Author Topic: a fast and explosive donkey!  (Read 1863398 times)

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Joe

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Re: a fast and explosive donkey!
« Reply #2130 on: October 26, 2013, 09:21:59 am »
0
I'm fairly certain someone linked to a study on this forum a while back that showed that 400m runners had stiffer ankles than sprinters.
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Raptor

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Re: a fast and explosive donkey!
« Reply #2131 on: October 26, 2013, 10:02:42 am »
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I'm telling you - the way that I feel after playing 5 on 5 basketball, the feeling in my legs, I've never came across any training as of yet that gives me the same feeling.

But I RARELY play 5 on 5.
Current PR status:

All time squat: 165 kg/Old age squat: 130 kg
All time deadlift: 184 kg/Old age deadlift: 140 kg
All time bench: 85 kg/Old age bench: 70kgx5reps
All time hip thrust (same as old age hip thrust): 160kgx5reps

LBSS

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Re: a fast and explosive donkey!
« Reply #2132 on: October 26, 2013, 01:34:21 pm »
0
WEIGHT: ???
SORENESS: none
ACHES/INJURIES: none
MENTAL STATE: okay

- warm up

- SVJ x 3

- DLRVJ out to 2-step x a bunch
horrifyingly bad. barely touching rim.  :huh:

- explosive box squat 225 x 2,2,2,2,2,2

- cable hip thrust 9(?) x 20,20

- assisted natural GHR x 8,8
tried to use a plate to hold my legs down on the second set. kind of worked although i was not able to activate my hamstrings as much as the first set, when i got a dude to hold my ankles down. it wasn't uncomfortable with the plate, though. will try with more weight next time.

- DB OHP 50 x 8,8(6L)

- neutral chin up x 8,8

- decline situp +30 x 10,10

- stretch

jumping was atrocious. did not help that there was a guy at the other end shooting around and dunking effortlessly every once in a while. he was significantly taller than me and obviously a basketball player. mental weakness.
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

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https://www.savannahstate.edu/cost/nrotc/documents/Inform2010-thearmstrongworkout_Enclosure15_5-2-10.pdf

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TKXII

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Re: a fast and explosive donkey!
« Reply #2133 on: October 27, 2013, 11:06:10 am »
0
continuing the train of thought from T0dday's journal, here are my ideas, even though I think a consensus has been reached:

If you can squat down and up fast you SHOULD be able to jump high.

This may be true for an SVJ, but not as true for an RVJ. Jumping high for LBSS as discussed in T0dday's journal will involve a greater RFD and much greater movement efficiency. Greater movement efficiency will require greater speed in the approach, which requires greater ability to absorb that speed. Squats have a minimal effect on rate of force absorption. Even fast squats, primarily because the squat require force absorption at a below parallel position, which almost no one does an RVJ from, and squats aren't ever fast, unless we're talking about jump squats, which still can be slow, and require less force absorption than actual jumping.

From personal experience I have this one test of force absorption: the drop landing, to show why squats won't help much with RVJ, based on when I used to do the following
185lbs jump 1/2 squats - dropped in a 1/2 squat position comfortably (my max squat was below 275lbs)
335lbs back squat (full squat) - have to drop into a deep squat position from same height drop. Strength from back squatting did not improve force absorption ability.

I think this makes sense and isn't a unique finding to my body type.

I think both of these comments put an over-emphasis on the weight room for the athlete.

agreed.

Then maybe he should spend more time in the strength-speed rather than speed-strength spectrum. Maybe he's not as good at high speeds yet, so maybe it's a good idea to train at just SLIGHTLY faster speeds than the usual squat (think power cleans, speed box squats etc) and after he gets better at these THEN transition into more intense plyometric stuff.

agreed-ish, start with a slightly faster exercises, for 4 weeks as Raptor suggested, then move on to even faster stuff, for another 4 weeks, check results, repeat, while reducing squat volume.

Yeah well I don't remember him doing anything specifically targeting the posterior chain (granted I'm too lazy to look in his log to search for it) - but I haven't seen RDLs, hip thrusts etc for HIGH volumes. I'd even do unilateral stuff (dumbbell BSSs, one-leg deadlifts, one-leg explosive box squats like Lance said).

disagreed. I think the emphasis should be on the speed of the exercise rather than what muscles are involved. Heavy deadlifts will have a negligible effect on his vertical jump - my hypothesis. However, reverse depth jumps (landing backwards requires more from the hip), top speed sprinting or longer sprints, single legged jumping, will help more.

