Hey Lance I'm a beach volleyball player so my jumping goal is a little different. The sand takes away a lot of my reactive advantage. That said I still obviously descend quickly and reverse the movement like everyone else.
My current program includes jump squats. How should I do these to maximise the advantage for my sport??? I'm comfortable with either technique, just don't get which one I should use. I've been doing paused in the belief that they'll help with my RFD and that sand jumping is all about raw strength and RFD.
Thats a really good question, I have actually worked with some fairly high level volleyball players who played in beach circuits as well as hardcourt, so I can share with you what I FELT had the best carryover to the sand vs the hardcourt for them.
First of all, the approach is different, youre looking at a shorter approach in sand vs a longer approach on hard court, so the plyos/jump drills are cut down to 2 steps or less for the majority of the training. I definitely agree that the paused jump squat will have some unique benefits for jumps in the sand, but one thing I found that helped a lot was to still make sure and drop quickly into the countermovement. The stretch reflex will dissipate in a VERY similar manner that it does in the sand when a countermovement is performed, BUT THE MORE YOU TRAIN THIS QUALITY OF BEING ABLE TO "HOLD" THE STRETCH REFLEX, the better you get at it, and the more you will benefit from it even though the amortization phase is longer than optimal. Louie Simmons has spoken about this extensively, and has a ton of research to back it up, the more you practice "maintaining" the stretch reflex, the better you get at it. Hence his quotes of "a trained athlete can maintain the stretch reflex up to several seconds."
One other thing that helped was doing cleans and snatches from boxes or pins, setting the bar in the power position. In a traditional hang clean or hang snatch, you can "dip" and initiate the stretch reflex, this version makes for a more static start. Obviously, doing jumps and jump drills barefoot helps a ton as well, as the smaller muscles in the feet are often lacking in athletes who play and train in shoes most of the time. Hope that helps man, I would still do some jumping/explosive training utilizing a faster amortization phase as well, but paused lifts like the jump squats, paused squats, olys off boxes, etc., will give you some very good carryover to your sport, just remember to still descend sharply into the countermovement or eccentric, even though you are pausing the lift, you are training to "hold on to" and "maintain" the stretch reflex, and that is going to play a critical role in the successive jump height/power.
edit: I forgot to add, we usually used a higher percentage of squat max as well on the jump squats, closer to 40% and higher, when training for the sand. Its just a little more on the strength-speed end of the spectrum rather than the speed-strength, which is similar to the effects the surface has on the jumps.