One male drag-flicker (19 years old; 66.8 kg; 1.71 m; eight years of field hockey experience) participated in this study. He was a drag- flicker from the under-21 Spanish National Team. The participant was requested to provide informed consent prior to his participation. The University’s Ethics Committee approved the research protocol. The training sessions were conducted in the hockey field of the Spanish Sports Council’s High Performance Centre. The player exercised three times per week using specific drills over a four week period, completing a total of 12 sessions (Beckamnn et al., 2010). The average duration of the training sessions was 45 minutes and they were supervised by a qualified hockey coach and ex-Olympic athlete. The training sessions started with a preliminary warm up which was followed by four drills ordered by increasing complexity (Figures 1, Figures 2, Figures 3 and Figures 4). Each drill was related to findings from previous studies (McLaughlin, 1997; Yusoff et al., 2008; López de Subijana et al., 2010) and it was performed in 2 sets with 7 repetitions per set (2x7). After each drill, 10 free drag- flicks were performed in order to add the new information to the overall movement. The training sessions were designed and organized according to a panel of expert. All the coaches selected had a minimum of 10 years experience as hockey coaches and they were members of the staff of the Royal Spanish Hockey Federation. Three dimensional (3D) data analysis was conducted prior to and after the training period. All of the measurements were carried out in the Biomechanics Laboratory of the Faculty of Physical Activity and Sport Sciences at the Technical University of Madrid. A VICON optoelectronic system (Oxford Metrics, Oxford, UK) captured the drag-flicks with six cameras, sampling at 250 Hz. The experimental space was 5m long, 2.5m wide and 2m high, and was dynamically and statically calibrated with an error of less than 2 cm and a static reproducibility of 0.4%. A total of 49 retro- reflective markers (46 body markers and three 14 mm diameter stick markers) were attached to anatomical landmarks following VICON’s kinematics model (Vicon Motion Systems, 2003). The stick markers were placed where the player’s grip began, at the toe of the shaft, and at the end of the shaft. The stick’s features (height: 94 cm; mass: 584.6 g; distance between the center of mass position and the end of the shaft: 38.4 cm) were approved by the International Hockey Federation (2009). Raw data were filtered using quintic spline functions based on Woltring’s Generalized Cross-Validation (GCV) method for calculating the smoothing factor (Woltring, 1986). As markers could not be placed on the ball, an official field hockey ball was covered with adhesive reflective material. VICON cameras recognized the ball as a marker and ball velocity was estimated. After a specific warm-up, 20 trials were carried out and captured at habitual speed. In each trial, the participant shot into a goal area marked with a fence in front of the player. If the participant did not score in the goal area, the trial was rejected. The ball was placed by the subject approximately 1.5 to 2 m away from the centre of the calibrated area. The drag-flick movement commenced once the front foot made contact with the floor, and finished 20 frames after the stick’s peak positive angular velocity. The pelvis, upper trunk and stick angles were calculated using the line of the double foot contact as the y-axis, the x-axis as 90° to the right of the y-axis and the z-axis as the vertical axis. The angular velocities were computed from the angles formed by the upper trunk (shoulder line), pelvis (hip line), and stick with the x-axis on the xy plane. The knee flexion angle was computed for the front leg only. The knee flexion angle was computed for the front leg only. The following key events of the drag-flick were identified: T1 (front foot contact); T2 (maximum angular velocity of the pelvis); T3 (peak negative angular velocity of the stick); T4 (maximum angular velocity of the upper trunk); T5 (maximum angular velocity of the stick); and T6 (ball release). The event times were normalized to the T1-T6 times. The stance width, drag-flick distance and the front foot-ball distance at T1 were normalized to the player’s height. Statistical analysis was carried out using SPSS v.16 software (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, United States). The means and standard deviations of the study parameters were calculated. In order to analyze pre- and post-test differences, a dependent t-test was carried out. The alpha level of significance was set at p < 0.05 for all statistical tests. |