Rowing is New Zealand's top Olympic medal winner - and now new research into muscles and tendons is targeting increased performance in that and possibly other sports.
Auckland University of Technology (AUT) postgraduate student Ryan Turfrey is doing his PhD on the structural changes of muscles and tendons during strength-based exercise and how they affect performance at the highest level of the sport.
Rowing is already our most prolific source of Olympic medals (21 in all since 1908, just ahead of track and field with 20 and sailing with 18) and Turfrey has a box seat for conducting and applying his research. He is one of the strength and conditioning specialists for Rowing New Zealand in Cambridge, through High Performance Sport New Zealand (HPSNZ).
He hopes his findings will offer greater understanding of how strength training can be effectively used during the build-up to major sporting events, developing targeted and tailored exercise programmes for high-performance athletes.
It works like this: using ultrasound technology, Turfrey will analyse muscle changes of rowers in response to different training stimuli to establish the effect of the training. The main aim is to discover which of the current strength-based exercises are best when training for a large event.
The ultrasound gives a picture of the structure of the muscle fibres, important for determining the strength and speed of the athlete. That information can be useful for individualising training and maximising the positive benefits on muscles and their performance.
The research will be conducted in the build-up to the 2016 Rio Olympics with findings used to help future campaigns. It may help refine existing knowledge to provide performance boosts.