Dias, AmândioLopes, BrunoMachado, FranciscoFonseca, JoãoSantos, RicardoAlves, Rodrigo2026-05-292026-05-292025-12Dias A, Lopes B, Machado F, Fonseca J, Santos R, Alves R. Validation of a Smartphone Application for Measuring Peak Torque During the Nordic Hamstring Exercise in Recreational Athletes. Physiologia. 2025; 5(4):53. https://doi.org/10.3390/physiologia50400532673-9488http://hdl.handle.net/10400.26/63422Background/Objectives: Hamstring injuries are highly prevalent in sports and often occur, particularly among recreational and professional athletes. Assessing eccentric hamstring strength is critical for injury prevention and rehabilitation, with isokinetic dynamometry being considered the gold standard. However, its accessibility is limited by cost and logistics. This study aimed to evaluate the validity and reliability of the My Jump Lab (version 4.0) mobile application in estimating eccentric peak torque in the break-point angle, compared with isokinetic dynamometry. Methods: Twenty-seven recreational athletes (twenty-six male, one female) were assessed bilaterally using the mobile application and isokinetic dynamometer, which is considered the gold standard for this type of strength assessment. Statistical analysis included Pearson’s correlation, intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), standard error of measurement (SEM), coefficient of variation (CV), and Bland–Altman plots. Results: Results showed excellent inter-rater reliability (ICC = 0.999; CV = 0.66%) for both smartphone application evaluators and good comparative validity and reliability (ICC ≈ 0.76 with confidence interval: 0.5367–0.876; p < 0.001 and r ≈ 0.705;) when comparing with isokinetic dynamometry. Conclusions: My Jump Lab is a mobile application which can provide a practical and accessible mean for monitoring eccentric hamstring strength in field settings. The app may serve as a feasible field-based alternative to laboratory dynamometry for eccentric strength monitoring.enghamstring injuryeccentric hamstring strengthNordic hamstring exercisemobile applications in physiotherapyfield-based assessmentsValidation of a smartphone application for measuring peak torque during the Nordic hamstring exercise in recreational athletescontribution to journal10.3390/physiologia5040053