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COMPLETED
NCT07567677
NA

Flywheel vs Traditional Resistance Training for Change of Direction in Elite Soccer Players

Sponsor: Beijing Sport University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The purpose of this randomized controlled trial is to compare the effects of unilateral flywheel resistance training and unilateral traditional resistance training on change-of-direction performance in elite male soccer players. A total of 22 elite soccer players will be randomly assigned to either a flywheel resistance training group or a traditional resistance training group. Both groups will perform supervised training twice per week for 8 weeks in addition to their regular soccer training. Performance outcomes will include linear sprint tests (10 m and 30 m), pre-planned change-of-direction tests (Pro-agility, T-test, Arrowhead test), and agility tests under no-ball and with-ball conditions (AFL agility test). The primary outcome is change-of-direction performance assessed by the T-test. Secondary outcomes include direction-specific change-of-direction ability and agility performance. It is hypothesized that unilateral flywheel resistance training will produce greater improvements in change-of-direction performance compared with traditional resistance training, particularly in tasks involving braking and re-acceleration.

Official title: The Effects of Unilateral Flywheel Training and Traditional Resistance Training on Change-of-Direction Performance in Elite Soccer Players: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Key Details

Gender

MALE

Age Range

18 Years - 25 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

22

Start Date

2026-02-20

Completion Date

2026-04-21

Last Updated

2026-05-08

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

OTHER

Flywheel Resistance Training

Unilateral flywheel resistance training was performed using a Bulgarian split squat exercise on a flywheel device. Participants completed 2 training sessions per week for 8 weeks. Each session consisted of 4 sets of 6 repetitions per leg. The inertial load was individually selected based on mean concentric velocity matching. Participants were instructed to perform the concentric phase explosively and the eccentric phase with maximal braking effort.

OTHER

Traditional Resistance Training

Unilateral traditional resistance training was performed using a barbell Bulgarian split squat exercise. Participants trained twice per week for 8 weeks. Each session consisted of 4 sets of 6 repetitions per leg at approximately 80% of one-repetition maximum. Movement tempo was controlled with an explosive concentric phase and a controlled eccentric phase.

Locations (1)

Beijing Sport University

Beijing, China