I wanna see how big and slow I can really be while still dunking on fools.
I thought you still hadn't even achieved an in game dunk?
Seriously your recent posts have just broke the record for your habit of just making things up out of thin air and adhering to these lies and dismissing others like there is any reason to... Face the facts. You jump 28 inches and are slow. Most of these people on the board have trained athletes or themselves to jump far higher but you insist on making up rules like you are the expert... Why?
An exercise has to be weekly improvable to be useful? Why? Because you said so? No. There is some utility to having athletes perform exercises that are measurable but unfortunately not all are. That doesn't make them useless. Speed bounds are amazing in developing sprinters. Primetime straight leg bounds are one of the best ways to get a quad dominant athlete to learn how to apply an accelerating foot into the ground. Primetime skips are not even measurable yet alone improvable. Yet they are very valuable. No coach would disagree.
Your ironic dismissal of raptors shooting example when you brought up squats for a beginner as an improvable exercise. Your realize that when a beginner adds weight to the squat it is all neural in the beginning. Yes. They are getting coordinated at squatting - or as you like to say "improving their skill not their strength." How ironic that you dismissed raptors example when yours was the same.
Look at others on this board that have surpassed your gains. Look at LBSS who jumped 37" and dunked a ball at 5'10. How did he do it? Ask him. Weirdly enough he will tell you he did it in large part to greasing the groove, to practicing his ME jumps over and over and over. What an idiot though... ME jumps are a test, not a exercise! There were multiple weeks where LBSS didn't even add half an inch to his ME jumps! He should have just stopped jumping and done squats and cleans and retested his jump when he was stronger right??
If you want a squat centric example look at KF. He squats a lot. His squat is hardly improvable. He will add no poundage to his squat for months just getting better at it and then cutting weight or occasionally trying to up volume or beginning jump practice where he does do reps of jumping tests. He doesn't get better week in and week out in terms of poundage but he has an effective formula for himself where he doesn't need to switch to exercises each week that make him improve.
I'm sorry to sound judge mental but your suffering from what is a classic "weak" persons syndrome. You were weak and a terrible athlete. Your learned about the gym and weights and training and now are no longer weak but you are "mediocre". The gym also gave u more confidence and you want to be buff and strong and no longer the weak guy. You think that given all the benefit the gym and training has given you that it must be the key to more gains. You can go outside and do bounds or ball tosses but your bad at this stuff and don't like doing things where you don't feel like your good. You look silly and unimpressive and there are probably 14 year old kids that could come up to you and ask you what your doing and outbound you. That sucks. Won't happen in ththe squat rack or hip thrusts. But that's EXACTLY why you should do it. You are getting free training from a great community and don't want to take the steps to become great which is disheartening for them. You are already noticing differences in your sprinting in two weeks but still are not convinced!!!!
Bottom line is you don't need double leg bounding or ball tosses. Not one bit. I've seen many great athletes developed without either exercise. But I have never seen a great athlete developed with the level of resistance to ball tosses or bounding when a coach prescribed them to them that you have!
Sometimes we outsmart ourselves as athletes. No coach is always right. But if a coach is 90% right that's exceptional. If so just follow the coach and stop wasting your cns trying to figure out what he has you doing that isn't perfect for your goals. Listen. Follow. Obey. Develop. The lack of stress you get by letting a coach design your workout and just following is worth a lot in itself.