90° ROTATIONAL MINI HURDLE BOUNDING: BOUND TO TOUCH/PAUSE

90° ROTATIONAL MINI HURDLE BOUNDING: BOUND TO TOUCH/PAUSE
90° ROTATIONAL JUMPS
Rotational Jumps are another Jump variation which involves work done in a multiplanar fashion. Sports are not just linear. An athlete needs to able to quickly change direction. Frequently you’ll see athletes go down injured, without any contact. Seemingly hurting themselves. A lot of that can be attributed to a lack of proper strength and stability from rotational forces. This is especially true with female athletes and their higher rick to knee injuries. Adding a simple rotational warm-up or training rotational jumps can have a huge benefit on injury prevention. Our rotational program only includes 90° or a quarter turn. We keep it simple incorporating hops, jumps, and bounds. Using Boxes, Mini Hurdles. Again, difficulty is prescribed in layers. Each layer introduced based on what is appropriate for each age group.
90° ROTATIONAL MINI HURDLE BOUNDS
90° Rotational Mini Hurdle Bounds are part of our Rotational Jump Series and are taught in a specific progression. 90° Rotational Mini Hurdle Bounds are an introduction to change of direction. More specifically an Open Gate Start. Ice skating requires hockey players to utilize their foot in a lateral fashion. This 90° Lateral Bound is followed with a stable single leg landing. Performing this movement pattern over a mini hurdle will help the player focus on a stable landing, subsequent hip load, and rapid change of direction through our progressions. The single most difficult thing will be getting your arm mechanics correct, which are extremely important and very relative to balance and ability to generate power. Arm action is opposite leg action. The athlete will also practice working on adjusting their hip level height in reference to Base of Stance.
90° Rotational Mini Hurdle Bounding: Bound to Touch/Pause
Touch / Pause puts emphasis on the transitional Phase, landing with a proper hip load to transition, yielding with a strong deceleration and application of force in the opposite direction.
- Begin standing tall, in a single leg stance, on your trail leg, 45° away from the mini hurdle
- Arms are both bent at 90°. Your trail hand is above your head. Your lead hand is near your waist
- Your lead leg in bent at 90° with knee at waist height
- Quickly drop down into a load position switching arms positions, dropping back your lead leg
- During this Load Phase, your hip should line up directly over your knee and foot
- Once you get to your power position, quickly change direction, applying force with the trail leg.
- Bound laterally 90° over the hurdle, landing on the opposite leg
- Quickly change direction bounding back to starting position
- Externally rotate your lead leg toward the hurdle as you bound over
- Reach across your body with your trail arm
- Rip your lead arm back
- Internally rotate your body as you jump
- Quietly land in athletic position, on your lead foot.
- Both Arms bent at 90°. Your trail hand is above your head. Your lead hand is near your waist
- Pause for 2 sec after each sequence
- This is not a quick drill. Focus on quietly sticking the landing without excessive movement.