Effects of Plyometric and High Intensity Interval Training on Sprint Speed, Agility and Power Among Female Fast Bowlers

NAActive, not recruitingINTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment

35

Participants

Timeline

Start Date

March 20, 2025

Primary Completion Date

June 20, 2025

Study Completion Date

February 2, 2026

Conditions
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Interventions
DIAGNOSTIC_TEST

Plyometric Training

"Frequency: Three sessions per week on non-consecutive days to allow for adequate recovery.~Intensity: High-intensity exercises performed at 80-90% of maximum effort. Exercises include box jumps, depth jumps, lateral bounds, and tuck jumps targeting explosive power and agility.~Time: Each session lasts approximately 45-60 minutes, including: Warm-up (10 minutes), Core Plyometric Exercises (30-40 minutes), Cool-down (5-10 minutes) Type: Explosive lower-body movements utilizing the stretch-shortening cycle (SSC) to improve neuromuscular coordination, sprint speed, and power."

COMBINATION_PRODUCT

(High-Intensity Interval Training (HIIT)

Frequency: Three sessions per week (e.g., Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday) with a rest day between sessions. Intensity: Alternating between 85-95% of maximum heart rate during high-intensity intervals and 50-60% of maximum heart rate during recovery periods. Work-to-rest ratio of 1:2 (e.g., 30 seconds of high-intensity sprints followed by 60 seconds of low-intensity walking). Time: Each session lasts approximately 45-50 minutes, including: Warm-up (10 minutes), HIIT Intervals (25-30 minutes with 8-12 work-rest cycles), Cool-down (5-10 minutes) Type: Cardiovascular exercises such as sprinting, cycling, or shuttle runs designed to enhance anaerobic capacity, agility, and sprint speed.

Trial Locations (1)

Unknown

Punjab university, education university, GCU university, Lahore

All Listed Sponsors
lead

Superior University

OTHER