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Vew-Do Balance Boards Plyometric Exercise Training Program

Still looking for that silver bullet? The one that gives you the “insiders” edge over the competition? What’s your motivation?… The love of the sport, that high you feel from the attention of winning or being the best? Maybe it’s to attract members of the opposite sex or overcome a disability. Your motivation is there. You’ve tried training harder, drilling, lifting and even nutritional supplements, but you can’t seem to crack the-code.

Core training could be the missing link for you. It used to be a secret weapon, but not anymore. Coaches and trainers who are on the cutting edge of athletics are adapting core training to their conventional training routines.

Plyometric exercise training and improving balance, coordination and other motor
skills through proprioception is one of the fastest growing areas of core training. Try adding plyometric exercise training to your bag of tricks and see for yourself.

What’s Plyometrics and how can you benefit from a plyometric exercise training
program?

Plyometrics and plyometric exercise training programs are exploding from cult status to a
necessity because it zeroes in on two missing links to modern day athletics – Sport specific core training and proprioception.

Plyometrics is the activity of rapid alternation of lengthening and shortening of specific muscle groups while resistance is continuously being applied to them. This lengthening and shortening cycle when performed in rapid succession allows the muscles to store some of the lost energy in the lengthening phase for use during the contraction phase.

The faster your muscles can perform this lengthening, shortening with resistance cycle, the more powerful your movements become. Strength + Minimal Time Factor = Power. That’s the science of Plyometrics.

I could go into the scientific jargon of concentric and eccentric muscle contraction, but you’ll
probably become as confused as I was as to which is which.

The monster-sized benefit is deadly power, but other benefits also kick-in; strength, speed, agility, along with muscle memory and even endurance. Once you start using these plyometric training exercises, you’ll quickly find out why I’ve also mentioned agility and endurance.

What is Proprioception?

Proprioception is often referred to as the sixth sense. Proprioception allows you to sense the positioning of parts of the body in relation to other parts of the body. Without proprioception you wouldn’t be able to put a forkful of food in your mouth, walk or swing a baseball bat without visually watching your limbs doing it.

There is a lot of uneducated banter about proprioception *usually from marketers trying to load up sales copy with bullets of benefits.* Proprioception is not a skill, it’s a sense… much the same as the sense of smell is not a skill. Smell is the enabler for determining whether an egg is rotten or not. Without the sense of smell, you’d have to figure out if it was bad visually or by the cramping stomach ache you’ll get after eating it.

Proprioception is your body’s enabler for learning and perfecting motor skills like balance and coordination. Proprioception allows you to improve coordination and balance through repetitive drilling and
nailing it all down as muscle memory. You either have proprioception or you don’t.

Have you ever heard the expression, “Once you learn how to ride a bike, you never forget
how”, That’s of proprioception at work. Once a task is learned, it’s programmed into body movements automatically as motor skills through muscle memory.

In other words, it enables you to remove the thought process. You don’t think about it, you
just do it. Imagine proprioception as the fuel that helps make your body a lethal jet fighter that runs on auto-pilot.

Plyometric Exercise Training and Proprioception

The Vew-Do Balance Board Plyometric Training Exercises I’ve developed are easy to master and will have a radical effect on your core training. Many of these exercises were also designed as sport specific training drills to help perfect motor skills through proprioception.

Many of the exercises in this program are sport specific. The exercises movements mimic real-world actions. They transform them from just exercises to sport specific drills that helps develop muscle memory through proprioception.

Which sports benefit from plyometrics and plyometric training programs?

Just about any athletic activity or rehabilitation program would benefit from some form of Plyometric
exercise training, but I’ll break the benefits down into two specific groups: Full body sports and partial body sports. Full body sports require continuous explosive power from head to toe.

Heading the list for full body sports is Freestyle and Greco-Roman wrestling. The world’s oldest sport is also the most grueling. No other sport requires the full-body power, strength, stamina, speed and agility as wrestling.

