Is there a relationship between the overhead press and split jerk maximum performance? Influence of sex
Identifiers
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12020/1528ISSN: 1747-9541
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/17479541211020452
Author/s
Soriano, Marcos A.; Haff, G. Gregory; Comfort, Paul; Amaro-Gahete, Francisco J.; Torres-González, Antonio; [et al.]Date
2022Document type
articleÁrea/s de conocimiento
Ciencias de la Actividad Física y del DeporteAbstract
The aims of this study were to (I) determine the differences and relationship between the overhead press and split jerk
performance in athletes involved in weightlifting training, and (II) explore the magnitude of these differences in onerepetition
maximum (1RM) performances between sexes. Sixty-one men (age: 30.4 6.7 years; height: 1.8 0.5 m; body
mass 82.5 8.5 kg; weightlifting training experience: 3.7 3.5 yrs) and 21 women (age: 29.5 5.2 yrs; height: 1.7
0.5 m; body mass: 62.6 5.7 kg; weightlifting training experience: 3.0 1.5 yrs) participated. The 1RM performance of
the overhead press and split jerk were assessed for all participants, with the overhead press assessed on two occasions
to determine between-session reliability. The intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) and 95% confidence intervals
showed a high reliability for the overhead press ICC¼0.98 (0.97 – 0.99). A very strong correlation and significant
differences were found between the overhead press and split jerk 1RM performances for all participants (r¼0.90 [0.93
– 0.85], 60.2 18.3 kg, 95.7 29.3 kg, p 0.001). Men demonstrated stronger correlations between the overhead press
and split jerk 1RM performances (r¼0.83 [0.73-0.90], p 0.001) compared with women (r¼0.56 [0.17-0.80],
p¼0.008). These results provide evidence that 1RM performance of the overhead press and split jerk performance
are highly related, highlighting the importance of upper-limb strength in the split jerk maximum performance.





