This study investigated the RHK height effect on hip–knee joint kinematics on the pivot leg and activation of the surrounding stabilizer muscles. According to the results, RHK height substantially affected the hip–knee joint angles at the pivot leg as well as co-activation of the surrounding stabilizer muscles. The results more specifically reveal the following: (1) During attack and return, compared with lower kicks, a higher kick resulted in greater maximum and average dynamic hip abduction and knee valgus angles. (2) During attack but not return of a high kick, joints on the pivot leg have a greater range of motion at the hip frontal plane as well as the knee sagittal and frontal planes. At the return phase, a high kick resulted in greater dynamic knee abduction and abduction angles and lesser minimum and average knee flexion angles. (3) During a high kick, the GM activation decreased, but the hamstring muscles co-contraction reaction considerably decreased during attack but substantially increased during return. During attack, a higher RHK resulted in a larger dynamic hip abduction, knee valgus angles, as well as larger joint ranges of motion at the hip frontal plane, knee sagittal plane, and knee frontal plane. Previous studies observed that during an RHK, the body’s centre of mass tended to move horizontally and vertically toward the target, during which the body moved forward with an axial rotation at the pelvis (Gavagan and Sayers, 2017; Kinoshita and Fujii, 2014). At this moment, the hip joint at the attacking leg bent and extended to achieve knee extension, thus finishing the kick (Gavagan and Sayers, 2017; Kim et al., 2010b; Kinoshita and Fujii, 2014). In the preparation phase, the pivot leg stored potential energy required for the kick, including hip extension and hip adduction (Kinoshita and Fujii, 2014). During attack, the pivot leg produced kinetic energy, which drove pelvis rotation and forward inclination. This process improved kick performance (Gavagan and Sayers, 2017). The present study confirmed that an increase in kick height can greatly enhance the hip abduction and flexion angles on the pivot leg, thus enabling the practitioner to increase the kicking leg angles after pelvis rotation. Under these conditions, the kicking height can be increased without compromising kicking performance (Kim et al., 2010b). Additionally, when the player attempted to increase their attacking range while maintaining the kicking speed, the pelvis on the pivot leg tended to push even further to increase the hip abduction angles (Cortes et al., 2011; Kim et al., 2010a; 2010b). This study also demonstrated that in the attack phase, the pivot leg was partly affected by increased kicking height, thus increasing the dynamic frontal plane movement (such as hip abduction and knee valgus), but not affecting the range of motion in the horizontal plane (es. Hip and knee external rotation). During this kicking process, the pivot leg was mainly responsible for pivoting and supporting the body. Before the attacking foot touches the target, the pivot hip quickly rotates and drives lower-limb rotation to prevent the pivot leg from being “locked” to the ground (Kasbparast et al., 2014b; Moreira and Paula, 2017). Therefore, before the player kicked the target, the heel of their pivot foot was already pointed forward or to the side (Kim et al., 2010b) to allow the attacking leg to smoothly execute the kick movement. However, the present study found that although a high kick does not impact the pivot leg horizontal angle; it does increase the hip and knee frontal plane angle. This shows that the player's foot was “locked” through the hip rotation and the release axis during the kick. Although the horizontal plane angle can be released, the hip and knee frontal plane angles are still relatively high. Previous scholars verified that the lower limb joints of the axial foot may increase joint mobility in the frontal plane synchronously. The purpose is to compensate for the increase in kicking difficulty (Kasbparast et al., 2014a). This study observed that during the return, as the target height (and, by implication, kicking height) increased, the dynamic hip abduction, knee valgus and external rotation angles on the pivot leg also increased. Notably, compared with a low kick, a high kick resulted in higher dynamic knee valgus, tibia torsion angles and lower minimum knee flexion and average knee flexion angles. The increase in these processes may be related to the pivot foot return phase, which causes the body to decelerate. This deceleration force from the ground makes the planted pivot foot produce greater impact on the lower extremity kinematics (Cortes et al., 2011; Kasbparast et al., 2014a). Especially for higher kicks, this study found that there are more knee valgus and external rotation angles. This result was consistent with that of a previous study comparing the kinematics involved in three different moving tasks, as performed by Division-I soccer players (Cortes et al., 2011). The study observed that compared with a sidestep or drop-jump task, players had a lower knee flexion angle (pivot task 24.3 ± 5.7°, sidestep 38.8 ± 8.4°, drop-jump 30.3 ± 5.2°) and higher knee valgus angle (pivot task 12.0 ± 7.0°, sidestep 3.8 ± 10.0°, drop-jump 3.9 ± 8.0°) when performing a pivot task involving a 180° directional change at the moment of ground contact (Cortes et al., 2011). Generally, with a decreased angle of knee flexion and increased angles of knee valgus and external rotation, burden on the ACL increases, which increased the risk of ACL (Cortes et al., 2011; Kasbparast et al., 2014a; Norcross et al., 2010; Sam, 2010) and knee sprain in athletes (Ford et al., 2003). According to the angular data of the present study, the maximum knee valgus and average knee flexion of the pivot leg peaked at 12.2° and 16.3°, respectively, when performing a high kick, which were 1.7 degrees higher and 3.7 degrees lower than the valgus (10.5°) and flexion (20°), respectively, when performing a low kick. This result indicated that kicks increased the risk of noncontact injuries at knee joints (Cortes et al., 2011; Sam, 2010). This result also clarified the mechanisms underlying the finding of Kasbparast et al. (2014a), who discovered that common knee injuries among TKD players tended to occur when their pivot leg plants, loads and returns. This study demonstrated that compared with low kicks, high kicks trigger low levels of hamstring and quadriceps co-activation ratio (HQCR) during the attack phase. However, at the return phase, the HQCR level of high kicks substantially increased. This was possibly because the pelvis rotation and forward inclination generated at the kicking