1 / 16

The Balanced Development of Jumpers

The Balanced Development of Jumpers. All Developmental Stages of an Athlete should have ‘EQUALITY of THOUGHT. Training in the Early Years. Training must be General to Specific Work should be mainly Aerobic prior to puberty

margie
Télécharger la présentation

The Balanced Development of Jumpers

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Balanced Development of Jumpers • All Developmental Stages of an Athlete should have ‘EQUALITY of THOUGHT

  2. Training in the Early Years • Training must be General to Specific • Work should be mainly Aerobic prior to puberty • Anaerobic Training should be introduced gradually from the ages of 14-15 years • Foremost we must build BALANCED athletes.

  3. Training Elements • Strength • Suppleness • Speed • Skill • Stamina

  4. Strength Progression • Hill Running • Distances can be lengthened/timed • Gradients can be chosen and varied • Body Weight Circuits • Circuit training • Stage Circuits – increase intensity • Aerobic including jog recoveries • Body Weight Circuits are ENDURANCE based

  5. Strength Progression • Medicine Ball Exercises • Start with footballs or light balls • Weights of balls are increased • Degree of exercise difficulty is intensified • Skills with balls are required • Games , Relays and Competitions can be utilised

  6. Strength Progression • Bounding • Jumps in place • Standing Jumps • Multiple hops and jumps – horizontal surface • Ditto over barriers – height changes • Box drills or specific work • Depth jumps • Jumping down • Start with LOW intensity

  7. Strength Progression • Multi-Gym apparatus • Isolates major muscle groups • Safe • Only works in a fixed plane • Good first learning experience to a GYM environment

  8. Strength Progression • Free Weights • All body exercise • Balance and co-ordination challenged • Increases competitive nature • Correct technique MUST be taught

  9. Suppleness • Mobility – Normal progression is Active to Passive to Kinetic/Ballistic • Active – Limbs are positioned by the exerciser’s own muscles • The end position is held for 10-30 secs • Passive – Using the aid of an external force – Partner or Apparatus • Kinetic/Ballistic – Bouncing or swinging actions • Mobility starts to decline at approximately 8 years of age.

  10. Suppleness Progression • As the athlete matures, we should maintain general mobility but increase Specific mobility to ankles, hips, spine, and shoulders.

  11. Skill • Should be developed at an early age • Skill Hungry Years are : • Girls – 8-11 years old • Boys – 8-13 years old

  12. Skill Progression • Initially isolated movements using individual drills • Co-ordination sequences • Introduce complication of synchronisation movement at increasing speeds • Two Keys : Speed of free limb movement & Postural stability • Concentration usually subsides after Approximately 20 minutes

  13. Speed • Speed is a development of skill • Previously learned drills are practiced at an increased tempo • Rhythms are maintained • Jumping activities are performed lightly increasing to fast explosive activities • Speed training before strength/stamina training in individual session ? • FULL recoveries between repetitions required

  14. Stamina • Endurance is required to practice exercises to a high level of quality • Aerobic is adjusted to anaerobic • Interval runs replace longer single runs • Gradient running is introduced • Circuit training is intensified

  15. The emphasis of objectives will vary during each age/stage of development. It will also vary from one athlete to another.Generally it will look like this :Scale: 1= Minimal Emphasis, 5 = Essential Emphasis

  16. The emphasis of objectives will vary during each age/stage of development. It will also vary from one athlete to another.Generally it will look like this :

More Related