Maybe a split that has him squatting 2 times per week, one day full squats and one halves , some form of DL in the one day and some sort of lunge in the other one. Best jumping day would be between the halves and the fulls, closer to the fulls to take full advantage of the halves potentiation effect.
Just a couple of extra thoughts.

and that brings my to my exrx.
Reduce squatting to 2 days a week, one day being a regular squat day, the second being a jump/explosive squat day from anything above a 1/2 squat position.

I have seen LBSS in person, and when I trained with him he paused squatted 275 in the back squat easily for 5 reps for sets, and he has a 2xbw squat. That's not bad at all. The question that makes us hesitant to reduce the back squat is... how high could he jump if he squatted 405 paused...? And we have evidence that this works from Kingfish and Rutgers dunker and many more that this could work for LBSS. But he can already backsquat 2xbw, and hasn't seen much improvement, so that evidence isn't that compelling anymore.

This is why I recommend first learning to jump correctly, then emphasizing weighted jumping exercises, and let go of numbers in the weight room. Perhaps creating a new thread on DLRVJ form will help, because the coordination required in a RVJ is not easy to master. I still struggle with it but have seen my jump height improve from learning the correct form.

Jumping more, with incorrect form, will not help.

LBSS needs to lower his COM/hips during the penultimate step of the DLRVJ much more than he is now to reduce braking forces in the knee, and well, to jump higher. Learning to DLRVJ properly is the most important thing for him right now, more important than depth jumps, pogos, or any other plyo.

Favoring explosive exercises in the weight room such as jump squats may help a little with improving DLRVJ form, or even just 1/2 squats. They will help with "expressing" strength and improving RFD.  I wouldn't recommend box squats however, the amortization needs to be trained with weights.
"Performance during stretch-shortening cycle exercise is influenced by the visco-elastic properties of the muscle-tendon units. During stretching of an activated muscle, mechanical energy is absorbed in the tendon structures (tendon and aponeurosis) and this energy can subsequently be re-utilized if shortening of the muscle immediately follows the stretching. According to Biscotti (2000), 72% of the elastic energy restitution action comes from tendons, 28% - from contractile elements of muscles.

http://www.verkhoshansky.com/Portals/0/Presentations/Shock%20Method%20Plyometrics.pdf

Raptor

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Re: a fast and explosive donkey!
« Reply #2134 on: October 27, 2013, 01:29:53 pm »
0
Quote
disagreed. I think the emphasis should be on the speed of the exercise rather than what muscles are involved. Heavy deadlifts will have a negligible effect on his vertical jump - my hypothesis. However, reverse depth jumps (landing backwards requires more from the hip), top speed sprinting or longer sprints, single legged jumping, will help more.

I actually think that's a good idea.

He might even eliminate all the full squats from his workout and focus on the half squat and that coupling phase. Maybe do some complex training - explosive half squat + jump squat, depth jump + SVJ.

And the backwards depth drops/jumps are also a good idea. To me, when I did stepups I had the craziest calf soreness ever. Why? Because I had to put my leg back backwards on the ground to do my next rep in the stepups. And just that alone gave me huge calf soreness that I never ever get from the calf raises. So imagine what the backwards depth jumps can do for the calves.

Another thing that we omit is the fact that the running 2-leg jump is a different event than a depth jump. It has a lower center of gravity, the plant is more forward/at a different angle etc. There's a different type of loading that occurs, at least from a specificity standpoint.

So this is especially (maybe the MOST) important for him (and possibly for myself as well):

Quote
LBSS needs to lower his COM/hips during the penultimate step of the DLRVJ much more than he is now to reduce braking forces in the knee, and well, to jump higher. Learning to DLRVJ properly is the most important thing for him right now, more important than depth jumps, pogos, or any other plyo.

