Why I like it
- As mentioned, it takes people out of a linear movement pattern, and improves lateral movement.
- It teaches proper deceleration - upon landing - of the glutes/hips. This is huge for field athletes as it reduces the risk of ACL tears (as a large majority of ACL tears occur in a non-contact situation, in which the athlete fails to properly decelerate lateral forces acting upon the knee joint).
- Very few sports (with the exception of sprinting/running, and a few others) take place exclusively in the sagittal plane. This drill will develop muscular and neural efficiency required in side-to-side movement.
- Even if you are a runner, it will serve you well to develop your body's ability to adequately move in all three planes of motion.
- It's fun.
Key Coaching Cues
- Jump for both height and distance.
- Keep the chest up throughout.
- Before jumping, be sure the non-working leg starts behind/across the working leg (to give you a bit more "swing" room).
- Generate power from your hips/glutes.
- Swing your arms side-to-side to aid force production. You'd be surprised at how many people swing their arms front-to-back when performing this drill.
- "Stick" the landing, holding for at least 2 seconds. This will help teach your glutes and hips to decelerate your body upon landing, and also provide a bit of proprioceptive benefit around the ankle joint.
2 comments:
I used to do these as training for ice hockey when I was younger. It helped a lot.
That is a very ninja-like bound.
Post a Comment