Vertical Jump - How to Jump Higher

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The vertical jump is one of the most explosive athletic movements an individual can execute and a co

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  • Vertical Jump - How to Jump Higher

    The vertical jump is one of the most explosive athletic movements an individual can execute and acommonly used performance measure of relative lower body power output in athletic circlesparticularly in sports such as basketball, football, volleyball and track and field.

    There are 4 key areas you need to work on. How much emphasis you need to put on each area willdepend on your individual strengths and weaknesses as an athlete. I will give you an understandingof each of these qualities, how to improve them and a sample training schedule:

    1. Movement Efficiency

    Movement efficiency is a combination of your mobility, posture, co-ordination and technique.

    The mobility aspect of movement efficiency is based primarily on your mobility in 3 key areas:thoracic, hip and ankle. The links contain some drills that you will benefit from performing in yourwarm-ups to not only improve your mobility, but also prepare yourself for verticaljump/strength/sprint/running training sessions.

    The postural aspect of movement efficiency ties in with the mobility aspect in many respects. Youcurrently have postural deficiencies in the feet, knee, hip, lumbar, upper back, shoulder girdleregions caused by lack of mobility (flexibility) and/or poor activation (strength), which may limit yourathletic performance and possibly leave you more prone to particular injuries. Check out these threearticles for more information on assessing and correcting individual postural deficiencies:Neanderthal No More Series and Hips Don't Lie

    The co-ordination aspect of movement efficiency relates to how cleanly you can execute generalathletic movements. Mastering a variety of different strength, jump and mobility drills (such as thoselisted here) with good technique will be of most benefit to your co-ordination, as will trainingbarefoot or with Vibram FiveFingers to activate dormant stabilising muscles around the foot, ankle,knee and hip in particular as well importantly improving proprioception (better body awareness).

    The technique aspect of movement efficiency refers to how cleanly you can execute the specificathletic movement (in this case the vertical jump). Luckily the vertical jump is not a highly technicalmovement, so having good general co-ordination (as per mentioned) will suffice. The key techniquetips to remember are to rapidly descend into your jump and make maximum use your arms to thrustyou higher.

    2. Relative Body Maximum Strength

    Relative Body Strength is how much force (strength) you can apply relative to your body weight(RBS = Strength/BW).

    This quality can be improved in two ways:

    Lowering bodyweight (fat), whilst maintaining or improving strength or not losing strength at afaster rate.Increasing strength, whilst maintaining or decreasing bodyweight or not gaining weightat a faster rate - for the vertical jump, the most important muscle groups to strengthen will be theprime movers of the lower body - the quadriceps, hamstrings, gluteals and calves - with exercises

  • such as: squat variations, deadlift variations, powercleans, good mornings, pull throughs, hyper-extensions, reverse hyper-extensions, split squats, lunges, glute ham raises, pistol squats etc.

    Testing Relative Body Maximum Strength

    As the vertical jump is largely dependent on the strength and power capabilites of the lower body,your one repetition maximum (1RM) in the back squat,.an exercise which involves all the primemovers of the lower body, is widely considered the best measure of your lower body strength.

    If you don't feel comfortable testing your 1RM, then you can always test your 2RM or 3RM or 4RMor 5RM or 6RM etc. and make a conversion to your 1RM using a 1RM calculator, such as this one(the closer the weight is to your 1RM the more accurate the result). Using these results:

    If your Back Squat 1RM is less than 1.5x your bodyweight, then you will probably get most of yourresults from improving relative body strength.If your Back Squat 1RM is 1.5-2x your bodyweight,then you will probably get most of your results from a combination of improving relative bodystrength, improving relative body power and reactive strength.If your Back Squat 1RM is more than2x your bodyweight, then you will probably get most of your results by improving relative bodypower and reactive strength (see below) whilst at least maintaining relative body strength.3.Relative Body Explosive Power

    Relative Body Power is how much power (strength x speed) you can apply relative to your bodyweight (RBP = Power/BW). It's a similar concept to relative strength, except the focus is rate offorce development (RFD), rather than absolute force (strength).

    This quality can be improved in two ways:

    Lowering bodyweight (fat), whilst maintaining or improving strength or not losing strength at afaster rate - as per mentioned in the above section.Increasing power output (strength x speed),whilst maintaining or decreasing bodyweight or not gaining weight at a faster rate - power exerciseswhich target the prime movers of the lower body, particularly those that involve triple extension (hipextension, knee extension and ankle extension in the one movement), will give you best results - withexercises including: olympic lift variations (Power Cleans, Power Snatches, Push Press/Jerks, JumpShrug), speed/DE squats (using 50-60% of 1RM back squat), Pause Jump Squats (using 15-30% of1RM back squat), Box Jumps, Split Squat Jumps

    Testing Relative Body Explosive Power

    As the vertical jump is largely dependent on the strength and power capabilities of the lower body,your one repetition maximum (1RM) in the power clean, a power exercise which involves all theprime movers of the lower body, is widely considered one of the best measures of your lower bodypower. As the power clean is a complex movement make sure you are well versed with the lifttechnically before performing with heavy weights.