Favoring explosive exercises in the weight room such as jump squats may help a little with improving DLRVJ form, or even just 1/2 squats. They will help with "expressing" strength and improving RFD.  I wouldn't recommend box squats however, the amortization needs to be trained with weights.
Current PR status:

All time squat: 165 kg/Old age squat: 130 kg
All time deadlift: 184 kg/Old age deadlift: 140 kg
All time bench: 85 kg/Old age bench: 70kgx5reps
All time hip thrust (same as old age hip thrust): 160kgx5reps

mdevin93

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Re: a fast and explosive donkey!
« Reply #2135 on: October 27, 2013, 10:24:35 pm »
+1
Don't know how much credibility, if any at all, I have...but this is just my opinion from reading your log.

1) I would say your squat is high enough based on where your vert is at. Instead of trying to bump up and go for PRs in your squat, keep the high intensity (80+ percent), but with submaximal reps with a fast concentric (So singles with 90 vs 3-5, triples with 85 versus 5-8, 5s with 80 versus 8-10, etc ...so kind of like an MSEM sort of thing and what you have been doing recently). You could cycle them in a 5/3/1 sort of format or just do whatever percentages and reps you'd like. Bump the weights up 5-10 pounds when the weights start to feel like cake. Use Prilepins table for sets and reps. Do some unilaterals and glutehams after to keep your size.
That is one squat workout. Call it monday for example purposes.

2) The other would be your basic dynamic type workout...(speed squats as well as drop and catch jump squats and/or depth jumps)  Call this Thursday for example purposes

3) Start jumping more, and like Avishek (I think) said stop doing other plyos. Go in with a plan...about 30 total jumps 3-4 times per week. 3 standing verts isn't going to help anybody, nor is 8 running verts. Over the summer I was squatting consistently 2-3 days a week, but because I didn't have a plan and I was hopping around from scheme to scheme, it didn't improve one bit. This probably works the same way with jumping? I don't know.
Have a high volume session the day before your squat days, and a medium session the day of.

So it could look something like this

Sunday: 4x5 standing verts, 4x5 running/1-to-3 step verts
Monday: "Heavy" lower body from above. 2x5 standing and 2x5 running/1-to-3 step verts before
Tuesday: Upper body, shorter sprints (<50 meters)
Wed: Same as Sunday
Thurs: Dynamic Lower body from above. 2x5 standing and 2x5 running/1-to-3 step verts before
Friday: Upper body, longer sprints (200-400), get shitfaced
Saturday: Recover from hangover

3-4weeks:1week    work:deload

The jumps shouldn't take more than 20 minutes, the lifting shouldn't take more than 45. You could even split it AM/PM if youd like (EDIT: and if that were the case do 40 jumps instead of 20 on the squat days). If Jordan Kilagnon can dunk for 3 hours a day, this should be reasonable. If technique is an issue, I know Adam is selling freak technique 3.0 at 90% off for a limited time only ;D.

 
Keep it simple. You bust your ass probably more than anybody in this forum, so I'm sure I speak for the rest of the forum when I say it would be great to see you throw down a dunk.

Again, I probably have zero credibility, but that is just my 2 cents so feel free to bash me, call me stupid, naive, whatever. I also realize in have no right to comment on what you are doing since you never really asked for help, but other people were and have been for a while so i figured why not.

Thanks for reading.


« Last Edit: October 28, 2013, 10:37:45 am by mdevin93 »
Goals by Sept 1, 2014:

2x BW Squat for 5
33" SVJ
36" RVJ

Jump on so many mailboxes i make cascio look like a bitch


http://www.youtube.com/user/mdevin93

LBSS

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Re: a fast and explosive donkey!
« Reply #2136 on: October 28, 2013, 10:41:28 am »
0
thanks mdevin and avishek. i'm already moving toward an AM/PM split, with jumping in the morning and sprinting/weights in the evening.  to wit:

today AM:

WEIGHT: ???
SORENESS: none
ACHES/INJURIES: right posterior hip while i was jogging to the gym (?)
MENTAL STATE: good

- warm up
gonna just start lumping in SVJ and submax SLRVJ into this. assume i did them as part of AM warm ups.

- one-step RVJ x 5

- two-step RVJ x 10
muuuuuuch better than the other day. 1.5 knuckles over for most, got 2 knuckles over on a couple.

- three-step RVJ x 5
inconsistent but a couple were 2.5 knuckles over.

- stretch

today PM:

WEIGHT: ???
SORENESS: none
ACHES/INJURIES: none
MENTAL STATE: tired, a little bummed cause my friend is moving to chile (hey guga!) tomorrow and i saw him off right before hitting the track

- warm up

- broad jump x 4
12y on the nose

- DL bound x 4,4,4
meh, all right about 12y. did not feel explosive.

