Lower-Body Plyometric Drills
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Transcript Lower-Body Plyometric Drills
CHAPTER
Plyometric Training
19
Chapter Outline
Plyometric mechanics and physiology
Plyometric program design
Plyometrics and other forms of exercise
Safety considerations
Further research
Mechanical Model
Mechanical Model
SEC= connective tissue, tendon
When the SEC is stretched it stores elastic NRG
The SEC acts like a spring that is stretches, then if
followed by a concentric contraction aids in the total
force production
If a concentric contraction doesn’t immediately
follow the stored NRG by the SEC is lost as heat
Rubber Band Example
Neurophysiological Model
Stimulation of the Muscle Spindle – sensitive to rate
and magnitude of a stretch
Stretch
Reflex – Fig 19.2
When a quick stretch is detected, muscular activity
reflexively ↑ the activity in the agonist muscle which
↑ the force the muscle produces
If a concentric contraction doesn’t immediately
follow the stored NRG by the stretch reflex is lost as
heat
Illustration of the Stretch Reflex
Stretch-Shortening Cycle –SSC
Phase I—Eccentric (stretch of the agonist muscle)
- Elastic energy is stored in the SEC.
- Muscle spindles are stimulated.
Phase II—Amortization (pause between phases
I and III)
- Ia afferent nerves synapse with alpha motor neurons.
- Alpha motor neurons transmit signals to agonist
muscle group.
Phase III—Concentric (shortening of agonist muscle
fibers)
- Elastic energy is released from the SEC.
- Alpha motor neurons stimulate the agonist muscle
group.
The stretch-shortening cycle combines
mechanical and neurophysiological
mechanisms and is the basis of plyometric
exercise. A rapid eccentric muscle action
stimulates the stretch reflex and storage of
elastic energy, which increase the force
produced during the subsequent concentric
action.
Program Design
• Mode - Upper/Lower/Trunk Plyos
• Intensity – depends on the exercise low to
high
• Frequency – 1-3 per week depending on
sport and time of season
• Recovery – 48-72 hrs b/w days; 1:5 to 1:10
work to rest ratios b/w sets but also depends
on sport and time of season
Program Design Cont
• Volume - # of foot contacts or distance
traveled for lower body See Table 19.4; # of
throws or catches per workout for upper
body
• Program Length – 6-10 weeks depend on
the sport and should be assigned throughout
the macrocycle
Program Design Cont
• Progression – follow rules of resistance
training; “systematic ↑ in training
frequency, volume and intensity in various
combinations”.
• Warm-Up – should be followed; see Table
19.5 p. 436
Plyometric Training Considerations
• -Plyometrics and resistance training
• -Plyometrics and aerobic training
• -Safety considerations include addressing a
pretraining eval, technique, strength, speed,
balance, age, physical characteristics, landing
surfaces, and equipment to name a few (pp. 437440)
• -Depth Jumps – recommended 16-42” with 30-32”
the norm; athletes over 220lbs the height should
be 18” or less
Proper Plyometric Landing Position
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Jumps in Place
Two-Foot Ankle Hop
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Jumps in Place
Squat Jump
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Jumps in Place
Jump and Reach
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Jumps in Place
Double-Leg Tuck Jump
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Jumps in Place
Split Squat Jump
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Jumps in Place
Cycled Split Squat Jump
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Jumps in Place
Single-Leg Tuck Jump
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Jumps in Place
Pike Jump
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Standing Jumps
Double-Leg Vertical Jump
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Standing Jumps
Jump Over Barrier
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Standing Jumps
Single-Leg Vertical Jump
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills:
Multiple Hops and Jumps
Double-Leg Hop
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills:
Multiple Hops and Jumps
Double-Leg Zigzag Hop
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills:
Multiple Hops and Jumps
Single-Leg Hop
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills:
Multiple Hops and Jumps
Front Barrier Hop
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills:
Multiple Hops and Jumps
Lateral Barrier Hop
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Bounds
Skip
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Bounds
Power Skip
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Bounds
Backward Skip
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Bounds
Single-Arm Alternate-Leg Bound
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Bounds
Double-Arm Alternate-Leg Bound
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Box Drills
Single-Leg Push-Off
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Box Drills
Alternate-Leg Push-Off
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Box Drills
Lateral Push-Off
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Box Drills
Side-to-Side Push-Off
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Box Drills
Jump to Box
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Box Drills
Squat Box Jump
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Box Drills
Lateral Box Jump
Step
down
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Box Drills
Jump From Box
Step
from box
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Depth Jumps
Depth Jump
Step
from box
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Depth Jumps
Depth Jump to Second Box
1
4
3
2
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Depth Jumps
Squat Depth Jump
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Depth Jumps
Depth Jump With Lateral Movement
1
3
2
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Depth Jumps
Depth Jump With Standing Long Jump
Lower-Body Plyometric Drills: Depth Jumps
Single-Leg Depth Jump
Upper-Body Plyometric Drills: Throws
Chest Pass
Upper-Body Plyometric Drills: Throws
Two-Hand Overhead Throw
Upper-Body Plyometric Drills: Throws
Two-Hand Side-to-Side Throw
1
2
3
Upper-Body Plyometric Drills: Throws
Single-Arm Throw
Upper-Body Plyometric Drills: Throws
Power Drop
Upper-Body Plyometric Drills: Plyometric Push-Ups
Depth Push-Up
1
3
2
Trunk Plyometrics
45-Degree Sit-Up
1
4
3
2