    As mentioned with the squat test, if you don't feel comfortable testing your 1RM, then you canalways test your 2RM or 3RM or 4RM or 5RM or 6RM etc. and make a conversion to your 1RM usinga 1RM calculator, such as this one (the closer the weight is to your 1RM the more accurate theresult). Using these results:

    If your Power Clean 1RM is less than 1x your bodyweight, then you will probably get most of yourresults from improving relative body strength and power.If your Power Clean 1RM is 1-1.5x your

  • bodyweight, then you will probably get most of your results from a combination of improving relativebody strength, improving relative body power and reactive strength.If your Power Clean 1RM ismore than 1.5x your bodyweight, then you will probably get most of your results by improvingreactive strength (see below) whilst at least maintaining relative body strength and power.4.Plyometric Ability

    Plyometric ability (Reactive Strength) is your ability to produce force after a counter movement(transitioning from deceleration to acceleration) - the elastic reflex actions of the muscle tendonunits.

    Reactive strength can be improved in 2 ways:

    Improve Force Absorption - being able to absorb and stabilise more force (deceleration)ImproveReflex Reaction - being able to elastically produce more force after a counter movement(acceleration after deceleration)

    Examples of exercises that will help improve reactive plyometric ability include lateral cone jumps,hurdle jumps, altitude landings, 3 step jumps and depth jumps.

    Testing Plyometric Ability

    Kelly Baggett outlines a great way to test reactive strength in his aforementioned book:

    1. Measure your normal standing vertical jump.

    2. Starting off with a 12" box measure your reactive vertical jump (depth jump).

    3. Repeat step 2, increasing the height of the box in 6" increments until your reactive jump is lessthan your vertical jump.

    If your best reactive jump is higher than your best stationary jump, you would be best served byfocusing most of your training on improving strength and RFD.

    If your best reactive jump is lower than your best stationary jump, you would be best served byfocusing most of your training on improving plyometric ability (reactive strength).

    Basic Sample Program

    This program is designed for the average athlete looking to improve his/her vertical jump. Forfurther insight into the art of vertical jumping and more individualized programming I wouldstrongly recommend obtaining a copy of Kelly Baggett's Vertical Jump Bible.

    Monday

    Warm-up

    Plyometrics

    Ankle Jumps or Ricochet Jumps - 3 sets of 20 reps (1.5-2 min rest between sets)

    3 step jump or Altitude Drops (from 110-120% height of maximum standing vertical jump) - 5 sets of

  • 4 repetitions (2 min rest between sets)

    Weights

    Barbell Back Squats or Barbell Front Squats - 3 work sets of 6 repetitions (keep weight the same forall sets, rest 3-5 min between sets - increase weight by 1-2.5% every week)

    Barbell Good Morning or Cable Pull Throughs - 3 work sets of 8 to 12 repetitions (keep weight thesame for all sets, rest 3 min between sets - try to increase weight or reps every week)

    Tuesday

    Upper Body Weights or Rest or Conditioning e.g. Extensive Tempo Runs or BW circuit training

    Wednesday

    Warm-up

    Regular Barbell Deadlifts or Barbell Snatch Grip Deadlifts - 4 work sets of 4 repetitions (keep weightthe same for all sets, rest 3-5 min between sets - increase weight by 1-2.5% every week)

    Reverse Lunges or Bulgarian Split Squats (with either dumbbells or barbells) - 2 work sets of 8repetitions (keep weight the same for all sets, rest 3-5 min between sets - increase weight by 1-2.5%every week)

    Thursday

    Upper Body Weights or Rest or Conditioning

    Friday

    Warm-up

    Plyometrics

    Slalom Jumps or 4 Star Drill - 3 sets of 20 reps for slalom jumps (1.5-2 min rest between sets), 3 setsof 8 reps for 4 star drill

    Box Jumps or Split Squat Jumps - 5 sets of 5 repetitions (per leg for split squat jumps, 2 min restbetween sets)

    Weights

    Barbell Speed Squats (use 50-60% of 1RM squat) or Barbell Power Cleans - 5 work sets of 3repetitions (1 minute rest for speed squats, 3-5 min rest between sets for Power Cleans)

    Reverse Hyper-extensions or Romanian Deadlifts (dumbbell or barbell) - 2 work sets of 8 to 12repetitions

    Saturday

  • Rest or Conditioning

    Sunday

    Rest

    *NOTE: It's advisable that you consulthttp://www.fitnessmagazine.com/workout/yoga/poses/beginner-yoga-poses/ a qualified healthprofessional before starting a new exercise or training regime.

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