Author Topic: chasing athleticism  (Read 939954 times)

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vag

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1485 on: January 05, 2014, 08:44:09 am »
+1
Indeed, Amare's  standing reach is 9'0,5'', so 10' for him looks like 9' for us ~8' reachers. Toddday's reserve argument is still valid of course. Amare's draft measurements are 32'' SVJ / 35,5'' RVJ. He can touch 11' with 24'' of leap, which is only 75% of his SVJ. If his numbers were lower, he would have a harder time dunking ( no shit Sherlock! ).
Forget Amare and anyone else, focus on yourself. You have a 8'3'' reach, you need 21'' to touch rim, you can palm the ball easily so you need 28-30'' to dunk. Get to 38-40'' of vert, have 10'' of reserve between barely dunking and max vert, enjoy in-game dunk-fest!
:lololol:
Target training paces (min/km), calculated from 5K PR 22:49 :
Easy run : 5:48
Tempo run : 4:50
VO2-max run :4:21
Speed form run : 4:02

---

it's the biggest trick in the run game.. go slow to go fast. it doesn't make sense until it smacks you in the face and you're like ....... wtf?

entropy

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chasing athleticism -- RSR2-W5D1
« Reply #1486 on: January 06, 2014, 07:56:56 am »
0
Training
FS 1x137.5
BS 2x6x130

BS notes:
That was a light day?? damn, i am spent. They were very hard. I went into the workout with my left knee feeling achy. As i went thru the workout it felt better and better and as i write this, it feels normal thank god! I am afraid the squatmornings i've been doing might have started to weed their way into my pristine highbar mechanics. I can see the dirty hip drive faggotry creeping into my concentric :/ Hopefully it's just an aberration because of the fatigue built up from last week. I've had doms in my posterior chain, doms in my quads, doms in my calves... etc.

I planned on doing arms and pressing today but i might not do it in the end, i need to be fully recovered for weds rx heavy day and might let my legs and buttocks take the full recovery resources available..
Goals: Cutting to 6-8% bodyfat

T0ddday

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1487 on: January 06, 2014, 09:26:29 am »
+1
Game time dunking, raptor..

My favoured approach is R of the rim with a R-L plant while dunking with the L hand. I do the same thing from the L side too but not as comfortably. Would a L-R plant from the L side be more ideal? And I guess with the R hand would even be better. But I can't hold the ball as well with my R hand. Guess i could stand to work on my grip regardless.

As Vag and Raptor pointed out... you will never be Amare because your just too short (although you can still be a formidable in game dunker - Charles Barkley sure was).  But to be the best in game dunker you can you essentially want to have all the plants and practice dunking off both legs.  It's also a good general workout and will allow you to have jump sessions where you get in a lot more dunks without putting much more stress on your body.  Of course some of your dunks probably won't even be dunks but you could drill things like: standing dunks, drop step dunks, 1 leg right, 1 leg left, two step LR, RL, etc, etc. 

As far as plants go....   Perhap's I've never been truly into dunking enough.... but I personally have never really been able to learn to plant the opposite way.  I didn't put a ton of time into it but I messed around with it once and found it pretty awkward.  However... If you want to be the ultimate 2-footed dunker I would argue that yes you really need to develop a LR plant from the L side ( or a RL plant from the R side ).   An alternating plant ( LR from L, RL from R )  really does open your hips up to dunk and it opens your opposite shoulder to the defender (so if have to dunk on someone you can).

I think the best developed resource from bilateral jump footwork is actually volleyball... Not basketball.   In volleyball a left handed hitter is taught to jump with with a LR plant and a right handed with a RL plant.   Jumping the opposite way (as you and I do) is referred to as "goofy footed" and avoided most of the time because the contortion causes shoulder injuries and it's a slower approach relative to the set.    Of course in advanced volleyball there are *some* uses to goofy footed hitters because they can jump reverse essentially and mess up timing, but as a standard it's the less desirable plant.  As to whether athletes should switch from goofy to regular is a little unclear...  Most coaches will try to switch a young volleyball player to regular plant, some believe you have to leave it alone.   Honestly, I am not sure whether it would be easier for me to learn to dunk with my left hand or switch my plant... I actually think it might be easier for me to just dunk lefty with my current plant, then again I have stubborn coordination and I have been jumping this way ( and starting in blocks LR AND on the line as a receiver LR ) for about 20 years now so it's a pretty ingrained pattern... you might be able to change it and if possible you should become proficient at the other plant. 

I'm sure it's been posted before... but perhaps the best bilateral jumper of all time, the 6' cuban volleyball player... And of course he uses a RL plant for a right handed spike.

Quote

Btw does anyone do windmills, what is good technique for it? Not for me, i'm asking for a friend who has 10% bodyfat..

