“…It has since been observed that the expression of vertical stiffness and associated asymmetries is highly task dependant (Maloney, Fletcher, & Richards, 2015). As a change of direction may be characterised as acyclic, ballistic and unilateral in nature, the unilateral drop jump is likely to demonstrate the greatest correspondence to CODS and may therefore carry greater validity as an assessment for vertical stiffness Several investigations have reported that asymmetries in force/power qualities may be detrimental to athletic performance (Bailey, Sato, Alexander, Chiang, & Stone, 2013;Bailey, Sato, Burnett, & Stone, 2015;Bazyler, Bailey, Chiang, Sato, & Stone, 2014;Bell, Sanfilippo, Binkley, & Heiderscheit, 2014;Hart, Nimphius, Spiteri, & Newton, 2014), however, this relationship is not clear in regards to CODS. Whilst eccentric strength asymmetry has been linked to impaired CODS in some investigations (Chaouachi et al, 2012;Lockie, Shultz, Jeffriess, & Callaghan, 2012), Lockie et al (2014) reported that athletes with 'typical' asymmetries in unilateral jump performance (vertical jump: ∼10%; horizontal jump: ∼3%; lateral jump: ∼5%) did not experience speed detriments.…”