Some of the other sports include Football, Boxing, Rugby, Martial Arts, Swimming, Power Lifting,
Gymnastics and some Track and Field events like the Shot-Put, Pole Vaulting and even Tennis.

Partial body sports use explosive power, but much of the power needed is limited to one part of the body, usually the legs. Partial body sports would include Cycling, Basketball, Skateboarding, Skiing, Snowboarding, Surfing and many Track and Field events.

This plyometric exercise training program comes with a couple of warnings though…

First…plyometric training exercises are not for couch potatoes or weekend warriors who haven’t been in shape since Jesus left Chicago. They’re also not for people with half-hearted ambitions to become low-level super heroes.

Second…They are not warm-up exercises. Don’t perform plyometric training exercises until you’re body is sufficiently stretched out and warmed up.

Third…If you own one of those limited motion balance training devices; you know, the Bongo Board type boards or any of the Vew-Do copycat boards; don’t try using them for these plyometric exercises unless you plan on screwing the thing down onto a couple of 2X4’s. You’re just asking to injure yourself if you do.

Which Vew-Do Balance Boards Can Be Used As Plyometric Training Devices?

The Indy, The Sk8, The Flow and The Zippy are the only Vew-Do Balance Boards that can be adapted as a plyometric exercise equipment.


More Information On The Plyometric Rock Training System

How to set up a Vew-Do Balance Board for Plyometric Training Exercises

Setting up your Vew-Do Balance Board for plyometric training is easy. First, find a place clear of large objects like furniture, walls and pieces of exercise equipment. To reduce the impact on joints like knees, ankles and shoulders, use an exercise area with carpeting or some other dense cushioning material like a wrestling or exercise mat.

Using 2 plyometric training rocks (aka teeter rocks) place the rocks (flat side to the floor) at the end stops of the Vew-Do Balance Board sub-deck. Be sure that the Board’s center rail fits snugly in the slots of the teeter rock and up against the end stops at each end of the board…Ta da…you’re done! Let’s rock n’ roll!

  

Vew-Do Balance Board Lateral Pancake Board
Jumps

None of these exercises can be considered warm-ups, but pancake box jumps are the closest thing you’ll see to a warm-up exercise in Plyometrics. The term ‘pancake’ is derived from the fact that the balance board lays on a flat surface like a pancake. You don’t use the Vew-Do plyometric training rocks for this exercise.

     

Stand alongside the center of the board facing the vertical length of it. Slightly coil your legs and jump laterally to the other side of the board, repeating this motion from one side to the other. This is a speed burner. The trick to perfecting this exercise to take just enough air to clear the board before coiling your legs for the next jump. After landing, spend as little amount of time on the ground as possible.

Another variation to this is the Vertical Pancake Board Jump. Stand alongside the center of the board, but face horizontally across it. Coil up, jump vertically across the board to the other side and then jump back to your original position. Remember that you’re looking to increase foot speed, so limit the amount of air you take on the jumps. You want just enough to clear the board on landing and prepare for the next jump.

       

Sport Specific Benefit – Low-impact Plyometric exercise for developing power and increasing foot speed. This exercise is effective for every physical activity including rehabilitation.

Vew-Do Balance Board Lateral Box Jumps

Now we’ll start to get into some serious plyometric training. The box jump is a simple yet effective plyometric exercise. The term “box” is used because this exercise is commonly done using a wooden box. There are lots of fancy box jumping apparatus on the market; usually the only benefit is increased height. The problem is, about the only other thing you can use them for other than plyometrics is possibly doubling them as a seat or a snack table.

Stand alongside the center of the board facing the vertical length of it. Slightly coil your legs and jump laterally onto the board, bend your knees, coil and jump off the board on the opposite side. Reverse the sequence of floor, to board, to floor again returning to your starting position.

This is a speed exercise. You’ll need to add some air to your jump to make it onto the board and
remember to keep your feet close together. Try to use as little time as possible to land and prepare for the next jump. The 3 step sequence of the box jump will also help your coordination, muscle memory and endurance.

