Biological and physical fitness adaptations in soccer players after jump training: a systematic scoping review

Purpose To conduct a systematic scoping review assessing the effects of jump training in soccer players physical fitness. Methods Included studies incorporated: (i) soccer players; (ii) jump-training interventions; and (iii) outcomes related to physical fitness (e.g. endurance). Selection was not b...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rohit Kumar Thapa, Exal Garcia-Carrillo, Andrew Sortwell, Paul J. Byrne, José Afonso, Rodrigo Ramirez-Campillo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Termedia Publishing House 2025-03-01
Series:Human Movement
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hummov.awf.wroc.pl/Biological-and-physical-fitness-adaptations-in-soccer-players-after-jump-training,199886,0,2.html
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Purpose To conduct a systematic scoping review assessing the effects of jump training in soccer players physical fitness. Methods Included studies incorporated: (i) soccer players; (ii) jump-training interventions; and (iii) outcomes related to physical fitness (e.g. endurance). Selection was not based on comparator groups and/or study designs. PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus databases were searched for documents. One author led the process, and a second author independently verified the process. The type of outcome measure determined studies aggrupation [e.g. vertical jump (e.g. height; contact time)], with a narrative synthesis accompanied by data summaries (e.g. percentage). Results Included studies involved males (adults k = 25; youths k = 52) and females (adults k = 8; youths k = 3). Nonrandomised interventions (single-arm and multi-arm) comprised ~40% of the studies, with durations between 3–96 weeks, and improvements in 1 outcome, including body composition, stiffness, electromyographic activity, potential injury risk factors, kicking velocity, repeated sprint ability, linear sprinting, endurance, balance, maximal strength, and jump performance. However, only 10-13 participants were involved in jump training groups. Further, false significant results and publication bias in favour of studies with significant findings are potentially common issues in the available literature. Conclusions Jump training may improve physical fitness in soccer players. However, methodological issues (e.g. non-randomisedcontrolled studies) and evidence gaps (e.g. fewer female studies) were noted. More and better-designed jump training studies on soccer participants are advised before robust recommendations regarding optimal jump training regimens can be made.
ISSN:1899-1955