Purpose: This study examined the effects of a structured physical training programme on the development of motor abilities in adolescent volleyball players. The study also aimed to identify the key physical components that contribute to volleyball-specific performance. Methods: A quasi-experimental design was applied with adolescent volleyball players divided into control and experimental groups. The experimental group followed a structured training programme focused on speed, explosive strength, coordination, agility, and endurance, while the control group continued traditional training. Motor abilities were assessed through sprint, shuttle-run, vertical jump, standing long jump, coordination, and volleyball-specific accuracy tests. Results: The findings showed greater improvements in the experimental group compared with the control group. The most notable progress was observed in speed-strength indicators, jumping ability, agility, and coordination. Factor-based interpretation indicated that explosive strength, general strength, speed, muscular endurance, and coordination were the main components of physical preparedness in adolescent volleyball players. Conclusion: Structured and scientifically planned physical training has a positive effect on the development of motor abilities in adolescent volleyball players. Training programmes for youth volleyball should integrate strength, speed, agility, endurance, and coordination exercises rather than developing these qualities separately.
Huseynli et al. (Fri,) studied this question.