On-ice acceleration as a function of the Wingate anaerobic test and a biomechanical assessment of skating technique in elite ice hockey players
Loading...
Date
Authors
Purves, Neil Alexander
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Success in ice hockey depends on an individual’s ability to accelerate from a standing
start or change direction and continue skating quickly and efficiently. Previous research to
determine those factors which had the greatest contribution to on-ice acceleration was limited to
two-dimensional biomechanical analyses of skating technique, without regard for the influence
of physiological measures. The purpose of the present study was therefore to predict on-ice
acceleration using peak anaerobic power from a Wingate test and kinematic variables from a
three dimensional analysis of the biomechanics of skating technique. A sub-purpose of the
present study was to examine the variability of skating technique at the elite level. The
participants in this research study were thirty-seven ice hockey players from the Florida Panthers
and Los Angeles Kings of the National Hockey League participating in the 1999 Prospects Camp
in Thunder Bay, Ontario. The players completed a thirty second, maximal intensity Wingate
anaerobic cycle ergometer test against a resistance of 0.095 kg-kg bodyweight-1. Peak anaerobic
power was calculated and recorded as the highest anaerobic power value (number of flywheel
revolutions) produced during any of the five-second intervals. One week following the Wingate
anaerobic test, the players performed two maximal, on-ice accelerations over a distance of
twenty meters, while being taped by two, Panasonic™ CL-350 digital cameras mounted on Peak
Performance™ pan/tilt heads. The Peak Performance™ 3D Video Analysis System and a 23-
point spatial model were used to extract the raw coordinates for the fastest of the two trials for
each player, as measured by a photoelectric timer. The system was then used to smooth the raw
data from both camera views and to combine the smoothed data to produce a three-dimensional
image. Center of mass and kinematic variables of interest were measured at push-off and
touchdown for the first five strides.
Description
Keywords
Hockey Training, Skating Physiological aspects, Hockey Physiological aspects