       

Vew-Do Balance Board Vertical Box Jumps

Stand alongside the center of the board, but face horizontally across it. Coil up, jump onto the board, bend your knees, coil and jump off the board to the opposite side.

Continue facing the same direction after your landing. Reverse the sequence by jumping backwards onto the board, bend your knees, coil and jump backwards again off the board to your starting position.

       

Sport Specific benefit – Increased power and foot speed is an almost universal benefit, but is critical for the following athletes because it adds balance and agility. Football players, boxers, wrestlers, soccer players, surfers, skiers, snowboarders, skateboarders and martial arts.

Vew-Do Balance Board Carving Jumps

Do you often need to change your body position laterally? How about being able to do it with more quickness, power and agility? If your sport requires aggressive lateral movement, this plyometric carving jump exercise will help you kick-in that extra split-second burst of power. The added benefit is balance training.

Stand at one end of the board facing horizontally across it. Coil and jump laterally onto the center of the board. Immediately coil and continue jumping laterally off the board to the other end. Continue facing the same direction and reverse your jumping direction back onto the board. Immediately jump again laterally off the board to your original position. Spend as little time as possible on the floor or the board. The goal is to develop a short quick carving technique.

       

Sport Specific benefit - Any sport where carving and lateral movement is important. This includes all your board sports like snowboarding, skiing, skate and wake boarding as well as surfing and skating. Also helpful for soccer and football players especially positions where you need quick lateral movement. Running backs, receivers, defensive backs and linebackers are the beneficiaries.

Vew-Do Balance Board Grand Amplitude Carving Jumps

This is where the rubber meets the road. ‘Grand Amplitude’ in wrestling is quickly elevating your opponent and taking them from their feet to their back in a wide arc. This exercise requires the same wide arc and will hone your carving ability along with some serious balance, agility and endurance skills.

Using the same body position as the carving jump, keep your feet together, coil your legs and jump laterally in a wide arc across the length of the board. Adjust your body position in mid-air to absorb the impact of the landing and to position yourself for the next jump. Make sure you use enough power and get enough air to clear the entire length of the board. Landing should be done cleanly and without any hopping or extra steps.

Immediately coil your legs and jump the length of the board to your original position. Land cleanly and prepare to jump to the other side of the board. The key to performing this exercise correctly is your old friend proprioception. You must change your body positioning in mid-air to have the ability to land
cleanly without any extra steps.

       

Sport Specific Benefit – Any athlete that needs powerful lateral changes in body position. Skiers, snowboarders, surfers, skateboarders, hockey and figure skaters. Running backs, receivers, defensive backs and linebackers in football. Soccer players, wrestlers and gymnasts.

Vew-Do Balance Board Diamondback Jumping Jacks

I call these Diamonds Backs because the foot positioning resembles the four corners of an imaginary diamond. This is one of the harder exercises for coordination. I suggest walking through this exercise slowly at first to develop some muscle memory before you step it up to full speed.

Stand alongside the center of the board, but face horizontally across it. Coil up, jump onto the board. After landing on the board, jump up vertically and land spread eagle with your legs on the outside of each end of the board. (You can cheat a little by landing on the same side of the board as you started, but spread your legs as far as you can.) Jump back onto the board with your feet together.

The next move is to jump forward in front of the board. Then jump backwards back onto the board with your feet together. Jump up vertically again and land spread eagle with your legs across the length of the board. Jump back onto the board with your feet together and then jump backwards off the board to your original
starting position. You can enhance the effectiveness of this exercise by raising your arms above your head during the spread eagle jumps, just like a regular jumping jack.

This exercise requires coordination, balance and muscle memory. You’ll feel a little awkward until you get the sequence mastered, but you’ll appreciate the results.

             

Sport Specific benefit – Any sport that requires balance, coordinated foot movements and speed. Best examples are soccer, wrestling, hockey and figure skating, martial arts and boxing.