- SL bound 20y x 2
L:13.5,12; R:13.5,11.5

- sprint ~30m x 4

- sprint ~60m x 2
did not have stopwatch and had to run on the far side of the track (no markers), so these were approximate. 95+% effort, though.

- stretch

NOTES:

getting back to what everyone is saying: yes, RFD/reactivity and movement efficiency are my biggest deficits. i'm leaving for 2.5 weeks in tajikistan (and a day in istanbul woot!) this coming weekend. work trips are exhausting, but what i will plan to do for this upcoming one is a lot of short approach jumps, some depth jumps, and some BSS and p-chain-focused lifting. and jumping rope. if i can do AM/PM, i will, but most days i will probably be too tired to do both.

when i get back, i'll go back to AM jumping, PM sprinting/lifting. AM jumping is not ideal but it's infinity percent better than nothing. lower-body lifting will continue to feature low-volume squats or squat variations -- box squats, maybe even some supramax partials -- and higher-volume p-chain stuff like hip thrusts, GHRs, and RDLs. main ab exercise will be the t0ddday decline-sit-up-with-barbell thing, working my way up to ten full reps with a 45 lb BB. upper body will be ad hoc because i just shouldn't focus on it enough to have a plan. pushing and pulling, that's it.
« Last Edit: October 29, 2013, 11:37:12 am by LBSS »
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

- Avishek

https://www.savannahstate.edu/cost/nrotc/documents/Inform2010-thearmstrongworkout_Enclosure15_5-2-10.pdf

black lives matter

Raptor

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Re: a fast and explosive donkey!
« Reply #2137 on: October 28, 2013, 12:04:31 pm »
0
Is it this exercise:

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sgwbT7EQvUo" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sgwbT7EQvUo</a>

or

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LrawCNDtfdM" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LrawCNDtfdM</a>
« Last Edit: October 28, 2013, 12:07:21 pm by Raptor »
Current PR status:

All time squat: 165 kg/Old age squat: 130 kg
All time deadlift: 184 kg/Old age deadlift: 140 kg
All time bench: 85 kg/Old age bench: 70kgx5reps
All time hip thrust (same as old age hip thrust): 160kgx5reps

LBSS

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Re: a fast and explosive donkey!
« Reply #2138 on: October 28, 2013, 12:52:55 pm »
0
neither. bar is behind the neck as in a HBBS. much harder that way. if it's too hard, you can do eccentric with HB position and then move the bar around to the front for the concentric. that's what i ended up doing for the later reps when i worked out with t0ddday. for now i'm sticking to lighter bars.
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

- Avishek

https://www.savannahstate.edu/cost/nrotc/documents/Inform2010-thearmstrongworkout_Enclosure15_5-2-10.pdf

black lives matter

LBSS

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Re: a fast and explosive donkey!
« Reply #2139 on: October 29, 2013, 11:33:31 am »
0
today AM:

WEIGHT: ???
SORENESS: none
ACHES/INJURIES: none
MENTAL STATE: good

- warm up

- one-step x 5

- two-step x 12

- three-step x 5

not as good as yesterday but still okay. about one in every five jumps "clicks" and feels noticeably better than the others. i get about 0.5" higher on those than the rest of the jumps.

WEIGHT: ???
SORENESS: none
ACHES/INJURIES: none
MENTAL STATE: good

- warm up

- intensive tempo 200m x 4, 100m recovery
this whipped me, as it did with t0ddday the other week. i did the 200s in 33-35s rather than 30 so i did manage to finish all the sets strong. thought about starting up another set but jogged home very slowly instead. baby steps.
« Last Edit: October 29, 2013, 09:06:38 pm by LBSS »
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

- Avishek

https://www.savannahstate.edu/cost/nrotc/documents/Inform2010-thearmstrongworkout_Enclosure15_5-2-10.pdf

black lives matter

LBSS

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Re: a fast and explosive donkey!
« Reply #2140 on: November 01, 2013, 12:38:50 pm »
0
yesterday AM (10/31/2013):

WEIGHT: ???
SORENESS: hamstrings a bit
ACHES/INJURIES: left heel
MENTAL STATE: okay

- warm up

- DLRVJ one- and two-step x 15
really bad, could not get any speed or bounce. left heel bothering me since last night.

