The third leg of the four-legged improvement stool is athleticism. Whatever one's genetic makeup, training can boost athleticism - strength, quickness, conditioning. MVB has some wonderful athletes who will benefit from higher performance and injury resistance.
Plan your training. First, a warmup recommended via ChatGPT Plus:
There is a recommended way to warm up for volleyball plyometrics, and it matters a lot. Going straight into jumping drills without prep is one of the fastest ways to irritate knees (patellar tendon) and ankles.
A good warmup should do three things:
raise temperature
activate key muscles (glutes, calves, core)
rehearse landing mechanics before explosive work
Here’s a practical, volleyball-specific sequence you can actually use with an emphasis on control:
1. General Warmup (3–5 min)
Get your body temperature up:
Light jog or shuffle
Backpedal → forward run
Carioca (grapevine)
2. Mobility + Dynamic Stretch (5–7 min)
Focus on joints used in jumping:
Leg swings (front/back & side/side)
Walking lunges + twist
Ankle rocks (knee over toe)
Hip openers
3. Activation (5–8 min)
This is where most people cut corners—but it’s critical.
Glute bridges (10–15)
Mini-band lateral walks
Calf raises (slow, controlled)
Plank or dead bug (core)
4. Landing Mechanics (VERY important)
Before plyos, teach your body how to absorb force.
Snap-downs (rise on toes → drop into athletic stance)
Stick landings (jump → hold landing 2–3 sec)
Focus on:
Soft, quiet landings
Knees tracking over toes (not collapsing inward)
Hips back
5. Low-Intensity Plyo Prep (Progression)
Gradually ramp up:
Pogos (quick ankle hops)
Line hops (forward/back, side/side)
Small squat jumps (50–70% effort)
6. THEN your main plyos (see below)
Now you’re ready for:
Approach jumps
Box jumps
Depth jumps (only if experienced)
Volleyball-Specific Add-On
Because volleyball is approach-based:
2–3 controlled approach jumps at ~70%
Focus on arm swing timing and penultimate step
⚠️ Common Mistakes
Skipping landing prep → leads to knee pain
Going max effort too early
Ignoring ankles/calves (huge for vertical + injury prevention)
Bottom line
A proper warmup isn’t just about “loosening up”—it directly improves jump performance and reduces injury risk. Think of it as part of the workout, not a prelude.
Pogo work
Dynamic plyometrics (easy to understand why to warm up)Do this with your kids. https://t.co/jOOO1Kb8hu
— Tyrone V. Ross Jr. (@TR401) March 19, 2026
Plyometric session with our 18U Club Volleyball players. pic.twitter.com/EJmAbmwCjV
— Missy Mitchell-McBeth (@missyMmcbeth) March 19, 2026
No comments:
Post a Comment