Quote

Lol, asking for a friend huh ;).   From the dunk videos posted you are not incapable of windmills.  I quite good at missing windmills and the answer to the question really depends if it's off a lob or a dribble.  As bad as our plant for where it puts our shoulders it can be useful for more advanced dunks.  Despite only having about 2'' inches of two-handed dunk reserve (ie on my best day I estimate I could maybe do two handed dunk on 10'2'') I have been able to pull off really easy turn around drop step dunks ( back toward hoop, turn body toward right, bring left around for powerful plant, then tap with right as I power-dribble and rise up with right hand ) because my plant actually helps me with the turn.  Additionally, I have landed a few fake 360's be approaching turned and finishing the last 150 degrees of the spin in the air to dunk.   I forget the mechanics but I was at one time working on a strange windmill windup that helped me straighten up from my plant.    Essentially the goofy plant the both you and I use requires you to contort your body in the air to get your hips open and dunking shoulder back if you take off for maximum height.... This contortion can be used to do a semi-360 or some cool wrinkle on a dunk that will make people think dunking is a lot easier for you than it is...  It will take a lot of practice.....

BTW, speaking of the challenges of in game dunking.... Part of the problem is you are just too short...  The threshold for in game dunking seems to around 6'6'' for where you can ALWAYS dunk.  Consider Dwayne Wade (who btw can plant both ways)...  Similar standing reach as you, doesn't have huge hands, has some nagging knee pain (like you do when you squat), and has fatigued legs from the nba season....    He blew a layup the other day because his steps were off and it simply isn't that easy to dunk on command... so your in good company: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y5P4BSUK72A
 



T0ddday

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1488 on: January 06, 2014, 09:34:34 am »
0
Cool post t0dday. What's the point of half squats/quarter squats if not for specificity to the movement of jumping? Just the fact that more resistance can be used?

Good question.  Snarky strength coaches would just rephrase the question as "What's the point of half squats/quarter squats" - nothing. 

But the point of half/quarter squats is the same as trap-bar deadlifts... To develop leg muscle and strength.   If an athlete can do full squats easily, has good form, etc then the only possible advantage is to a partial rep is like you said supramaximal loading.  However, a lot of athletes can't full squat much at all or end up relying on their back too much when full squatting.  Half squats and quarter squats might be better for these athletes if they can build leg strength and muscle faster with them.   You can easily add in a hamstring exercise for what half squats dont recruit as far as glutes/hams.  My problem with half squats was moreso that they aren't measurable than than that they are a inferior movement.   They lack measurability because it's hard to know whether you have PRed in the half/quarter squat or just raised your depth an inch.... Pin squats can keep the bar going down to the same height but then it's hard to measure whether you just bent your back a bit more to hit the pin....   I favor a box squat a bit more because measurability is slightly better that way, but basically if you can keep honest form then and prefer half squats can be really useful.   

entropy

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1489 on: January 06, 2014, 11:02:44 am »
0
I looked on google images for an appropriate up arrow gif but i can't find one to do justice. Might defer to LBSS to look into big bag of cool graphics and kindly post one in gratitude for the awesome posts above!

So this is the first time in a long time, i can't remember the last, maybe when i was learning to swim a few summers ago that i'm genuinely excited about going out and trying something out in anticipating of improving myself. I can def get behind exploring different plants, i just wish someone had suggested it to me sooner. I'm always keen to re-learn and re-do my mechanics. it was only recently i took apart my jumpshot and put it back together again with cleaner technique. I love stuff like this!

Shit, even before i become a DL jumper. I always jumped off my L leg, either side of the rim and after become a squatter and DL jumper, i just carried this over when i took up a RL plant w/ all my jumps. That would have been the ideal time to switch to LR where it's more appropriate but i didn't know better.

So for efficiency if dunking L of rim, I should use L hand and plant LR. If dunking from R of rim, use R hand and plant RL (what i alraedy do except with L hand).  hmmm  interesting.

 :highfive:

« Last Edit: January 06, 2014, 11:25:01 am by entropy »
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LBSS

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1490 on: January 06, 2014, 11:48:41 am »
0
ask, and you shall receive.




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

vag

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1491 on: January 06, 2014, 12:20:18 pm »
0
Also, FWIW and from my n=1, it is much easier to change your dunking hand than your plant. It is weird in the beginning but you adapt to it pretty fast ( i am talking weeks, not even months ). At least that is how it worked for me. I am still 100% right handed except from dunking, and LR-L is 100 times better than my previous LR-R. I did play around with plants too but there was no way to get the RL down right, it always feels awkward and has me jumping 2-3 inches lower. To be fair also, at my all time peak my plant was more like a jump stop than a true LR, but still, if last step before that was with L, it wouldn't work again. Agree once again with toddday, play around with all plants, bring them all up.
Target training paces (min/km), calculated from 5K PR 22:49 :
Easy run : 5:48
Tempo run : 4:50
VO2-max run :4:21
Speed form run : 4:02

---

it's the biggest trick in the run game.. go slow to go fast. it doesn't make sense until it smacks you in the face and you're like ....... wtf?