attack phase increasing kicking performance (Gavagan and Sayers, 2017). When the quadriceps exerted force and the hamstring relaxed, lateral pelvis rotation and hip flexion were facilitated. In other words, the co-activation reaction level decreased at the attack phase to create more space for the pivot leg, thereby ensuring that high kicks were as swift as lower kicks. By contrast, at the return phase, the co-activation reaction accelerated with RHK height, indicating that HQCR enhancement was affected by the kicking height. Previous research has argued that the HQCR level increased when the pivot leg sustained a strong impact from the dynamic knee valgus, thus the pivot leg functions as a provider of joint stability and mitigator of the valgus on ACL tension effects (Norcross et al., 2010; Sam, 2010). This previous finding also implied that players must have a strong HQCR to withstand the impact from foot planting when performing a high kick. When entering the return phase, the ability to quickly induce a strong CIBF-RF force is crucial for knee joint stabilization (Kellis et al., 2004; Sam, 2010; Thibordee and Prasartwuth, 2014). According to this study’s observation of the activation of each muscle, decreased RF activation on the pivot leg during return was the main cause of the decrease in CIBF-RF. Studies have also revealed that the force exerted by the hamstring can limit the forward tibia displacement when landing, thereby alleviating the burden sustained by the ACL and absorbing the landing shock (Kellis et al., 2003; Li et al., 1999; Norcross et al., 2010; Opar and Serpell, 2014; Shin et al., 2007). Yu et al. (2006) demonstrated that when the knee joint sustained pressure generated by the dynamic knee valgus, the knee joint was susceptible to injuries if the hamstring muscles did not facilitate the type of desirable contraction that provided dynamic stability. Opar and Serpell (2014) noted that stable hamstring contraction must be ensured to reduce the ACL load at the knee joint, demonstrating more generally that the hamstring muscles are essential stabilizer muscles that resist knee valgus load during high RHK deceleration. Moreover, when the knee joint was at full abduction angle, excessive activation of the quadriceps can intensify the shear force on the ACL (Brophy et al., 2010). Similarly, the present study discovered that when performing a high kick, quadriceps activation at the return phase decreased, possibly due to a protective muscle contraction aimed at lowering the burden on the knee ligaments. This study observed that the magnitude of CIGM-AD did not increase with the kicking height at the xiphoid position despite an evident co-activation reaction. Few studies discussed the GM activation effects on different kicking heights. One study compared soccer players of different sexes with respect to their hip motions and hip abductor activation when kicking a ball (Brophy et al., 2010). According to the results from that study, the pivot leg of female players who were susceptible to ACL injuries exhibited less satisfactory lower-extremity alignment and GM–AD co-activation reactions (Brophy et al., 2010) relative to their non-susceptible counterparts. In general, the GM at the pivot leg must provide stability during the soccer kicking process if injury was to be avoided. If such stability was not provided, hip abduction and internal rotation were likely to intensify during support, where such intensification, in turn, increased the knee twisting force (Hanson et al., 2008). Similarly, when the kicking height increased, the body tended to lean backward to increase the pelvic lateral inclination, thereby elevating the pelvis at the attacking leg (Kim et al., 2010b). This posture adjustment allowed the centre of gravity to move backward and help reduce the hip abductor burden at the pivot leg when performing a kick. The present study confirmed that GM activation was the most notable at the return phase of a moderate-height kick, indicating that hip abductor stabilization was required for kicks lower than head height to guarantee hip stability. The implication of this study was that when players perform high kicks, their pivot leg induced a posture with greater dynamic knee valgus, knee straightening, and a high level of requisite HQCR (for lower-limb joint stabilization). TKD training should focus on hamstring training, where a strong hamstring might form the basis of injury-mitigating high-RHK technique (Opar and Serpell, 2014). Like FIFA 11+, an injury-prevention program designed for soccer players, involved exercises that progressively induced lower-limb neuromuscular functions (Daneshjoo et al., 2012; Monajati et al., 2016); FIFA 11+ has been proven to effectively prevent knee joint injuries (Barengo et al., 2014; Grooms et al., 2013). Accordingly, this study argues that a standard TKD warm-up program should be designed to condition the hamstring muscles, thereby reducing the risks for those injuries to the knee joints caused by pivot leg planting and spinning. Scholars have made similar arguments (Park and Song, 2018) involving a training regimen that facilitates knee injury prevention when kicking in TKD. This study was limited in that the height of the kick, the displacement distance, and the pivoting foot, were primarily controlled by the athlete. However, a mark on the ground was used to confirm the sliding distance and the height of the kick target was based on the anatomical position of human body. Nonetheless, the situation was still potentially different from the kicking performance of athletes facing real opponents. In addition, the experimental design and laboratory-based nature of the study may have caused the athlete's performance to be over-regulated and distorted, and thereby not representative of the real phenomenon during competition (Gavagan and Sayers, 2017). Furthermore, another limitation was that only high-level TKD athletes were recruited in the study. Recent studies have found that differences in the level of professional knowledge of TKD athletes were inconsistent with specific neuromuscular responses and technical aspects of high kicks (Moreira et al., 2018). Finally, the the recruitment and analysis of different genders in single group may have influenced the study’s findings. Subjects of different genders may have inconsistent lower-extremity neuromuscular control and knee movement behaviours when performing landing tasks (Brophy et al., 2010; Hewett et al., 2005) and the injury mechanism of female TKD athletes may be different from that of males (Yalfani et al., 2019). Therefore, further research should be done to explore the impact of genders on these currently examined outcome variables. |