key: cord-0751504-hlaz0oly authors: Donskov, Anthony S.; Brooks, Jeffrey S.; Dickey, James P. title: Normative Reference of the Single Leg, Medial Countermovement Jump in Adolescent Youth Ice Hockey Players date: 2021-07-26 journal: Sports (Basel) DOI: 10.3390/sports9080105 sha: f183c8a39a9f5d8286f5e68582e2e58f78ced700 doc_id: 751504 cord_uid: hlaz0oly Functional performance tests provide quantitative information on specialized sport movements and are important for documenting training and fatigue. The single leg, medial countermovement jump provides objective measures of frontal plane force, velocity and power, and is relevant for ice hockey players given the similar lateral movement to ice skating. This study measured normative single leg, medial countermovement jump parameters (i.e., vertical and lateral maximum force, average concentric power and average concentric power during the last 100 ms) amongst male youth ice hockey players and assessed interlimb asymmetry in these healthy athletes. Ninety-one elite youth players participated in the study. Participants completed three right and three left jumps. Non-parametric tests were performed to evaluate between-jump and between-group comparisons. Many differences in jump force and power parameters were observed between the 10U/11U and 12U/13U age groups, and the 12U/13U and 14U/15U age groups, but differences were not as consistent between older or younger players. The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for force parameters, while the power parameters had larger asymmetry indices (between 9% and 22%). Our results provide age-specific reference values and asymmetry indices for male elite youth ice hockey players aged 10–18 years performing the single leg, medial countermovement jump. Ice hockey has become one of the most popular sports played in North America with 561,700 players under 18 years of age registered with USA Hockey in 2019-2020 [1] . As players mature, a greater emphasis is placed on their skill and physical development, resulting in improved upper body strength and lower body power [2] . Consequently, physical preparation training and testing is paramount for tracking progress and improvement over time [3] . Tests such as the countermovement jump, squat jump and three hop jump have been employed to measure physical performance [4, 5] . However, the best tests for assessing physical capacities and return to sport are those that closely mimic the biomechanics of the sporting activity [6] . The single leg, medial countermovement jump is a reliable measure of assessing youth hockey player performance [7] . Nevertheless, normative values across multiple youth ice hockey age groups have yet to be reported. The single leg, medial countermovement jump is a lower body power test that incorporates a high degree of force, velocity, impulsiveness and coordination in the frontal plane. It has been used to assess the unilateral power output of field and court sport athletes [8, 9] . One study has examined the reliability of various temporal and kinetic variables involved in jumping vertically, horizontally and medially [8] . This study determined that eccentric and concentric peak force and concentric peak power were the only reliable measures between single leg vertical, horizontal and medial jumps [8] . Another group of researchers Participants performed a standardized 15 min warmup consisting of static stretching, mobility and dynamic movement (foam rolling, knee hugs, heel to butt, reverse lunge, single leg deadlift with reach, A skips, back pedaling, short accelerations). Participants performed single leg, medial countermovement jumps on both left and right legs for three repetitions each. Jumps were performed in randomized ordered blocks for each leg. Jump ground reaction forces were measured using bilateral force plates (OR6-7, AMTI, Watertown, MA, USA). A custom LabVIEW program (LabVIEW 2012, National Instruments, Austin, TX, USA) sampled the force plate signals at 200 Hz with a 16-bit analog-to-digital converter (USB 6211, National Instruments, Austin, TX, USA). One minute of rest was provided between each jump to prevent fatigue [19] . Standardized verbal commands and demonstrations were administered to all participants by the same staff member. Maximal effort on each jump attempt was encouraged by verbal support from the coaching staff. During the single leg, medial countermovement jump, participants squatted to a self-selected depth on the designated leg, while standing on a force plate, and then jumped medially as high and as far as possible landing on both legs. Arm swing was permitted. All jumps were monitored by two strength and conditioning professionals to ensure proper jumping technique. Compromised trials (improper technique, equipment malfunction) were discarded and repeated. Force plate data was analyzed using custom software in LabVIEW. The force plate signals were unfiltered, similar to other jump research [20] . The resultant forces in the X, Y and Z directions were calculated as the sum of the X, Y and Z forces from both force plates. Participants' bodyweight was extracted from a one second duration window from standing trials. Jump phases (initiation, transition between concentric and eccentric phases, end) were automated in LabVIEW and verified via visual inspection. Jump initiation was defined as the point of time where lateral force started to increase (10 N threshold) . The point where the vertical force dropped to less than 10 N was defined as the end of the jump/task. The transition from the eccentric to the concentric phases was determined when the vertical velocity of the center of mass became positive for longer than 0.1 consecutive seconds, similar to other studies [8] . The product of velocity and force was used to calculate instantaneous vertical and lateral power, as performed in other studies [8, 21] . Maximum force was extracted from the force-time curve. Average concentric power and average concentric power in the last 100 ms were extracted from the power curve. Force and power were expressed in raw units (N and W). In summary, the variables included vertical and lateral maximal force, average concentric power, and average concentric power during There was only one statistically significant difference (peak lateral force for the 12U/13U age group) between the right and left leg jump performances for any of the 24 comparisons (six force and power parameters for each of the four age groups) after false discovery rate adjustment. Consequently, all normative values were based on the combined right and left scores for each participant. In general, all of the power and force parameters for the single leg, medial countermovement jumps increased with age ( Figure 1 ). Note that tabulated normative data are available as Supplementary Materials. The details of the statistical analysis and the effect sizes are reported in Table 2 . Most parameters were significantly different between the ages of 10U/11U and 12U/13U, and 12U/13U and 14U/15U; the 14U/15U group outperformed the 12U/13U group by 22-44% in all six of the parameters. As a general trend, older (14U/15U and 16U/18U) age groups experienced fewer significant differences between age groups. The 12U/13U group had significantly larger scores than the 10U/11U group in all six performance parameters, outperforming them by 18-26%. In addition, three significant differences were observed between the 16U/18U age groups and the 14U/15U for maximum vertical force, vertical average concentric power, and average vertical power during the last 100 ms. The 16U/18U group outperformed the 14U/15U age group by 4-12% in five of the six performance parameters; however, only three were statistically significant (p < 0.05). The 14U/15U group outperformed the 16U/18U group by 1% for lateral average concentric power. Box and whisker plots comparing youth ice hockey single leg, countermovement jump variables across each age group. Panels (A,B) illustrate the maximum lateral and vertical force, respectively. Panels (C,D) illustrate the lateral and vertical average concentric power, respectively. Panels (E,F) illustrate the average lateral and vertical power in the last 100 ms, respectively. Whiskers are extended 1.5 times the length of the interquartile range beyond the box boundaries, defining the inner fence for identifying outliers. Data points that are outside of these fences are identified with individual points. Significant differences (p < 0.05) between adjacent age groups are indicated with brackets. Note that the scales are different for the lateral and vertical panels. Box and whisker plots comparing youth ice hockey single leg, countermovement jump variables across each age group. Panels (A,B) illustrate the maximum lateral and vertical force, respectively. Panels (C,D) illustrate the lateral and vertical average concentric power, respectively. Panels (E,F) illustrate the average lateral and vertical power in the last 100 ms, respectively. Whiskers are extended 1.5 times the length of the interquartile range beyond the box boundaries, defining the inner fence for identifying outliers. Data points that are outside of these fences are identified with individual points. Significant differences (p < 0.05) between adjacent age groups are indicated with brackets. Note that the scales are different for the lateral and vertical panels. m, n and U refer to the number of participants in the two groups and the value of the Mann-Whitney U statistic. VERT refers to vertical, LAT refers to lateral, Con refers to concentric. * p value for the Mann-Whitney U test, before considering the false discovery rate adjustment O denotes statistically significant differences at p < 0.05 after the false discovery rate adjustment. denotes a small effect size, denotes a medium effect size, denotes a large effect size. The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical ( The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical m, n and U refer to the number of participants in the two groups and the value of the Mann-Whitney U statistic. VERT refers to vertical, LAT refers to lateral, Con refers to concentric. * p value for the Mann-Whitney U test, before considering the false discovery rate adjustment O denotes statistically significant differences at p < 0.05 after the false discovery rate adjustment. denotes a small effect size, denotes a medium effect size, denotes a large effect size. The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical m, n and U refer to the number of participants in the two groups and the value of the Mann-Whitney U statistic. VERT refers to vertical, LAT refers to lateral, Con refers to concentric. * p value for the Mann-Whitney U test, before considering the false discovery rate adjustment O denotes statistically significant differences