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Research Shorts

Research Shorts

By: Research Shorts Editorial
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Research moves fast. Most people don't. Breaking down research studies into clear, concise episodes. Topics include sports science, human performance, health, and innovation. AI-powered delivery means we can cover more research, more frequently. No academic jargon. No gatekeeping.

Exercise & Fitness Fitness, Diet & Nutrition Hygiene & Healthy Living Physical Illness & Disease
Episodes
  • Flywheel vs. Traditional Training Methods: A Review
    Jun 4 2026

    Seven studies. 201 athletes. Five databases screened. This is what a meta-analysis looks like when the data actually tells a clean story.

    Flywheel resistance training outperformed traditional weight training on change of direction performance with a standardized mean difference of 0.64. That might sound small. It isn't. The within-group effect for flywheel training came in at 1.63 — a large effect by any statistical convention. Traditional weights produced 0.62. The gap is real and it's consistent across every included study.

    But the dose findings are where it gets interesting. Two sessions per week outperformed three. Twelve total sessions produced larger effects than seventeen. More training volume didn't just fail to add benefit — it actively reduced the effect size. The research points to one clear mechanism. Flywheel devices create eccentric overload that traditional weights simply cannot replicate at the same intensity. Eccentric strength drives the braking phase of a cut. Better braking means faster re-acceleration. Faster re-acceleration means the athlete gets there first.

    This episode breaks down every layer of the research — the methodology, the effect sizes, the dose-response relationships, and what it all means for how coaches should actually be programming agility work. The data has spoken. The question is whether the training world is listening.

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    22 mins
  • Why Getting Stronger Makes You Slower... At First
    May 25 2026

    Science just proved something coaches have ignored for years. You can build serious strength and still run slower. A 9-week study showed athletes getting stronger week after week while their sprint times got worse. Then one thing changed. This is the training mistake killing athletic performance.

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    22 mins
  • T-Junction Hamstring Injuries: The Hidden Muscle Loss That Persists Months After Return to Play
    May 17 2026

    Hamstring injuries are the most common and costly injury in professional soccer — and they're getting worse. But not all hamstring injuries are equal. The T-junction, where the long and short heads of the biceps femoris meet distally, represents one of the most poorly understood and potentially most dangerous subtypes — with re-injury rates as high as 54%.

    Research from an English Premier League club is now showing something that should concern every performance and medical team: months after T-junction hamstring injury and full return to play, a significant and consistent deficit in biceps femoris muscle thickness remains in the previously injured leg — visible on ultrasound, measurable, and absent in uninjured teammates.

    This episode breaks down what the muscle architecture data actually shows, why T-junction injuries appear to behave differently from other hamstring injuries, what the muscle thickness deficit means for re-injury risk, and what rehabilitation teams should be targeting before clearing players to return.

    If hamstring injury prevention, return to play, or muscle architecture assessment sits anywhere in your role — this episode belongs on your list.

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    23 mins
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