
Hopping Pendulum
- Zielmuskel
- —
- Equipment
- Body weight
- Körperregion
- Plyometrics
- Typ
- Aerobic
The hopping pendulum is a plyometric, bodyweight conditioning drill where you hop side to side in a swinging pendulum motion, landing on one leg before springing across to the other. Driven by the calves, quads, and glutes, it builds lateral power, single-leg balance, and aerobic conditioning with no equipment.
Hopping Pendulum: So führst du sie aus
- 1Stand tall on one leg with a soft bend in the knee, your other foot lifted slightly off the floor and your core braced.
- 2Push off the standing leg and hop laterally across to the other side, swinging your free leg across like a pendulum.
- 3Land softly on the opposite leg, absorbing the impact by bending the knee, hip, and ankle.
- 4Hold the landing for a moment to find your balance, keeping your chest up and eyes forward.
- 5Spring back across to the first leg in one continuous, controlled motion.
- 6Use your arms in rhythm with each hop to drive momentum and stay coordinated.
- 7Continue alternating side to side for the prescribed time or number of hops, keeping the swing smooth.
- 8Finish by landing on two feet and standing tall to recover.
Technik-Tipps
- Land on the ball of your foot first and roll back through the heel, letting the knee and hip soak up the impact quietly.
- Keep your knee tracking in line with your toes on every landing to protect the joint during the lateral push-off.
- Push for distance side to side rather than height — the pendulum is about lateral power, not how high you jump.
- Brace your core throughout so your torso stays stable while your legs swing beneath you.
- Start with a slower, controlled tempo and add speed only once your landings are balanced and quiet.
Häufige Fehler
- Landing with a stiff, locked-out leg, which sends impact straight into the knee and ankle instead of being absorbed by the muscles.
- Letting the landing knee cave inward toward the midline, which stresses the knee ligaments under load.
- Rushing the rhythm and crashing down off-balance, which loses the controlled pendulum swing and increases the chance of a rolled ankle.
- Hunching forward at the waist, which throws off your balance and reduces the power you can put into each hop.
- Looking down at your feet instead of forward, which disrupts balance and coordination between sides.
Häufig gestellte Fragen
What muscles does the hopping pendulum work?
It mainly works the lower-body movers that drive and absorb each hop — the calves, quads, and glutes — while your core stabilizes your torso through the side-to-side swing.
Is the hopping pendulum good for beginners?
Yes, as long as you start slow. Begin with small, controlled hops and quiet landings to build single-leg balance, then increase speed and distance as your landing mechanics improve.
How long should I do the hopping pendulum?
As an aerobic drill, work in timed intervals — for example 20 to 40 seconds of continuous hops followed by rest, repeated for 3 to 5 rounds. Stop and reset if your landings get sloppy.
Is the hopping pendulum a cardio or strength exercise?
It's an aerobic, plyometric drill. It trains conditioning, lateral power, and landing mechanics rather than building maximal strength, which makes it a good fit for warm-ups and conditioning circuits.







