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Outside Magazine, March 2005
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Bodywork: Fitness, Health, and Nutrition for the Outside Athlete
Jump Start
For regular guys, slam-dunking seems like an impossible dream. But the quest to soar is a fitness jackpot.

By Josh McHugh

Dunk
GONNA FLY NOW: Writer Josh McHugh drives to the basket. (Photograph by Chris McPherson)

THERE'S A PLEASING objectivity about the slam dunk that sets it apart. The rim is ten feet above the ground, and either you can dunk or you can't. Those hoppy few who can are assumed to be blessed with a gift, a power that isn't something just anyone with sufficient self-discipline can train for—like, say, running a marathon. Or is it?

At five foot eight and two decades beyond my last participation in organized basketball—in seventh grade—I'm not much of a hoops player. And yet, six months ago, the idea of turning my body into a trim and muscled spring became my obsession. In my primary sports—surfing, snowboarding, and lacrosse—leaping ability isn't something I necessarily need, but I suspected that adding a few inches to my jump would take my other games to new levels as well.

With a little help from Google, I found an actual dunk coach: Gil "Rise" Thomas, 38, a five-foot-eight
Pre-Flight Checklist
The mission-critical gear you need to get higherStrap a pair of JUMPSOLES ($70) around your feet for a workout filled with jumping drills that will force you onto your forefeet, automatically cocking the feet, ankles, and legs into a spring-loaded position. The result is stronger ankles and lower legs—the vital links for transferring power from the torso and thighs to the floor.

It may look like a superhero's utility pack, but the HYPERGRAVITY WEIGHT BELT ($125) is an extremely useful tool. It overloads your body with up to 20 pounds of weight applied in two-and-a-half-pound increments. During jumping drills, the belt speeds up development of the explosive fast-twitch muscles that get you airborne.

For strengthening the stomach, lower back, and hamstrings, roll with the POWER WHEEL II ($50). Use it by cinching your feet or hands to the wheel, assuming a push-up position, and rolling the wheel slowly forward and backwards. Keeping the wheel moving in a straight line helps build the smaller stabilizing muscles throughout your body and increases balance.

The ISOKINETIC SUPER MINI GYM ($200) uses a simple weighted-pulley system mounted on a platform and attached to a shoulder harness to maximize jumping strength. Stand on the platform, sling the harness around your shoulders, and start jumping. The Mini Gym lets you safely dial up more resistance than you'd get with the gravity belt (above) or with heavy free weights, which aren't the safest thing to hold while bounding around.

All of theese products and more are available at JumpUSA (800-586-7872, www.jumpUSA.com)
jump-training specialist based in Los Angeles. Via his connection with JumpUSA, a Web-based coaching service devoted to increasing athletes' air time, Thomas has spent the past 15 years helping college and high school basketball and track prodigies leap higher and farther. He told me over the phone that, in six months, his regimen could add 10 to 12 inches to my vertical leap. At the time, I was able to jump 22 inches; by comparison, six-foot, 165-pound Philadelphia 76ers star Allen Iverson can get about 44 inches off the ground.

According to Thomas, the first thing I had to do was slim down. "You're carrying way too much body fat," he said after hearing my stats. I weighed 185, and my body-fat percentage was 21.7, which meant I was loaded with more than 40 pounds of blubber. "We need to get you down to 160 and get your fat to under 10 percent. Once you do that, building up your strength to clear 12 more inches of vertical should be easy."

Thomas prescribed the South Beach Diet and four-day-a-week workouts alternating between weight lifting and jumping drills. The essential gear: a weighted belt for adding 20 pounds to my waist in two-and-a-half-pound increments; a dinner-plate-size wheel with handles on each side, used for building abdominal and hamstring strength; and Jumpsoles, strap-on rubber hooves for my sneakers to force my weight onto the balls of my feet (see "Pre-Flight Checklist," sidebar).

The weight-lifting program was straightforward: squats, jump squats, modified lunges, and hamstring curls—important, says Thomas, because about 60 percent of a leap's thrust comes from the hamstrings and glutes.

On the jump-training days, when I donned the Jumpsoles and the weighted belt, I felt like a fourth-grader wearing a slapdash Batman costume on Halloween. The workout consisted of muscling through squats, lunges, and step-ups, followed by a series of 50-yard hopping exercises—first skipping, then hopping like a frog, then alternating legs for two hops at a time. Then came vertical stationary jumps and hill sprints. Each week, I would add more weight to the belt.

Ten weeks into the project, I was lifting more and more weight, but I was stranded three inches short of the rim and jumping rather spastically. I decided I needed to refine my footwork and learn how to explode to the basket. So I contacted Mark Lobl, 45, a San Francisco–based trainer who's worked with NBA stars Rasheed Wallace and Damon Stoudamire in Nike's SAQ (speed, agility, and quickness) training program. Lobl's tools included a speed ladder—basically, a ladder of rope and plastic pipe laid out on the ground, which I stepped through as quickly as possible—and a set of platforms of varying heights to bound up onto. Once I added these plyometric workouts to Thomas's drills, the upward progress quickly resumed.

Four months into my training, I'd lost 22 pounds, and my body fat was just under 11 percent. My abs were beginning to show—call it a four-pack—for the first time in my life. My chronically weak ankles were stronger, my Achilles tendons and hamstrings felt more supple. On the other hand, my knees hurt constantly—nothing structurally worrisome, just a persistent twinge.

For McHugh's complete training plan for jumping higher, click here.



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San Francisco writer JOSH McHUGH is a contributing editor at Wired.

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