Single-leg staircase ladder
Jumping: vertical, broad & staircase
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1m 43s
THE WHAT & HOW:
A unilateral staircase ladder context designed to develop maximal single-leg jumping capacity alongside unilateral landing control within a structured, measurable progression. The staircase provides a clear external framework through step “paces,” allowing the practitioner to progressively load unilateral take-off and landing demands while tracking output in a simple and repeatable way. The goal is to build both coordination and capacity in single-leg projection under increasing distance demands.
The structure follows the same graded ladder principle, but performed entirely on one leg. The practitioner begins at lower paces and completes sets of controlled “stuck” jumps at each level before progressing. Progression is earned through consistency and landing quality rather than effort alone, with Minimum Time to Stabilisation (MTS) remaining a key constraint. As intensity increases, volume and exposure must be managed carefully due to the higher mechanical and neuromuscular load of unilateral work.
A central feature of this context is the coordination between the free leg and the arm swing. In take-off, the free leg actively coordinates with the arms to assist force production, creating a linked whole-body extension rather than an isolated leg action. In flight, this coordination helps organise balance and trajectory. In landing, the system must rapidly re-stabilise on a single point of contact, requiring precise control of alignment, timing, and force dissipation.
From a movement perspective, this builds on principles widely discussed in plyometric and sprint mechanics literature (e.g. Supertraining), where unilateral actions are known to place higher demands on stabilisation, reactive strength, and inter-limb coordination. Compared to bilateral jumping, unilateral jumping increases the requirement for pelvic control, foot-ankle stiffness, and midline organisation, while also enhancing transfer to locomotor skills such as sprinting, cutting, and reactive direction change.
The benefits of this context are largely grounded in its transfer to real-world and sport environments, where force is often applied and absorbed asymmetrically. Many athletic tasks involve single-leg take-off or landing - such as sprinting, bounding, cutting, or stepping into unpredictable terrain - where the body must manage force through one limb while maintaining whole-body orientation. This makes unilateral ladder work especially valuable for improving robustness under variability, as well as enhancing reactive balance and force redirection.
Execution should remain mindful due to the higher intensity and fatigue cost. The practitioner should prioritise clean, committed take-offs, controlled landings, and consistent rhythm rather than excessive volume. Over time, this develops not only maximal single-leg output, but also the ability to maintain coordination and stability under high force, high variability conditions where precision becomes more important than raw output alone.
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