists from the same national team, stratified by sex, category, and discipline. Cyclists underwent a two-day protocol to assess MAP via a graded exercise test, time-to-exhaustion at MAP, and 1RM via a velocity-based parallel back squat test. Spearman correlations, mixed models, generalized additive models, structural equation modeling, and cluster analysis examined strength-performance relationships, adjusted for covariates. 1RM strongly predicted MAP (r=0.73, β=0.86, p<0.001; 2.47 W increase per kg), and relative 1RM predicted MAP relative to body mass non-linearly (r=0.58, β=0.84, p<0.001). Time-to-exhaustion showed no significant strength association (p>0.05). Women exhibited lower MAP (-71.67 W, p<0.001), mountain bike cyclists showed longer time-to-exhaustion (+0.61 SD, p=0.049), and elite cyclists had higher MAP (+21.51 W, p=0.030), reflecting physiological and discipline-specific differences. Clusters highlighted strength-power distinctions. These findings demonstrate that maximal strength is associated with MAP but not time-to-exhaustion, with associations varying according to sex, discipline, and category.
期刊介绍:
The IJSM provides a forum for the publication of papers dealing with both basic and applied information that advance the field of sports medicine and exercise science, and offer a better understanding of biomedicine. The journal publishes original papers, reviews, short communications, and letters to the Editors.