Vew-Do Balance Board Extreme Squat Thrusts

This exercise takes the classic squat thrust and adds an aerial component along with additional arm movement. Don’t be fooled by the looks of this. You’ll feel some serious arm burn doing these.

Squat down and face across the board. Place both hands down on the board, shoulder length apart. The first move is to uncoil your body and assume a push-up position. Coil up and return to your starting position.

While facing the same direction, jump up onto the board while raising your arms above your head. As soon as you land on the board, immediately jump up again, jumping slightly backwards off the board while raising your arms above your head and return to the original squat position. Repeat the cycle.


         

Sport Specific Benefit – This is an all-around plyometric training exercise. It works the legs, abs, and arms. Best bet for full body sports like gymnastics, wrestling, martial arts and swimming.

Vew-Do Balance Board Vertical Riot Bomb Push-Ups
How about a plyometric exercise carved from a modified ‘jailhouse’ push-up. Forget about clap or Japanese style push-ups. They’re no comparison to this street-tough arm burner. Don’t try this exercise if you have any shoulder or rotator cuff problems.

Assume the standard push-up position, facing across the board with your arms shoulder length apart and the board in front of you. Coil down and push up quickly using the spring in your arms to get enough air to land on the board.

Perform another push-up, this time landing with your arms in front of the board. Reverse the sequence backwards onto the board again and finish the cycle with another push-up off the board and return to your starting position. Make sure you absorb the landings by bending at the elbows to relieve the impact strain on the shoulders.

     

If you ate your Wheaties you can try this variation of the Vertical Riot Bomb. Skip the push-up onto the board and vault your arms across it. Be aware that you’ll need enough air to clear the board and land on the other side. Reverse the sequence and vault back to the starting position.

Sport Specific Benefit – Any sport which requires straight ahead, powerful arm thrusts to create separation between you and your opponent or another object. Best bet for boxing, shot-put, gymnastics, wrestling, martial arts, defensive and offensive linemen in football to name a few.

Vew-Do Balance Board Lateral Riot Bomb Push-Ups

This exercise adds lateral movement to a standard push-up and something else. It requires you to torque your mid-section during the push-up phase. With some sports, it’s all about pushing people or objects around. That requires powerful arm thrusts while simultaneously using torque from your hips and abs. Stay away from this exercise if you have rotator cuff or shoulder problems.

Face your body along the vertical length of the board, with your shoulders lined up with the center and take a close-hand push-up position. Coil down into your push-up. As you vault up onto the board, torque your hips slightly to change your arm position and land on the board with your hands.

Coil into another push-up from the board, and torque your hips to land on the opposite side of the board. Reverse the sequence and the hip torque to return to your original position. Make sure you absorb the landings by bending at the elbows to relieve the impact strain on the shoulders.

     

If you’re an absolute masochist, another variation of this exercise is to skip the push-up onto the board and just arm-hop from one side of the board to the other. May the force be with you on that one.

Sport Specific Benefit – Here’s a partial list sports that could benefit from lateral riot bombs. Pole vaulting, wrestling, offensive and defensive linemen in football, shot-put, discus, hammer-throw, javelin and gymnastics.

Vew-Do… “Balance without limits ™

Purchase The Plyometric Rock Training System

This is just another example of how you can get limitless versatility for your money if you do some research and make the right choices before you plunk-down your hard-earned
cash…This is just the first in a series of articles showing how you get more value from Vew-Do.

They say practice makes perfect, not true…only perfect practice makes perfect. If you’re doing it wrong in practice, you’ll do itwrong everywhere else.

By: Rick Contrata

Weight Training for Strength Over Muscular Endurance

Weight Training for Strength Over Muscular Endurance

Are You Weight Training for Strength or Muscular Endurance?

What are the demands of your sport? What you will read here is a portion of my response in a forum discussion on the best weight training protocol for an off-season wrestler. What was discussed can apply to any athlete that participates in a sport that demands strength and power over muscular endurance. That could mean boxing, mogul and downhill skiing, football, combat sports, speed skating, sprinting and others.

