Jump & Plyometric

Single-Leg Pogo Hops

Calves/Achillesanterior tibialisfoot/ankle and hip stabilizers Alactic/ATP-PC
i.

How to Do It

Standing on one leg, hop continuously straight up using mostly the ankle, with the knee nearly straight and stiff. Land on the ball of the foot and immediately rebound with the shortest possible ground contact. Keep the body tall and the hips level; use the arms for balance. Continue for reps, then switch legs.

ii.

Why It Works

Trains single-leg ankle stiffness and reactive strength through the stretch-shortening cycle, building unilateral tendon stiffness (Achilles), reactive elasticity, and the single-leg stability to control repeated fast rebounds — exposing left-right differences.

iii.

Hockey Transfer

Builds the single-leg ankle stiffness and reactive push that improve each skating stride’s efficiency; the unilateral demand mirrors the one-leg nature of each push and improves balance and quick, elastic feet on one edge.

iv.

Coaching Cues

  • "Stiff ankle, hips level"
  • "minimal knee bend, quick contacts"
  • "tall and balanced"
v.

Common Mistakes

Too much knee bend; hips dropping to the free side; slow, heavy contacts

vi.

Progression / Regression

Progression

higher/faster hops or add directional travel

Regression

two-leg pogo hops or lower height

vii.

Primary Muscles

Calves/Achillesanterior tibialisfoot/ankle and hip stabilizers
viii.

Energy System

Alactic/ATP-PC

Ready to train?

Put it to work
on the ice.

This exercise is part of a fully periodized 12-week off-ice program — built by a sport scientist who coaches at the national level.

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