Does Static Stretching Compromise Jump Performance in Diurnal Variation?

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Abstract

The purpose of the study was to investigate the effect of static stretching on squat jump (SJ) and countermovement jump (CMJ) in diurnal variation. Fifty-three male collegiate athletes (age=21.9±2.6 years; height=179.7±8.1cm; body-mass=75.3±8.6kg; mean±SD) completed the SJ and CMJ tests either after static stretching or no stretching protocols at two times of the day (07:00h and 17:00h) in random order on non-consecutive days. After warming-up for 5 minutes with low-intensity jogging, participants walked for 2 minutes before performing one of the two stretching protocols (static stretching or no stretching) then 4-5 minutes of additional rest was given before SJ and CMJ performances were measured. Jump heights were analyzed using the two-way ANOVA with repeated measures (2[stretching]×2[time-of-day]). No stretching protocol caused better jump heights in both SJ and CMJ (p

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Gelen, E., Bakici, D., Yaşar, M. N., & Turgut, A. (2021). Does Static Stretching Compromise Jump Performance in Diurnal Variation? European Journal of Human Movement, 47, 23–31. https://doi.org/10.21134/eurjhm.2021.47.3

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