A Kinematic Analysis of the Jumping Front-Leg Axe-Kick in Taekwondo

The jumping front-leg axe-kick is a valid attacking and counterattacking technique in Taekwondo competition (Streif, 1993). Yet, the existing literature on this technique is sparse (Kloiber et al., 2009). Therefore, the goal of this study was to determine parameters contributing significantly to max...

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Main Author: Emanuel Preuschl, Michaela Hassmann, Arnold Baca
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Uludag 2016-03-01
Series:Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jssm.org/researchjssm-15-92.xml.xml
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spelling doaj-bbfdc9827c3e4ffc9e666b5214c38e872020-11-24T22:52:00ZengUniversity of UludagJournal of Sports Science and Medicine1303-29682016-03-0115192101A Kinematic Analysis of the Jumping Front-Leg Axe-Kick in TaekwondoEmanuel Preuschl, Michaela Hassmann, Arnold Baca0University of Vienna, Institute of Sport Science, Department of Biomechanics, Kinesiology and Applied Computer Science, Vienna, AustriaThe jumping front-leg axe-kick is a valid attacking and counterattacking technique in Taekwondo competition (Streif, 1993). Yet, the existing literature on this technique is sparse (Kloiber et al., 2009). Therefore, the goal of this study was to determine parameters contributing significantly to maximum linear speed of the foot at impact. Parameters are timing of segment and joint angular velocity characteristics and segment lengths of the kicking leg. Moreover, we were interested in the prevalence of proximal-to-distal-sequencing. Three-dimensional kinematics of the kicks of 22 male Taekwondo-athletes (age: 23.3 ± 5.3 years) were recorded via a motion capturing system (Vicon Motion Systems Limited, Oxford, UK). The participants performed maximum effort kicks onto a rack-held kicking pad. Only the kick with the highest impact velocity was analysed, as it was assumed to represent the individual’s best performance. Significant Pearson correlations to impact velocity were found for pelvis tilt angular displacement (r = 0.468, p < 0.05) and for hip extension angular velocity (r = -0.446, p < 0.05) and for the timing of the minima of pelvis tilt velocity (r = -0.426, p < 0.05) and knee flexion velocity (r = -0.480, p < 0.05). Backward step linear regression analysis suggests a model consisting of three predictor variables: pelvis tilt angular displacement, hip flexion velocity at target contact and timing of pelvic tilt angular velocity minimum (adjusted R2 = 0.524). Results of Chi-Squared tests show that neither for the leg-raising period (χ2 = 2.909) of the technique, nor for the leg-lowering period a pattern of proximal-to-distal sequencing is prevalent (χ2 = 0.727). From the results we conclude that the jumping front-leg axe-kick does not follow a proximal-to-distal pattern. Raising the leg early in the technique and apprehending the upper body to be leant back during the leg-lowering period seems to be beneficial for high impact velocity. Furthermore, striking by extending the hip rather than by flexing the knee could raise impact velocity.http://www.jssm.org/researchjssm-15-92.xml.xmlBiomechanicsmotion analysismartial artstimingkicking velocityjoint angle
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emanuel Preuschl, Michaela Hassmann, Arnold Baca
spellingShingle Emanuel Preuschl, Michaela Hassmann, Arnold Baca
A Kinematic Analysis of the Jumping Front-Leg Axe-Kick in Taekwondo
Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Biomechanics
motion analysis
martial arts
timing
kicking velocity
joint angle
author_facet Emanuel Preuschl, Michaela Hassmann, Arnold Baca
author_sort Emanuel Preuschl, Michaela Hassmann, Arnold Baca
title A Kinematic Analysis of the Jumping Front-Leg Axe-Kick in Taekwondo
title_short A Kinematic Analysis of the Jumping Front-Leg Axe-Kick in Taekwondo
title_full A Kinematic Analysis of the Jumping Front-Leg Axe-Kick in Taekwondo
title_fullStr A Kinematic Analysis of the Jumping Front-Leg Axe-Kick in Taekwondo
title_full_unstemmed A Kinematic Analysis of the Jumping Front-Leg Axe-Kick in Taekwondo
title_sort kinematic analysis of the jumping front-leg axe-kick in taekwondo
publisher University of Uludag
series Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
issn 1303-2968
publishDate 2016-03-01
description The jumping front-leg axe-kick is a valid attacking and counterattacking technique in Taekwondo competition (Streif, 1993). Yet, the existing literature on this technique is sparse (Kloiber et al., 2009). Therefore, the goal of this study was to determine parameters contributing significantly to maximum linear speed of the foot at impact. Parameters are timing of segment and joint angular velocity characteristics and segment lengths of the kicking leg. Moreover, we were interested in the prevalence of proximal-to-distal-sequencing. Three-dimensional kinematics of the kicks of 22 male Taekwondo-athletes (age: 23.3 ± 5.3 years) were recorded via a motion capturing system (Vicon Motion Systems Limited, Oxford, UK). The participants performed maximum effort kicks onto a rack-held kicking pad. Only the kick with the highest impact velocity was analysed, as it was assumed to represent the individual’s best performance. Significant Pearson correlations to impact velocity were found for pelvis tilt angular displacement (r = 0.468, p < 0.05) and for hip extension angular velocity (r = -0.446, p < 0.05) and for the timing of the minima of pelvis tilt velocity (r = -0.426, p < 0.05) and knee flexion velocity (r = -0.480, p < 0.05). Backward step linear regression analysis suggests a model consisting of three predictor variables: pelvis tilt angular displacement, hip flexion velocity at target contact and timing of pelvic tilt angular velocity minimum (adjusted R2 = 0.524). Results of Chi-Squared tests show that neither for the leg-raising period (χ2 = 2.909) of the technique, nor for the leg-lowering period a pattern of proximal-to-distal sequencing is prevalent (χ2 = 0.727). From the results we conclude that the jumping front-leg axe-kick does not follow a proximal-to-distal pattern. Raising the leg early in the technique and apprehending the upper body to be leant back during the leg-lowering period seems to be beneficial for high impact velocity. Furthermore, striking by extending the hip rather than by flexing the knee could raise impact velocity.
topic Biomechanics
motion analysis
martial arts
timing
kicking velocity
joint angle
url http://www.jssm.org/researchjssm-15-92.xml.xml
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