If you want to truly develop this technique, which is especially important if you compete in track I’m going to tell you what to do.
Keep in mind you do not need to create a perfect figure 4, having the knees parallel when one leg is fully loaded on the ground is already exceptional.
1. Pogo Jumps = training your tendons = shorter ground contact times
By training your tendons to store and release energy quickly you will be able to get off the ground faster.
If you get off the ground faster, you can recover the leg sooner.
2. Box Jumps = faster leg extension
By putting the foot down faster, you naturally shorten your ground contact times, again giving you more time to recover.
3. Wickets = improving rhythm = faster leg recovery
In some cases, a faster leg recovery isn’t about developing your speed or power but simply about how you apply those 2 things.
By using a drill like wickets, an athlete can improve the timing of their limbs to recover the leg more efficiently and achieve a more desirable technique like the figure 4.
Another helpful drill that requires zero equipment but is very hard to learn, is something I call the Single Leg Slice. You can find it on my channel titled “Try This Weird Drill”.
Hope that helps.
TL;DR
- At the most elite level, some sprinters have the swinging knee ahead of the leg on the ground creating nearly perfect “figure 4”.
- For most athletes I train, parallel knees is the benchmark that we aim for.
- Nearly everyone can increase their leg cycle.
- The “invisible technique” is a concept that applies mainly to track
- To develop this technique train your tendons, improve hip extension, and refine your rhythm.
- Use Pogos, Box Jumps, Wickets, and the Single Leg Slice.