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Anthropometric, physiological and performance profiles of Elite and Sub-Elite Canoe Slalom Athletes

Publication at First Faculty of Medicine, Faculty of Physical Education and Sport |
2018

Abstract

The purposes of this study were to determine the anthropometric, physiological and performance characteristics of elite and sub-elite canoe slalom athletes and to determine the relationship between these characteristics and performance in selection races for the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro 2016. Eighteen male single-canoe (C1) slalom athletes (20.9+-5.1yr) performed a battery of tests including anthropometric parameters and somatotypes, upper-body anaerobic power (Wingate test), maximal muscular strength (bench- press, bench-pull, handgrip dynamometry), aerobic power (treadmill running test), and specific on-water tests (40m and 200m sprints with spins).

Additionally, Spearman's correlation were conducted and multiple regression analysis was used to determine the relationship between the results of on-water tests and the final race rankings. Canoe slalom athletes were 180.6+-4.1cm tall and 74.4+-4.6kg with an ectomorphic mesomorph somatotype (1.6-4.9-2.8).

They are further characterized by a treadmill VO2max of 62.7+-3.0mlBULLET OPERATORkgBULLET OPERATORmin-1 and high values of anaerobic upper-body peak power (9.4+-1.1WBULLET OPERATORkg-1) and mean power (7.4+-0.7WBULLET OPERATORkg1). Their bench- press 1 repetition maximum (1RM) was 95+-15kg, bench-pull 1RM was 93+-9.5kg, and handgrip strength was 49.3+-7.5kg.

Race performance was significantly correlated (p<0.01) with bench-press 1RM (rs=0.60), normalized upper-body peak and mean anaerobic power (rs=0.57), and on-water tests (rs=0.62 to 0.85). By multiple regression analysis, it was possible to predict race ranking based on water performance tests (R2=0.78; SEE=2.75).

The results of this study can assist coaches, and trainers in racionalization of training programmes for canoe slalom athletes.