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Scooby's Home Bodybuilding Workouts Plyometrics |
(Under Construction)
My journey into plyometrics started with a bad ankle sprain. During physical therapy, my therapist was amazed at how weak my calves were. I think his exact comment was "I'm surprised you can walk!". Anyway, it occurred to me that perhaps my sponge-calves were part of the reason that my vertical jump was so pathetic in volleyball. Since then (18months ago) I have been training calves heavy once a week and gained in calf size and strength. My vertical jump seems to be a bit better, but only barely. So I'm at the gym two weeks ago and this gentleman in his mid '30s was doing jump training and I was transfixed, he was simply amazing. He set the stool height to about 30" and repeatedly jumped up which was simply amazing considering that he was 5'7" tall. Anyway, I grilled him about his plyometric training which got me starting researching the subject. Since I always seem on the cusp of tendonitis in my knees, I never gave any serious thought to plyometrics. I guess it was an excuse to avoid training that looked very difficult. So I started plyometric training on 5/1/07 and measured my vertical jump as a metric (remember, we always must have measurable goals!), my standing vertical jump is a whopping 16.5"! OK, I obviously had a lot of room for improvement as the pro volleyball players can jump 44".
6/15/07 Some interesting results in my first 6 weeks. First, I had to discontinue most of the plyometrics because of back issues unrelated to the plyometrics but I was able to keep up at least the calf plyometrics, specifically, doing stiff legged calf jumps. I've slowly ramped up on the volume of the training and although I haven't re-measured my vertical jump (back issues again), my calf strength seems to have surprisingly increased. Before I started my max calf-raise was 180lbs, now its 220lbs. I will be very interested to see if that continues and if my vertical jump has improved as well.