Resumen:
This paper aimed to compare the angular motion in the sagittal plane of the hip and knee in
male and female soccer players during the entire kicking cycle through principal component
analysis (PCA). Kicking kinematics were recorded for 43 soccer players with a motion capture
system. The kicking cycle was defined from toe off to the end of follow through and timenormalised hip and knee joint angles data were used as input to PCA. Four PC were extracted
for hip and knee joint angles. Multivariate tests suggested an overall significant difference in
the PC scores between females and males for hip flexion data (p = 0.001) but not for knee
flexion data (p = 0.060). The results suggest that the primary difference in joint angle patterns
between females and males occur at the hip joint. More specifically, females tend to exhibit
smaller hip extension motion than their male counter-pair during the backswing phase (during
the first 20% of the kicking cycle).