John J. McMahon
University of Salford
108 Papers
187 Citations
John J. McMahon is an academic researcher from University of Salford. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 85 publications.
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Papers
A comparison of kinetic and kinematic variables during the midthigh pull and countermovement shrug, across loads
TL;DR: Results of this study demonstrate that the CMS may be a more advantageous exercise to perform to enhance force-time characteristics when compared with the MTP, due to the greater kinetics and kinematic values observed.
Changes in Strength, Power, and Speed Across a Season in English County Cricketers
TL;DR: The results of this study show that neither the demands of the competitive cricket season nor current in-season training practices provide a sufficient stimulus to maintain strength, jump, and sprint performances in these cricketers, and coaches should implement a more-frequent, higher-load strength-training program across thecompetitive cricket season.
No Kinetic Differences During Variations of the Power Clean in Inexperienced Female Collegiate Athletes
TL;DR: There appears to be no advantage in terms of peak power, Fz, or RFD between variations of the clean, in inexperienced female athletes, and it is suggested that inexperienced athletes intermittently perform different variations ofThe clean to ensure all round development and technical competence in each variation of the exercise.
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The effect of load placement on the power production characteristics of three lower extremity jumping exercises
Timothy J. Suchomel,Shana M. McKeever,Olusegun Sijuwade,Logan Carpenter,John J. McMahon,Irineu Loturco,Paul Comfort +6 more
TL;DR: The JShrug possessed statistically different power-time characteristics compared to both the JS and the HEXJ during the countermovement and propulsion phases, and appear to be superior exercises for PPRel compared to the JS.
Within-subject consistency of unimodal and bimodal force application during the countermovement jump
Jason P. Lake,John J. McMahon +1 more
- 08 Nov 2018
TL;DR: The results of this study suggest that researchers and practitioners should ensure within-subject consistency before group averaging CMJ force–time data, to avoid errors.
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