Depth Jump exercise animation (Männlich)

Depth Jump

Zielmuskel
Equipment
Body weight
Körperregion
Plyometrics
Typ
Aerobic

The depth jump is a bodyweight plyometric drill that builds explosive lower-body power and reactive strength. You step off a low box, absorb the landing in an athletic stance, then immediately rebound into a maximal vertical jump — training the stretch-shortening cycle through the quads, glutes, hamstrings, and calves. It's a power and conditioning tool best used by athletes who already have a base of strength.

Depth Jump: So führst du sie aus

  1. 1Set a sturdy box roughly knee-height (around 30–45 cm to start) and stand on top of it with your toes near the front edge.
  2. 2Step off the box — don't jump up or out — and let both feet drop straight down toward the floor.
  3. 3Land on the balls of your feet with knees and hips slightly bent, absorbing the impact in a soft, athletic stance.
  4. 4As soon as your feet touch down, reverse the movement and drive up into a maximal vertical jump.
  5. 5Swing your arms upward as you extend your hips, knees, and ankles to add height to the jump.
  6. 6Land softly from the jump with bent knees, reset your balance, and step back onto the box for the next rep.

Technik-Tipps

  • Minimize ground-contact time — think of the floor as hot, spending as little time on it as possible between landing and rebounding.
  • Land quietly on the balls of your feet; a loud, flat-footed landing means you're absorbing rather than reusing the energy.
  • Keep your knees tracking over your toes and avoid letting them cave inward on the landing or take-off.
  • Start with a low box and progress height only once your landings are controlled and your rebound stays explosive.
  • Treat this as a power drill: do quality reps with full recovery, not a fatigued, high-rep conditioning grind.

Häufige Fehler

  • Jumping upward or outward off the box instead of simply stepping off, which changes the drop height and the landing forces.
  • Pausing or sinking deep into the landing before jumping, which wastes the stored elastic energy and turns it into an ordinary squat jump.
  • Landing flat-footed with stiff, locked legs, which spikes joint impact and raises injury risk.
  • Letting the knees collapse inward on landing or take-off, which stresses the knee joint.
  • Using a box that's too tall, so you can't control the landing or rebound quickly — height without quality just adds risk.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

What muscles does the depth jump work?

As a lower-body plyometric drill it mainly trains the legs — the quads, glutes, hamstrings, and calves work together to absorb the landing and produce the explosive rebound.

How high should the box be for depth jumps?

Start low — around knee height (about 30–45 cm) — and only increase the height once you can land softly and rebound quickly. A taller box increases impact, not necessarily power.

Are depth jumps good for beginners?

They're an advanced plyometric drill, so beginners should build a strength base and master basic jumps and soft landings first. Start with a low box, low volume, and full recovery between reps.

How many sets and reps should I do?

Keep volume low and quality high — roughly 3–5 sets of 3–6 reps with full rest between sets. Stop the set once your landings get sloppy or your rebound loses height.

What's the difference between a depth jump and a box jump?

A box jump means jumping up onto a box, while a depth jump means stepping off a box, absorbing the landing, and immediately rebounding upward. The depth jump emphasizes the fast stretch-shortening cycle and reactive strength.

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