INSPIREE: Indonesian Sport Innovation Review
Vol. 7 No. 03 (2026): Articles September in Press (Accepted Manuscripts) – INSPIREE

Standardization of Lower Limb explosive Power and VO₂max inVolleyball Athletes Aged 17–21 Years

Murdiyanto, Fahmi Miftahul (Unknown)
Widodo, Achmad (Unknown)
Subagio, Irmantara (Unknown)
Hidayat, Taufiq (Unknown)
Muhammad, Muhammad (Unknown)
Sulistyarto, Soni (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
27 Sep 2025

Abstract

The  purpose  of  the study. This study aimed to analyze and standardize lower-limb explosive power and maximal oxygen uptake (VO₂max) in male volleyball athletes aged 17–21 years in East Java, Indonesia, in order to establish normative reference values for athlete selection, performance evaluation, and training program development. Materials and methods. This study employed a descriptive quantitative research design involving 50 male volleyball athletes recruited from regional training centers and sports senior high schools in East Java. Lower-limb explosive power was assessed using the Standing Board Jump Test, while VO₂max was estimated using the Multistage Fitness Test (beep test). Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics (mean, standard deviation, minimum, and maximum), normality testing (Kolmogorov–Smirnov), and norm-referenced classification based on mean ± SD intervals using IBM SPSS Statistics. Results. The results showed that lower-limb explosive power ranged from 2.19 to 2.82 m (mean ± SD: 2.54 ± 0.13 m), while VO₂max ranged from 29.9 to 53.3 ml·kg⁻¹·min⁻¹ (mean ± SD: 38.28 ± 3.67 ml·kg⁻¹·min⁻¹). A five-tier norm classification system (Very Good, Good, Moderate, Poor, Very Poor) was successfully developed. The Moderate category was identified as the minimum performance standard, with values of 2.48–2.60 m for explosive power and 36.45–40.11 ml·kg⁻¹·min⁻¹ for VO₂max. Conclusions. This study provides standardized normative values for lower-limb explosive power and VO₂max in adolescent male volleyball athletes, offering an evidence-based framework for athlete selection, physical readiness assessment, and performance monitoring. These findings can support the development of more effective and objective training and talent identification systems in volleyball.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

inspiree

Publisher

Subject

Humanities Education Health Professions Public Health Social Sciences

Description

INSPIREE: Indonesian Sport Innovation Review is an journal which provides a focal point for the publication of social science research on Sport and the wide range of associated Sport Education, Sports achievements, Sport history, Sport social, Sport cultural, Sport law, political, sport tourism, ...