It centered on my disagreement with the theory that low weight/high rep weight lifting is a feasible training program for a wrestler. What you will learn is that your weight training program should be geared towards enhancing the demands of your chosen sport, whatever it is.

Some have argued over labeling sports as either aerobic or anaerobic. At Vew-Do, we think this distinction is valid for determining the non-skill portion of training. Everybody knows that skill progression in any given sport or physical activity is achieved through drilling, practicing or competing in that sport. The underlying physical conditioning of that sport is almost automatic due to participation. Can you guess why this is a problem?

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Weight training is different. You can even say weight training is not a performance enabler, but a performance enhancer. Muscular strength is the most trainable aspect of endurance. Your muscles do all the work. When you get stronger, the intensity of performance increases.

Steady state or (aerobic) sports like running, cycling, soccer etc. require muscular endurance and have a different weight training protocol than a wrestler, boxer or mogul skier. These sports require extreme, short term bursts of strength and power during competitive participation. The strength training for these sports should be done using the anaerobic energy pathway with low reps and heavy weight. The added benefit of this type of strength training is that it will also support increases in cardiovascular (aerobic) function.

Don’t forget to take a minute and look at the strength training/benefit allocation chart at the bottom of this page. It outlines the different weight training variables and the associated benefits or results.

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First, training for muscular endurance never has and never will be the way to gain strength. Unless you’ve found a way to change the laws of Mother Nature, a high rep low weight muscle endurance weight training routine will not get you any appreciable strength increases… You may even become weaker, as this type of training can cause a decrease in muscle mass.

Here’s an example: Distance runners train for, and have muscular endurance, not strength. Sprinters train for, and have strength, speed and power. Both are track athletes, but no one would mistake a distance runner for a sprinter in performance or physique. The NFL recruits sprinters, not distance runners. Muscular endurance is not strength…Period.

Now, you are correct in that weight training using high rep low weight *12-15+ reps* will increase muscular endurance and allow you to use those muscles longer. The problem is that you’re not a soccer player, distance runner, cross-country skier or a swimmer, those are aerobic sports. You’re a wrestler and wrestling is an anaerobic sport.

To understand what I’m talking about you need to know the difference between the aerobic and anaerobic energy systems.

The “aerobic system” is a pathway that creates energy using a combination of fat, glycogen “carbs” and oxygen. The “anaerobic system,” when recruited, creates energy “without oxygen” using fat, glycogen, creatine stored in the muscles and lactic acid. During intense activity, once the local supply of glycogen in the muscles is used up, anaerobic activity can continue by using a combination of lactic acid and glycogen stored in the liver and fed to the muscles via the bloodstream.

All anaerobic activity ceases when the lactic threshold is met. That’s the point where the continuous muscle contractions restrict the blood supply to the muscles. At that point your body can no longer process and use the lactic acid from the muscles, the acid builds up, your muscles begin to burn, fatigue increases until the muscles fail to fire, then all activity stops.

In a competitive wrestling match, your body doesn’t continuously recruit those slow twitch muscle fibers that your low weight high rep aerobic workout was training you for. It wants to use the fast twitch fibers, the ones that have mitochondria cells in them and use the anaerobic system. Even with sport specific anaerobic conditioning, if you didn’t train for strength, you have less of a chance of being able to move your opponent around. Remember; high intensity strength training is in itself, anaerobic training.

So what’s a better weight training routine for wrestling? A routine that builds whole body strength using heavy weight and low reps using the anaerobic energy pathway? Or one that pretty much wastes all that time in the weight room training for little or no gains in strength and muscle endurance that you’ll hardly ever use in a wrestling match.

Bottom line is this. Weight train for strength using heavy weight and low reps. Then continue to build up your anaerobic threshold and skill progression in the wrestling room with 1.5 hours sessions of intense wrestling, grinds, chain wrestling and sprints.