at p < 0.05 after the false discovery rate adjustment. denotes a small effect size, denotes a medium effect size, denotes a large effect size. The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical m, n and U refer to the number of participants in the two groups and the value of the Mann-Whitney U statistic. VERT refers to vertical, LAT refers to lateral, Con refers to concentric. * p value for the Mann-Whitney U test, before considering the false discovery rate adjustment O denotes statistically significant differences at p < 0.05 after the false discovery rate adjustment. denotes a small effect size, denotes a medium effect size, denotes a large effect size. The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical m, n and U refer to the number of participants in the two groups and the value of the Mann-Whitney U statistic. VERT refers to vertical, LAT refers to lateral, Con refers to concentric. * p value for the Mann-Whitney U test, before considering the false discovery rate adjustment O denotes statistically significant differences at p < 0.05 after the false discovery rate adjustment. denotes a small effect size, denotes a medium effect size, denotes a large effect size. The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical m, n and U refer to the number of participants in the two groups and the value of the Mann-Whitney U statistic. VERT refers to vertical, LAT refers to lateral, Con refers to concentric. * p value for the Mann-Whitney U test, before considering the false discovery rate adjustment O denotes statistically significant differences at p < 0.05 after the false discovery rate adjustment. denotes a small effect size, denotes a medium effect size, denotes a large effect size. The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical m, n and U refer to the number of participants in the two groups and the value of the Mann-Whitney U statistic. VERT refers to vertical, LAT refers to lateral, Con refers to concentric. * p value for the Mann-Whitney U test, before considering the false discovery rate adjustment O denotes statistically significant differences at p < 0.05 after the false discovery rate adjustment. denotes a small effect size, denotes a medium effect size, denotes a large effect size. The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all m, n and U refer to the number of participants in the two groups and the value of the Mann-Whitney U statistic. VERT refers to vertical, LAT refers to lateral, Con refers to concentric. * p value for the Mann-Whitney U test, before considering the false discovery rate adjustment O denotes statistically significant differences at p < 0.05 after the false discovery rate adjustment. denotes a small effect size, denotes a medium effect size, denotes a large effect size. The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all m, n and U refer to the number of participants in the two groups and the value of the Mann-Whitney U statistic. VERT refers to vertical, LAT refers to lateral, Con refers to concentric. * p value for the Mann-Whitney U test, before considering the false discovery rate adjustment O denotes statistically significant differences at p < 0.05 after the false discovery rate adjustment. denotes a small effect size, denotes a medium effect size, denotes a large effect size. The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical The average asymmetry index for each age group was less than 15% for both vertical and lateral force parameters ( Table 3 ). The power parameters (vertical and lateral concentric power and the vertical and lateral average concentric power during the last 100 ms) had larger asymmetry indices than force parameters (maximum vertical and lateral force) for all age groups. These asymmetry indices varied between 9% and 22%. The maximum vertical and lateral force parameters had the lowest asymmetry magnitudes across all age groups. Asymmetry ranged from 3.7-10.4% for maximum vertical force. The 16U/18U group represented the lowest asymmetry index for both vertical and lateral force. Asymmetry values for maximum lateral force ranged from 3.7% for the 16U/18U group, to 4.5% for the 12U/U13 group. The purposes of this study were to measure normative single leg, medial countermovement jump parameters (i.e., maximum force, average concentric power and average concentric power during the last 100 ms) amongst youth ice hockey players, and to assess the interlimb asymmetry in these healthy athletes. These parameters were not significantly different between legs in our participants and therefore we defined our normative values based on the combined data set. We observed a general trend that most parameters increased between adjacent player age groups, partially supporting our hypothesis. In particular, we noted significant changes between the 10U/11U and 12U/13U, and 12U/13U and 14U/15U age groups, presumably related to physical maturation. Most asymmetries for these parameters were less than 15%. The age-based normative data that we present in this paper provide a benchmark that performance professionals, teachers and coaches can use to evaluate their athletes. Our previous study reports a variety of measurement properties of the single-leg countermovement jump including standard error of measure, smallest real difference and typical error (and 90% confidence interval) [7] . We observed typical errors less than 5% for the vertical and