Lunge & Single-leg

SL Balance — Eyes Open

Ankle/foot stabilizership stabilizerscore Strength/neural (balance)
i.

How to Do It

Stand on one leg, the other knee lifted to around hip height or the foot held just off the floor. Find a focal point, stack the hips level, and hold a tall, quiet posture. Keep a soft standing knee and let the foot and ankle make small corrections. Hold for the prescribed time, then switch.

ii.

Why It Works

Challenges the ankle, knee, and hip proprioceptive and stabilizing systems to maintain single-leg balance, training the small postural muscles and neuromuscular control that underpin all single-leg actions.

iii.

Hockey Transfer

Builds the single-leg balance and ankle/hip stability required to glide and push on one edge; better proprioception improves stride stability and the ability to recover balance after contact.

iv.

Coaching Cues

  • "Tall and quiet"
  • "hips level"
  • "let the foot make small fixes"
v.

Common Mistakes

Hips dropping to the free side; gripping/clawing excessively; locking the standing knee

vi.

Progression / Regression

Progression

eyes closed or unstable surface

Regression

hold a light support or shorten the time

vii.

Primary Muscles

Ankle/foot stabilizership stabilizerscore
viii.

Energy System

Strength/neural (balance)

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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