posted on 2017-03-22, 16:30authored byLorna A. Barry, Ian C. Kenny, Thomas M. Comyns
Warm-up protocols have the potential to cause an acute enhancement of dynamic sprinting performance. The
purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of three repetition specific gluteal activation warm-up protocols on
acceleration performance in male rugby union players. Forty male academy rugby union players were randomly
assigned to one of 4 groups (control, 5, 10 or 15 repetition gluteal activation group) and performed 10 m sprints at
baseline and 30 s, 2, 4, 6 and 8 min after their specific intervention protocol. Five and ten meter sprint times were the
dependent variable and dual-beam timing gates were used to record all sprint times. Repeated measures analysis of
variance found no significant improvement in 5 and 10 m sprint times between baseline and post warm-up scores (p ≥
0.05) for all groups. There were no reported significant differences between groups at any of the rest interval time
points (p ≥ 0.05). However, when individual responses to the warm-up protocols were analyzed, the 15 repetition
gluteal activation group had faster 10 m times post-intervention and this improvement was significant (p = 0.021).
These results would indicate that there is no specific rest interval for any of the gluteal interventions that results in a
potentiation effect on acceleration performance. However, the individual response analysis would seem to indicate that a
15 repetition gluteal activation warm-up protocol has a potentiating effect on acceleration performance provided that
the rest interval is adequately and individually determined.