lateral peak force parameter, less than 7.5% for the power in the last 100 ms parameter and less than 20% for the average concentric power parameter, which may help comparisons between athletes and these age-based normative data. In general, it appears as though body mass plays a critical role in jump performance [15] . Body mass is associated with improved peak power in adolescent boys and girls [15] . The 16U/18U group was much heavier compared to the 10U/11U group. The 16U/18U age group outweighed the 10U/11U group by an average of 38.5 kg. Access to a structured strength and conditioning plan also affects jump performance. This differentially affected the athletes in this study. Athletes in the 13U-18U age groups participated in a structured strength and conditioning plan during the hockey season. Structured weight training has been shown to increase countermovement performance due to an increase in cross sectional area and muscle mass which leads to larger force output [29, 30] . Accordingly, the fact that the younger age groups (10U-12U) did not partake in regular strength and conditioning sessions may have affected jump performance. A large study reported increases in countermovement jump height between 10-11 year old, 12-14 year old and 15-17 year old males [31] . However, our data have greater granularity as we evaluated differences between four age groups (except for the 17U age group that included 17-and 18-year-olds). We observed the greatest number of differences between the 10U/11U and 12U/13U, and the 12U/13U and 14U/15U age groups. These age groups are approaching peak height growth velocity for boys (13.85 ± 0.65 years old) [32] . During this age range tasks such as speed, static strength and power are related to the ages that an athlete matures [33] . Specifically, the window of time between the ages of 12U/13U and 14U/15U showed the largest change in jump performance in our group of youth ice hockey players as six of six performance parameters had significant differences and as much as a 22-44% increase in performance compared with the 12U/13U age group. Finally, the asymmetry indices were lower for the vertical and lateral force parameters compared to the power parameters. The average vertical asymmetry magnitudes for vertical force were 4.27% for all age groups, while the overall lateral force asymmetry was 7.37%. These asymmetries are consistent with previous research on elite youth soccer players [11] ; however, that study calculated asymmetry of the jump height parameter measured with the "My Jump" iPhone application, and therefore may not be directly comparable. The soccer paper reports that asymmetry has important implications for performance as the degree of asymmetry in the single leg, countermovement jump was correlated with sprint times across various distances [11] . Vertical and lateral power asymmetries in the current paper were larger during the single leg, medial countermovement jump as magnitudes varied between 9.11% to 22.60%. These values are difficult to compare as normative power parameters for youth ice hockey players do not currently exist to the authors' knowledge. Previous research on competitive male soccer players has evaluated asymmetry during countermovement jumps [17] . They suggest that asymmetries larger than 15% may be considered abnormal. However, it is important to note that they measured peak vertical force during countermovement jumps, and accordingly this threshold may not be relevant for the lateral force, vertical power and lateral power parameters that we report in this study. There are limitations to this study. This study tested youth athletes playing in a single youth hockey organization. Different organizations may have different resources such as strength and conditioning programming which may affect jump performance. We included players of different playing positions which may have affected our results. Further research should evaluate whether there are differences in single leg, medial countermovement jump performance between player positions. A sample of convenience was used, however, we observed statistically significant differences between adjacent age groups for many of our parameters, and large effect sizes between adjacent age groups for many of our parameters, which indicates that this experiment had adequate statistical power. We determined normative values for parameters from the single leg, medial countermovement jump for male youth hockey players 10U-18U. This is an important performance test for monitoring strength and conditioning in hockey players. The normative data presented in this paper serves as a baseline for evaluating jump performance in youth hockey players. The single leg, medial countermovement jump allows the tester to measure ground reaction forces and power in the frontal plane which makes this test a relevant tool in all phases of sport performance and rehabilitation. To our knowledge, this is the first study to generate normative values of these jump parameters, and the first to investigate interlimb asymmetries in youth ice hockey players. Supplementary Materials: The following are available online at https://www.mdpi.com/article/10 .3390/sports9080105/s1, File S1. Tabulated normative data for each age group. Informed Consent Statement: Informed consent was obtained from all subjects involved in the study. 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