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JOURNAL OF
SPORTS SCIENCE & MEDICINE
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KINEMATIC INSTEP KICKING DIFFERENCES BETWEEN ELITE FEMALE AND MALE SOCCER PLAYERS
1Department of Orthopaedic Surgery-Medical University of South Carolina & College of Charleston-Charleston,USA. 2Departments of Orthopaedic Surgery & Exercise & Sport Sciences-University of NC-Chapel Hill, NC, USA. 3Center for Human Movement Science, Division of Physical Therapy-University of NC-Chapel Hill-Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
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| ABSTRACT | |||||||||||
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The rapid rise in female participation in soccer worldwide has not been
followed by a corresponding increase in the number of studies biomechanically
that target female kicking patterns to determine if differences exist
between males and females. The objectives of this study were to examine
kinematic instep kicking differences between elite female and male soccer
players in dominant and nondominant limbs. Eight elite soccer players,
six females and two males, volunteered as subjects in the study. Subjects
took a two-step angled approach of 45-60 degrees to a stationary soccer
ball positioned between two force platforms and kicked the ball with the
instep portion of the foot as hard as possible into netting which was
draped from the ceiling. Ball velocity was the dependent variable. We
evaluated six additional variables that have previously been shown to
be important predictors of instep kicking ball speed. The males generally
kicked the ball faster than the females and displayed greater kinematic
variables, including maximum toe velocity, ball contact ball velocity,
mean toe velocity, mean toe acceleration, and ankle velocity at ball contact,
all of which contributed to faster ball speed. There was one exception.
One of the elite females kicked faster than the two elite males and demonstrated
higher or similar kinematic patterns when compared with the males. Our
conclusions were that females do not instep kick the ball as fast as males,
but there are exceptions as our data demonstrates.
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