Plyometrics Fitness

Fitness and Performance Benefits for Non-Athletes

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What are the benefits of plyometrics? Trainers and strength coaches often integrate plyometrics into their sports performance programs for athletes. Yet, the benefits of plyometrics aren’t exclusive to athletes.

When used appropriately, plyometric exercises add variety to programming, provide a safe and effective means of improving movement proficiency, and can better prepare your nervous system to produce maximal force during training sessions, athletic events, and in everyday life.

While I never rely exclusively on plyometrics for my online personal training programs, I often include at least one movement near the beginning of a workout. I’ll explain what plyometric exercise entails, the benefits you can expect, and my rationale for including certain exercises in my training program.

What are plyometrics?

Plyometrics are exercises performed with maximal speed and power for short periods of time. Though plyos are a type of power training, they aren’t the same as Olympic lifting or powerlifting.

Plyometrics definition: A quick and eccentric (muscle-lengthening) muscle contraction immediately followed by a swift and explosive concentric muscle contraction. While you quickly complete an eccentric movement, such as dropping to the bottom of a squat position, your muscles load with elastic energy. This storing of power from the stretch response is called “amortization.”

If you pause between the eccentric and concentric contractions too long, you lose the energy created from the amortization. To qualify as a plyometric exercise, you complete a maximal power, concentric movement immediately after the eccentric contraction.

The entire concentric-amortization-eccentric process is often referred to as the “stretch-shortening cycle.”

In reality, we leverage the stretch-shortening cycle in everyday life as well as in athletics. Once you become aware of it, you’ll see people use it to get out of chairs or move up the stairs, although they rarely use it to generate peak power.

Plyometric Exercises

Most plyometric training focuses on lower body movements, though some upper body plyometric movements exist. This is far from an exhaustive list, but the following are common plyometric exercises, many of which I include in my virtual personal training programs.

Jump squats

Triple broad jumps

Clapping push-ups

Depth jumps

Jumping lunges

Speed skater hops

Box jumps

Hurdle hops

Single leg hurdle hops

Jumping rope

Medicine ball catch and toss

Hand release pull-ups

Novice athletes and exercisers use their body weight as resistance, whereas intermediate and advanced athletes and exercisers may add additional resistance with bands, dumbbells, barbells, or a weight vest.

You can also vary the terrain to make plyometric exercises more challenging. Water, sand, and uneven surfaces add another layer or difficulty.

Though you often see people use them in gyms, I never recommend using a BOSU for plyometric exercises. It’s an accident waiting to happen and adds no functional value to a client’s programming unless they’re training for the circus. Sadly, though, I see many fitness professionals misuse the BOSU in this way.

What are the Benefits of Plyometrics?

Athletes have used plyometric training for decades to improve jump performance, lower body power, agility, and force production. Yet, non-athlete everyday Joe’s and Jane’s need these same abilities to function well in everyday life.

Plyometric movements challenge stability, balance, agility, speed, and power, which help you navigate life as much as an athlete navigates an athletic field.

In daily life, rapid force production is crucial in situations when balance needs to be corrected quickly after tripping, and its decline may be a major contributor to the loss of independence and falling accidents and injuries in older adults. Additionally, both agility and lower-extremity muscle power correlate well with balance, and having greater agility and more powerful legs thus likely indicates improved balance, which may decrease the risk of fractures and other fall-related injuries.

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Research-supported benefits of plyometric training include:

increased vertical jump height

increased horizontal jump performance

improved agility, or ability to change direction

increased lower body maximum power, strength, and muscle mass

increased bone density

improved movement proficiency and coordination

improved nervous system activation

improved ankle stability

improved stretch reflexes, which make the muscles more prepared for future plyometric or ballistic exercise

Plyos vs. Resistance Training

Though plyometric training does cause hypertrophy (muscle growth) and improves bone density, traditional strength training builds muscle and bone density much better.

Even if you add load with dumbbells or weighted vests, you can safely use only a fraction of the weight you can use with a standard resistance training exercise. Also, the time under tension during a plyometric exercise is much less than a resistance training exercise.

With standard strength training movements, a muscle group remains under tension throughout the entire set. With plyos, the muscles are only loaded when your body remains in contact with the ground.

That said, I do believe including some plyometric movements in a strength training program adds value.

Read also: 9 Reasons Strength Training is Critical for Long-Term Health and Fitness.

Plyometric Training for Non-Athletes

Plyometric movements:

increase neural drive

allow clients to practice fundamental movement techniques like jumping, hopping, and pressing safely, and

increase core temperature, which improves overall strength.

Though plyos do not increase muscle mass or bone density like resistance training, they do enhance the effectiveness of a strength and conditioning program for non-athletes.

By including the plyos early in a training session, they help increase neural drive and core body temperature, which may improve performance throughout the rest of the workout. Plyos also help clients improve their movement patterns.

For example, one of my favorite plyometric exercises is the triple broad jump. Not only do you need good squat technique, but you also need:

reasonable hip and hamstring range of motion

good coordination between your arms and legs

balance from right to left, so you jump and land with both feet, and

good body awareness.

You also get immediate feedback on your technique. You know if you land favoring one foot versus landing with both, and immediately feel if you’ve stretched certain muscles to their range of motion limits.

On the other hand, even in gyms with limited space, you can usually find somewhere to do some box jumps.

In my opinion, it’s best to include a plyometric movement after the general warm-up and prep work, and before standard strength or Olympic lifts.

As an example, the image below is a week of Lumberjacked. I’ve included a plyometric exercise after the prep work in three out of the four training sessions.

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Lumberjacked Example Training Schedule

Plyometric exercises add value to a well-designed training program, but they should only occupy a small part of the training plan for most people.

I recommend no more than two plyometric movements, so you have enough time to focus on building strength, mobility, muscle mass, and bone density during your training session.

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