Research Shorts cover art

Research Shorts

Research Shorts

By: Research Shorts Editorial
Listen for free

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
  • 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.

    Show More Show Less
    23 mins
  • Plyometrics Create Stiff Tendons. Just Not as Fast as You Think
    May 12 2026

    Plyometrics are everywhere. Every gym program, every pre-season block, every speed development plan has them. But there's a catch most coaches never mention — the tendon adaptation everyone is chasing doesn't show up in weeks. It takes years.

    Four years of tracking elite jumpers revealed that tendon stiffness — a key marker of injury resilience and force transfer — only meaningfully increases with sustained, long-term plyometric loading. Short blocks don't cut it. The muscle gets stronger. The nervous system adapts. But the tendon stays behind until the cumulative loading finally crosses the threshold.

    This episode breaks down what the data actually shows, why tendon stiffness matters more than most coaches realize, and what long-term plyometric programming needs to look like if the goal is genuinely protecting and developing athletes — not just checking a box in the pre-season plan.

    Show More Show Less
    45 mins
  • Every Workout Has a Hidden Price Tag. Now We Know What It Is.
    May 5 2026

    Coaches have been programming training for decades based on heart rate zones, GPS data, and how hard athletes say they feel. There's just one problem. None of those metrics actually tell you what's happening inside the muscle itself.

    A new case report by Martin Buchheit and Paul Laursen just changed that.

    Using a portable electrical stimulation device called Myocene, researchers measured something called low-frequency fatigue — a direct readout of muscle contractile impairment — immediately after nine different training sessions. Zone 2 runs. Sprint intervals. Small-sided games. Gym sessions. All-out cycling efforts. Every single one produced a completely different biological signature.

    The results were striking. Easy Zone 2 runs barely registered. All-out sprint intervals crushed contractility to below 80% of baseline. But here's where it gets genuinely interesting — two sessions could feel equally hard yet produce completely different recovery timelines. One workout rebounds in 4 hours. Another takes 48 hours to clear. And your heart rate data would never tell you the difference.

    The study also found something coaches can use starting tomorrow. The athlete's subjective perception of muscle heaviness — not overall effort, not heart rate — correlated with objective fatigue at r = -0.89. Almost perfectly. Meaning the body already knows its price tag. It just needed the right question.

    This episode breaks down what the data actually means, why eccentric load is the real hidden cost driver, and how to sequence a training week once you understand the true biological bill of each session.

    Some workouts cost 4 hours. Others cost 48. Now there's proof.

    Show More Show Less
    24 mins
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_c
No reviews yet