I see several problems with this research regarding the practical implications. What did the study reveal? Power output was higher in the jump shrug for very low weights than it was with the same low weights when the powerclean was performed. The question that has to be asked in this context is whether your training should consist of powercleaning with 60% of your max in the first place? Well, I don't think so. I wonder what the results would have been at 80%, 90% and 95% of 1rm.
Now why are those findings not very surprising.... It's not that you can't produce a lot of power with 60% of your 1rm in the powerclean, it's just that you don't have to with this light of a weight. Increasing power in the pull also means having to work more in the catch phase. Of course as an athlete experienced with that exercise you are aware of that fact and you won't see a need to pull harder than you have to. Again, try the same with 95% of your max and some lifters with decent technique and you will probably see how the jump shrug will hardly be an as effective exercise, especially if you also consider scalability. I will say it again and again until people will start to comprehend what that means. If you cannot scale progress in an exercise, you will not know when to use more weight and if you are unaware of your potential progress in one exercise, you cannot possibly relate its execution to performance gains on the field. In other words, if you have been doing jump shrugs with the same weight for 8 weeks and happen to jump higher, you cannot possibly suggest that this exercise has been the cause. If you would use a hang snatch and increased your work weights and observed that you jump higher after progress in that exercise has been made, it would make a lot more sense to attribute that progress to that part of your training.
Now why is that important? It is important because we have to learn to differentiate between what makes effective training and what does not for ourselves.
And we have to do so because exercise science apparently cannot.