T0ddday

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1492 on: January 06, 2014, 04:54:14 pm »
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Also, FWIW and from my n=1, it is much easier to change your dunking hand than your plant. It is weird in the beginning but you adapt to it pretty fast ( i am talking weeks, not even months ). At least that is how it worked for me. I am still 100% right handed except from dunking, and LR-L is 100 times better than my previous LR-R. I did play around with plants too but there was no way to get the RL down right, it always feels awkward and has me jumping 2-3 inches lower. To be fair also, at my all time peak my plant was more like a jump stop than a true LR, but still, if last step before that was with L, it wouldn't work again. Agree once again with toddday, play around with all plants, bring them all up.

I'm totally with you on the difficulty of changing your plant...  It doesn't really matter for Entropy as he wants to be an in-game dunker and so he must get decent at both plants, but I'm just curious if someone who more of a contest dunker has had any success changing their plant?  I always figured that the jumpers who use what looks more like a jump stop might have more luck than someone who really single leg plants and taps with the other leg.   It would be really cool if it I could dunk with the opposite plant... It's really nonsense to be equally as good at 180s, drop steps, and running dunks but that is where I end up with my goofy plant. 

I think Entropy will be a good test case... He is meticulous, willing to put in the time to practice, and since he wants to in-game dunk even if he can't successfully change his plant foot to jump as high as his natural plant it will still be helpful for him to improve.  I wonder how much of the plant leg is coordination vs strength.  To be fair I feel really uncoordinated trying the other plant, but at the same time I run the 200m (turning left), long jump off my left foot, single leg jump off my left, and have for years... My left hamstring is visually bigger than my right hamstring so maybe switching plant legs wouldn't work even if I was more coordinated...  Hopefully Entropy has less strength imbalances and will adapt better.

Vag, can you palm the ball with both hands?  Obviously, you L-R-L dunk is better than your L-R-R dunking but is your L-R-L maximum vertical touch higher than your L-R-R maximum vertical touch?   I probably should take your route and suck it up and learn to dunk with my left hand but I can precariously palm the ball only in might right hand and I've gotten pretty coordinated at keeping it in that hand!   Do you bring it up with both and switch to left?   

LBSS

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1493 on: January 06, 2014, 06:38:17 pm »
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...or maybe your right hamstring would get bigger and stronger.

fwiw, i used to be a complete mess SL jumping off my left foot. as bad as i was off right, i could not even do a coordinated layup off left. now, some hundreds (not even 1000s) of layups later, i can touch rim off both feet although my peak off right is still probably a bit higher. i have no doubt that my (or entropy's, or anyone's) RL plant would improve with lots of submax work.
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

vag

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1494 on: January 06, 2014, 06:54:27 pm »
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Vag, can you palm the ball with both hands?  Obviously, you L-R-L dunk is better than your L-R-R dunking but is your L-R-L maximum vertical touch higher than your L-R-R maximum vertical touch?   I probably should take your route and suck it up and learn to dunk with my left hand but I can precariously palm the ball only in might right hand and I've gotten pretty coordinated at keeping it in that hand!   Do you bring it up with both and switch to left?

Yes i can palm the ball the same with both hands. When i began changing it, highest touch was the same for LR-L and LR-R too. Dunk/highest touch sessions were mixed, like 50-50 LR-L LR-R. Session by session i started using more and more left, and after a couple of months or less it was pure left. Have not tried right ever since. That didn't happen deliberately, the LR-L efficiency naturally dominated.
I have it palmed before the runup but supporting it with the other hand during all runup and plant, i seem to release the right hand when starting to rise.
« Last Edit: January 06, 2014, 07:27:31 pm by vag »
Target training paces (min/km), calculated from 5K PR 22:49 :
Easy run : 5:48
Tempo run : 4:50
VO2-max run :4:21
Speed form run : 4:02

---

it's the biggest trick in the run game.. go slow to go fast. it doesn't make sense until it smacks you in the face and you're like ....... wtf?

Raptor

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1495 on: January 06, 2014, 07:07:50 pm »
+2
To me, entropy's biggest problem is neither of these things discussed here... I have to be honest... he just LACKS LIFE so to speak.

Whenever I see a recording with him... he's walking around very slowly and his jumps look like a 60 year old guy tries to jump. I hope entropy (or anybody else) doesn't hate me for saying this but... that's what I think.

