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An investigation into determinants of successful rowing performance in terms of body morphology and stretcher position.

Emery, Morag

Authors

Morag Emery



Contributors

Arthur D. Stewart
Supervisor

Abstract

Successful rowers competing at an elite level have been shown to have particular morphological characteristics that are associated with their success (Bourgois et al. 2001; Slater et al. 2005; Kerr et al. 2007). The aim of this investigation was to identify physical attributes that confer an advantage to 2km rowing ergometer performance in Scottish University rowers. The participants comprised thirty open-class males, twenty lightweight males, eighteen open-class females and four lightweight females including four world-class start athletes, who were all competing for their universities at the championships. A secondary aim was to determine a relationship between peak acceleration in a single scull, at three differing foot-stretcher positions and body morphology. Six experienced female scullers participated in this secondary experiment. Rowers competing at the Scottish University Indoor Rowing Championships 2007 and 2008 were measured for thirty-nine anthropometric dimensions, using standard International Society for the Advancement of Kinanthropometry (ISAK) protocol. Stature, muscle mass and mid-thigh girth were correlated with performance in open-class men (p < 0.05), while biiliocristal breadth and humerus breadth were correlated with performance in lightweight men (p < 0.05). Corrected forearm girth and sum of skinfolds were correlated with performance in females (p < 0.05). After scaling for stature, distinct differences could be seen between the male and female athletes. A regression showed a relationship to exist (r2 = 0.64) between stature, body mass and peak acceleration in a single scull. The results supported a conclusion that Scottish University rowers showed distinct morphological characteristics which provide a competitive advantage in 2km ergometer rowing. The results also made it possible to establish a relationship between morphology and peak acceleration in a single scull.

Citation

EMERY, M. 2008. An investigation into determinants of successful rowing performance in terms of body morphology and stretcher position. Robert Gordon University, MRes thesis.

Thesis Type Thesis
Deposit Date Sep 2, 2009
Publicly Available Date Sep 2, 2009
Keywords Rowing; Anthropometry; Proportionality; Somatotype; World class; Start; Foot stretcher position; Techinque system; Instrumentation system
Public URL http://hdl.handle.net/10059/414
Award Date Nov 30, 2008

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