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Assessment of the load-velocity profile in the free-weight prone bench pull exercise through different velocity variables and regression models

2019, GarcĆ­a-Ramos, Amador, Ulloa-Diaz, David, Barboza GonzĆ”lez, Paola, RodrĆ­guez Perea, Ɓngela, MartĆ­nez GarcĆ­a, DarĆ­o, Quidel CatrilelbĆŗn, Mauricio, Guede Rojas, Francisco, Cuevas-Aburto, Jesualdo, Janicijevic, Danica, Weakley, Jonathon

This aims of this study were (I) to determine the velocity variable and regression model which best fit the load-velocity relationship during the free-weight prone bench pull exercise, (II) to compare the reliability of the velocity attained at each percentage of the one-repetition maximum (1RM) between different velocity variables and regression models, and (III) to compare the within- and between-subject variability of the velocity attained at each %1RM. Eighteen men (14 rowers and four weightlifters) performed an incremental test during the free-weight prone bench pull exercise in two different sessions. General and individual load-velocity relationships were modelled through three velocity variables (mean velocity [MV], mean propulsive velocity [MPV] and peak velocity [PV]) and two regression models (linear and second-order polynomial). The main findings revealed that (I) the general (Pearsonā€™s correlation coefficient [r] range = 0.964ā€“0.973) and individual (median r = 0.986 for MV, 0.989 for MPV, and 0.984 for PV) load-velocity relationships were highly linear, (II) the reliability of the velocity attained at each %1RM did not meaningfully differ between the velocity variables (coefficient of variation [CV] range = 2.55ā€“7.61% for MV, 2.84ā€“7.72% for MPV and 3.50ā€“6.03% for PV) neither between the regression models (CV range = 2.55ā€“7.72% and 2.73ā€“5.25% for the linear and polynomial regressions, respectively), and (III) the within-subject variability of the velocity attained at each %1RM was lower than the between-subject variability for the light-moderate loads. No meaningful differences between the within- and between-subject CVs were observed for the MV of the 1RM trial (6.02% vs. 6.60%; CV ratio = 1.10), while the within-subject CV was lower for PV (6.36% vs. 7.56%; CV ratio = 1.19). These results suggest that the individual load-MV relationship should be determined with a linear regression model to obtain the most accurate prescription of the relative load during the free-weight prone bench pull exercise.

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Reliability and validity of different methods of estimating the one-repetition maximum during the free-weight prone bench pull exercise

2019, Garcƭa-Ramos, Amador, Barboza GonzƔlez, Paola, Ulloa-Diaz, David, Rodriguez Perea, Angela, Martinez Garcia, Darƭo, Guede Rojas, Francisco, Hinojosa Riveros, Hans, Chirosa Rƭos, Luis Javier, Cuevas-Aburto, Jesualdo, Janicijevic, Danica, Weakley, Jonathon

This study examined the reliability and validity of three methods of estimating the one-repetition maximum (1RM) during the free-weight prone bench pull exercise. Twenty-six men (22 rowers and four weightlifters) performed an incremental loading test until reaching their 1RM, followed by a set of repetitions-to-failure. Eighteen participants were re-tested to conduct the reliability analysis. The 1RM was estimated through the lifts-to-failure equations proposed by Lombardi and O'Connor, general load-velocity (L-V) relationships proposed by SƔnchez-Medina and Loturco and the individual L-V relationships modelled using four (multiple-point method) or only two loads (two-point method). The direct method provided the highest reliability (coefficient of variation [CV] = 2.45% and intraclass correlation coefficient [ICC] = 0.97), followed by the Lombardi's equation (CV = 3.44% and ICC = 0.94), and no meaningful differences were observed between the remaining methods (CV range = 4.95-6.89% and ICC range = 0.81-0.91). The lifts-to-failure equations overestimated the 1RM (3.43-4.08%), the general L-V relationship proposed by SƔnchez-Medina underestimated the 1RM (-3.77%), and no significant differences were observed for the remaining prediction methods (-0.40-0.86%). The individual L-V relationship could be recommended as the most accurate method for predicting the 1RM during the free-weight prone bench pull exercise.