Until he won't try to be more aggressive and FASTER... I just don't see how this will work out. Maybe he'll be OK off a standing vert or something but of a running (walking) jump in his case...

Entropy buddy... you need to put out some life out there man. Seriously. You can't just walk around and jump like someone forces to do it and you hate it, and then expect to have results.

entropy

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1496 on: January 06, 2014, 11:00:01 pm »
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I agree. I'be been reading and thinking about that Raptor, funny you should say. It's to do with having poor footwork, i don't have active athletic feet. I should be more forefoot dominant (have i used enough buzzwords yet?). When i watch video of myself during games i am very heavy on my feet and appear flat footed.

It's something i'm going to work on though. I have found a few drills to get good at; the BFS dot drill and the line hopping one, will see if it helps. I'm also told to do a bit of barefoot running to groove the position but there is something gross about running on grass these days knowing there are so many dogs who have pissed on it before. Probably. Maybe on sand or something, idk.

The other thing is partially an artefact of the video equipment I use. The few times i've filmed with a better camera eg on my phone, it comes out looking a lot smoother and faster. But it's harder to hold the phone in place compared to a camera i can put on the tripod or just sit up on a ledge somewhere, you know. I guess if i look fast on my usual camera, then i'll be super quick in real life or on a good camera :P



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ian459

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1497 on: January 07, 2014, 12:52:20 am »
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Cool post t0dday. What's the point of half squats/quarter squats if not for specificity to the movement of jumping? Just the fact that more resistance can be used?

Good question.  Snarky strength coaches would just rephrase the question as "What's the point of half squats/quarter squats" - nothing. 

But the point of half/quarter squats is the same as trap-bar deadlifts... To develop leg muscle and strength.   If an athlete can do full squats easily, has good form, etc then the only possible advantage is to a partial rep is like you said supramaximal loading.  However, a lot of athletes can't full squat much at all or end up relying on their back too much when full squatting.  Half squats and quarter squats might be better for these athletes if they can build leg strength and muscle faster with them.   You can easily add in a hamstring exercise for what half squats dont recruit as far as glutes/hams.  My problem with half squats was moreso that they aren't measurable than than that they are a inferior movement.   They lack measurability because it's hard to know whether you have PRed in the half/quarter squat or just raised your depth an inch.... Pin squats can keep the bar going down to the same height but then it's hard to measure whether you just bent your back a bit more to hit the pin....   I favor a box squat a bit more because measurability is slightly better that way, but basically if you can keep honest form then and prefer half squats can be really useful.

Thanks for the response T0ddday. Also, why not just leg press and hack squats to build strength? Do the stabilizers (which aren't trained by leg press/hack squats) matter that much for the vertical jump?

Raptor

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1498 on: January 07, 2014, 01:02:30 am »
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Yeah I think you're exactly right entropy. In fact, to think of it... that's the reason. If you have a lot of upperleg strength and you're weak in the lowerleg department... then you will tend to look like you do. That's a big no-no in my books.

Not only that, but will put you in the position of a possible injury because you will exert power from the upperlegs but have ankle collapse lower down the chain, which in turn will stress the knee.

So... the barefoot running idea is a very good one (I do it on the track). And anything else that loads up these calves while being in a dorsiflexed position is great too (consecutive jumps, ankle bounces, line hops, rudiment hops, sprints, high hurdles etc).

If I were you I'd probably do barefoot sprinting and double leg bounds + rudiment hops at the end, with emphasis on staying on the ground as little as possible.

T0ddday

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1499 on: January 07, 2014, 01:26:09 am »
+1

Thanks for the response T0ddday. Also, why not just leg press and hack squats to build strength? Do the stabilizers (which aren't trained by leg press/hack squats) matter that much for the vertical jump?


What are the stabilizers?  Some special group of muscles I have never heard of?  There are good reasons why squatting is usually a better idea than leg press but training the "stabilizers".   Muscles can act as stabilizers but there are not really muscles which can only be trained as stabilizers...   The prime stabilizers in the back squat are the quads, low back, and glutes/hams...  The stabilizers are the prime movers!   The front squat is going to involve more core stabilization but if anything that's a weakness (limits load on legs) as far as grading the front squat as a leg movement.   Now if you are talking about bang for the buck exercises (ie you can only choose one exercise) then sure choose front squats to press or some crossfit move but if you want to build bigger, stronger legs choose the exercise that lets you best do that...

Despite that the legpress as an exercise has a lot of weaknesses compared to the squat.  First of all it's just simply dangerous... the pelvis rotates away from the back rest when weights get big and you can easily herniate a disk if loads are significant.    Second of all it doesn't build any general mobility.   However, there are types of machine squats and or lifts that reduce stabilization that certainly could be used by athletes.