RT Journal Article T1 Relationships between Change of Direction, Sprint, Jump, and Squat Power Performance A1 Suárez Moreno-Arrones, Luis Jesús A1 Gonzalo Skok, Oliver A1 Carrasquilla, Irene A1 Asián Clemente, José Antonio A1 Santalla Hernández, Alfredo A1 Lara López, Pilar A1 Núñez Sánchez, Francisco Javier K1 Abalakov K1 CMJ K1 COD K1 Flywheel inertial device K1 Velocity K1 CIRFD - Centro de Investigación en Rendimiento Físico y Deportivo K1 CIRFD - RDDC K1 CIRFD - VED AB The aim of the study was to investigate the relationships between countermovement jump (CMJ) height and inertial power in squat and sprint variables with change of direction (COD) performance. Fifty young healthy active males participated in the study. To determine these relationships, we carried out a 10-m linear sprint test (T 10 m), vertical jump tests (CMJ and CMJ Abalakov), an assessment of power relative to bodyweight in a flywheel squat (Pbw), and 10-m COD sprints with two different turn types (COD-90° and COD-180°). T10 m showed statistically large and moderate correlations with T10 m COD-180° (r = 0.55) and T10-m COD-90° (r = 0.41), respectively. Moderate to large correlations between jumping height, linear sprinting, and sprints with COD were found (r = -0.43 to r = -0.59), and there were unclear correlations between jumping height and the loss of speed caused by executing COD (DEC-COD). Pbw showed a large correlation with CMJ Abalakov and CMJ jump height (r = 0.65 and r = 0.57, respectively), and a moderate and large correlation with T 10 m, T 10 m COD-180°, and T10 m COD-90° (r = -0.33, r = -0.38, and r = -0.54, respectively). Despite the existence of substantial correlations between variables, straight linear sprinting, jumping performance, CODs and squat power were, for the most part, separate motor qualities (R2 from 14% to 34%), suggesting that all of them should be specifically assessed and trained. PB MDPI SN 2075-4663 YR 2020 FD 2020-03-19 LK http://hdl.handle.net/10433/8127 UL http://hdl.handle.net/10433/8127 LA en NO Sports (Basel). 2020 Mar 19;8(3). NO Universidad Pablo de Olavide de Sevilla. Departamento de Deporte e Informática DS RIO RD May 30, 2026