Remember; don’t over-train by trying to add “aerobic” or cardio sessions. Your body only has so much energy to use in any given workout session. Re-carb and re-hydrate your fuel tanks, bust it up in practice or competition, rinse and repeat.

strength training/benefit allocation chart

By: Rick Contrata

How to use Vew-Do Balance Boards For Snowboard Training

How to do Snowboard Heel Turns on a Vew-Do Balance Board - First, find your center of balance on the board. This is easily done by positioning your body evenly over the rock with your knees slightly bent and your back straight. (Photo 1)Then maneuver yourself into your snowboarding stance. (Photo 2) For heel turns, slightly shift your weight back on your heels by bending your knees and elevating your toes.


(Photo 1)(Photo 2)

When you do this, you will automatically engage the taper in the rock. (Photo 3) Careful Sparky, too much lean and you’ll end up jumping off the board like a gymnast that just double-stepped a dismount. So keep yourself balanced.

Keep your body centered over the rock and bend either knee while simultaneously straightening the opposite leg. (Photo 4) Only a small amount of straightening is needed to set the board in motion. The board will start to move in the direction of the straightened leg to start.


(Photo 3)(Photo 4)

Proprioception will almost automatically induce you to roll your hips over the rock to maintain your balance on the board. Stay balanced over the rock, gravity will take over the physics of moving the board.

Simulating a snowboard heel turn on the balance board is activated by pushing the trailing foot heel in the direction you want to turn. The forward foot pulls into the direction of the turn and acts as a steering wheel to set the arc and angle of the turn. The more you push-pull, the tighter the turn will be.


(Photo 5)

After reaching the stops at the end of the board, repeat the same sequence by straightening the opposite leg. Maybe without even realizing it, you’re also teaching yourself how to correctly use your snowboard edges for carving.

Too much bite and you’ll lose your balance and fall off the board. Not enough bite and you won’t engage the taper in the rock. What you’re doing is creating muscle memory in the best sport specific environment outside of actually being on a snowboard.

How to do Snowboard Toe Turns on a Vew-Do Balance Board - In the same way you did on the heel turn, find your center of balance on the board. (Photo 1) This is easily done by positioning your body evenly over the rock with your knees slightly bent and your back straight. Then again, maneuver yourself into your snowboarding stance. (Photo2)


(Photo 1)(Photo 2)

For toe turns, slightly shift your weight forward onto the balls of your feet by bending your knees and elevating your heels. (Photo 6) When you do this, you will automatically engage the taper in the rock. Keep your body centered over the rock and bend either knee while simultaneously straightening the opposite leg. (Photo 4) Just like the in the heel turn, only a small amount of straightening is needed to set the board in motion. The board will start to move in the direction of the straightened leg to start.


(Photo 6)(Photo 4)

Now, your hips will naturally roll over the rock as the board moves to help you maintain your balance. Stay balanced over the rock, gravity will take over the physics of moving the board.

Simulating a snowboard toe turn on the balance board is activated by pushing the trailing foot toes in the direction you want to turn. The forward foot pushes into the direction of the turn and acts as a steering wheel to set the arc and angle of the turn. (Photo 7) Again, the more you push-pull, the tighter the turn will be.


(Photo 7)

Reaching the end stops requires you to repeat the sequence to continue your roll across the rock. Too much bite from the toes and you’ll lose your balance. Not enough bite and the rock won’t engage.

The best way to get the most out of snowboard training on a Vew-Do balance board is to master this – Switch from a heel turn to an opposite stance toe turn each time the board spans the rock. Then switch from a toe turn to an opposite direction heel turn. Eventually, you will want to turn your head, eyes, shoulders and hands in the direction you want to travel thereby initiating the turn with your upper body. From there it’s onto rotations but we will save that for another lesson.

Vew-Do Balance Boards Fitness Exercise Chart

Download a FREE Vew-Do Balance Boards Exercise Chart!

The Vew-Do Balance Boards Exercise Chart has 12 workouts of multiple difficulties. Proven by NFL Cheerleaders to get you in shape.