- stretch

yesterday PM (10/31/2013):

WEIGHT: 174
SORENESS: hamstrings a bit
ACHES/INJURIES: left heel
MENTAL STATE: okay

- warm up

- depth jump @20" x 3,3
have vid, will post. not great.

- squat 315 x 1,1,1,1
good pop

- box squat 225 x 2,2,2,2
good pop

- superset x 2
-- assisted natural GHR x 8,6
the bro holding down my ankles was not doing it hard enough the first set, so i asked him to put more pressure the second set and he seemed to be struggling so much that i felt bad and stopped early.
-- DB OHP 50 x 8
-- DB row 80 x 8

- superset x 2
-- cable hip thrust 100 x 10
-- decline sit up 18 x 15,10

- stretch

good workout. slept 10 hours last night.  :o
« Last Edit: November 01, 2013, 12:51:05 pm by LBSS »
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

- Avishek

https://www.savannahstate.edu/cost/nrotc/documents/Inform2010-thearmstrongworkout_Enclosure15_5-2-10.pdf

black lives matter

LBSS

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Re: a fast and explosive donkey!
« Reply #2141 on: November 01, 2013, 12:50:23 pm »
0
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPipj7rCxtg" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPipj7rCxtg</a>

quick-and-dirty freeze frame analysis suggests...29"? these did not feel very good.
« Last Edit: November 01, 2013, 12:52:07 pm by LBSS »
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

- Avishek

https://www.savannahstate.edu/cost/nrotc/documents/Inform2010-thearmstrongworkout_Enclosure15_5-2-10.pdf

black lives matter

ChrisM

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Re: a fast and explosive donkey!
« Reply #2142 on: November 01, 2013, 03:28:06 pm »
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Have you tried experimenting with different height boxes? I wouldn't worry too much about height, you just want to find a height that you have a good GCT with and increase your jump height from there.

Other than that it looked ok, maybe take a little more time between reps?
Insert motivational quote here...

Raptor

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Re: a fast and explosive donkey!
« Reply #2143 on: November 01, 2013, 04:00:54 pm »
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There are two obvious issues for me:

1) The lack of dorsiflexion. You plant in a plantar flexed foot position. That leads us to number 2
2) The lack of dorsiflexion translates itself in the collapse of the knee. If you play it frame by frame you can see that you plant, go down further and then jump. It's basically a standing vertical jump with "momentum". You don't want that. You want only concentric movement after the plant.

This has been a culprit of mine for years. I have the tendency when I jump off two to go further down as I plant, but in reality you need to plant as low as you need from the get-go. You must not plant, bend down and then go up. You must plant and go up.

What that does is two things:

1) Keeps the GCT low (since you eliminate the eccentric phase);
2) Forces a rapid and powerful stretch control in the plant. Preventing the eccentric collapse recruits a ton of muscle and generates a ton of power in a CONCENTRIC manner.

If you're unable to do this from that box then maybe you should try a box that allows you to do this.

Viewing all this I have a feeling you'd be terrible if you'd try consecutive jumps to the backboard or consecutive hurdle jumps. If you have access to hurdles then that should be a priority for you. Why? Because if you try to plantar flex when you do consecutive hurdle jumps you won't be able to do them. They teach you to maintain foot dorsiflexion.

If you take all these things into account... to me it sounds like you're biomechanically missing in on a lot of potential VJ inches you have in you already. You just need to correct these things (me too, I have the same issues).
« Last Edit: November 01, 2013, 04:03:33 pm by Raptor »
Current PR status:

All time squat: 165 kg/Old age squat: 130 kg
All time deadlift: 184 kg/Old age deadlift: 140 kg
All time bench: 85 kg/Old age bench: 70kgx5reps
All time hip thrust (same as old age hip thrust): 160kgx5reps

LBSS

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Re: a fast and explosive donkey!
« Reply #2144 on: November 01, 2013, 04:11:37 pm »
0
^^^good post, raptor. this was too high for me, i think. you're right, i'm terrible at consecutive backboard jumps. terrible. never really tried hurdle jumps.
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

- Avishek

https://www.savannahstate.edu/cost/nrotc/documents/Inform2010-thearmstrongworkout_Enclosure15_5-2-10.pdf

black lives matter