
Two to One Leg Jump
- Zielmuskel
- —
- Equipment
- Body weight
- Körperregion
- Plyometrics
- Typ
- Aerobic
The Two to One Leg Jump is a plyometric drill in which you explosively jump off both feet and land on a single leg, training unilateral landing mechanics, lower-body power absorption, and dynamic balance. The movement challenges the entire lower body to decelerate force through one limb, making it a staple in athletic conditioning and jump-training programs. Because it requires no equipment, it fits seamlessly into warm-up circuits, power blocks, or sport-specific conditioning sessions.
Two to One Leg Jump: So führst du sie aus
- 1Stand with your feet shoulder-width apart on a flat, non-slip surface with your knees slightly bent and arms relaxed at your sides.
- 2Hinge slightly at the hips and bend your knees to load into a shallow countermovement, swinging your arms back to prepare for the jump.
- 3Drive explosively through both feet, extending your hips, knees, and ankles fully as you swing your arms forward and upward to aid elevation.
- 4At the peak of the jump, draw one knee slightly toward your chest to cue the single-leg landing position.
- 5Land softly on one foot, contacting the ground first with the ball of your foot and immediately rolling back to a flat foot.
- 6Absorb the impact by allowing the ankle, knee, and hip of the landing leg to flex simultaneously, keeping the knee tracking over the second toe.
- 7Hold the landing position for one to two seconds to demonstrate control and balance before resetting.
- 8Return to the starting stance and repeat, alternating the landing leg each repetition or completing all reps on one side before switching.
Technik-Tipps
- Keep your chest tall and gaze forward during both the takeoff and landing — looking down shifts your weight forward and destabilizes the landing.
- Think 'soft and quiet' when you land; loud landings signal that you are not absorbing force efficiently through the hip and knee.
- Drive your arms powerfully on the way up to maximise jump height without relying solely on leg power.
- Brace your core before your foot contacts the ground so your trunk is rigid enough to transfer force from the landing leg upward.
- Begin with a small jump height and prioritise landing control before increasing the distance or adding speed between repetitions.
Häufige Fehler
- Letting the knee cave inward on landing: valgus collapse reduces the joint's ability to absorb force and places harmful stress on the knee ligaments and cartilage.
- Landing with a stiff, straight leg: a locked-out knee at contact eliminates the natural shock-absorption mechanism and transmits impact force directly into the joint.
- Rushing out of the landing too quickly: releasing the single-leg hold before achieving balance skips the stability phase that makes this drill effective for injury prevention.
- Taking off unevenly from both feet: pushing harder through one leg during the two-legged takeoff creates an asymmetric flight path and an awkward, unbalanced landing.
- Allowing the trunk to fold excessively forward: collapsing the torso toward the thigh at landing indicates the core is not braced and reduces the hip's ability to control deceleration.
Häufig gestellte Fragen
What is the difference between a two-to-one leg jump and a standard single-leg jump?
In a two-to-one leg jump you take off from both feet and land on one, which generates more total force at landing than a single-leg takeoff would. This bilateral-to-unilateral pattern is a common progression used in athletic training to teach athletes how to safely decelerate high forces through a single limb before they encounter those loads in sport.
Is this exercise appropriate for beginners?
It is best suited to trainees who already have a solid foundation in squatting mechanics and basic single-leg balance. True beginners should first master bodyweight squats and single-leg stands before progressing to plyometric landing drills. Once you can hold a controlled single-leg squat position for several seconds without knee cave, you are generally ready to introduce this movement at a low jump height.
How many sets and reps should I do for the Two to One Leg Jump?
For power and landing-mechanics development, 3–4 sets of 4–6 repetitions per landing leg work well. Plyometric quality drops sharply with fatigue, so keep total ground contacts per session moderate — typically 40–80 contacts for athletes new to plyometrics — and rest 60–90 seconds between sets to allow near-full recovery.
Where does this exercise fit in a workout?
Place it early in your session, after a thorough dynamic warm-up but before heavy strength work, when your neuromuscular system is fresh. It can also serve as the power component in a circuit-based conditioning session when performed at low to moderate intensity with adequate rest between rounds.
How can I make the Two to One Leg Jump harder as I progress?
You can increase difficulty by jumping from a step or box onto one leg (depth landing variation), by increasing horizontal distance covered during the jump, or by reducing ground-contact time between the landing and the next takeoff once control is established. Adding a reactive element — such as immediately absorbing into a single-leg squat after landing — also increases the demand on balance and deceleration strength.







