: Your Golgi Tendon Organs (GTO) are the "safety brakes" of your body. Their job is to shut the muscle down if the force is too high. In a trained athlete, plyometrics "desensitize" these brakes, allowing the body to tolerate higher workloads without hitting the "abort" button. Chapter 3: The Launch (The Concentric Phase)
This is the "story" of a single jump, told from the perspective of the anatomical systems working inside you to turn gravity into explosive power. Chapter 1: The Descent (The Eccentric Phase)
: As your quads and calves lengthen to absorb the impact, specialized sensory receptors called muscle spindles act as tripwires. They sense the rapid stretch and immediately send an urgent signal to your spinal cord: "We're stretching too fast—contract now!" .
: Your tendons—especially the massive Achilles tendon —act like high-tension springs. They don't just stay still; they deform and stretch, soaking up kinetic energy and storing it as elastic potential energy . Chapter 2: The Crossroads (The Amortization Phase)
: If you linger here for more than about 0.25 seconds, the "story" ends in a flop. The elastic energy stored in your tendons dissipates as heat, and the muscle spindles' urgent signal fades away.
Now, the stored energy is unleashed in a massive, coordinated strike. CURRENT CONCEPTS OF PLYOMETRIC EXERCISE - PMC
Plyometric Anatomy -
: Your Golgi Tendon Organs (GTO) are the "safety brakes" of your body. Their job is to shut the muscle down if the force is too high. In a trained athlete, plyometrics "desensitize" these brakes, allowing the body to tolerate higher workloads without hitting the "abort" button. Chapter 3: The Launch (The Concentric Phase)
This is the "story" of a single jump, told from the perspective of the anatomical systems working inside you to turn gravity into explosive power. Chapter 1: The Descent (The Eccentric Phase) Plyometric anatomy
: As your quads and calves lengthen to absorb the impact, specialized sensory receptors called muscle spindles act as tripwires. They sense the rapid stretch and immediately send an urgent signal to your spinal cord: "We're stretching too fast—contract now!" . : Your Golgi Tendon Organs (GTO) are the
: Your tendons—especially the massive Achilles tendon —act like high-tension springs. They don't just stay still; they deform and stretch, soaking up kinetic energy and storing it as elastic potential energy . Chapter 2: The Crossroads (The Amortization Phase) Chapter 3: The Launch (The Concentric Phase) This
: If you linger here for more than about 0.25 seconds, the "story" ends in a flop. The elastic energy stored in your tendons dissipates as heat, and the muscle spindles' urgent signal fades away.
Now, the stored energy is unleashed in a massive, coordinated strike. CURRENT CONCEPTS OF PLYOMETRIC EXERCISE - PMC