Creating Ankle Flex in Jump Air Positions (Michelle Leigh)

World and Olympic coach Michelle Leigh shares some exercises to help develop ankle flex in jump air positions. Ankle flex in the axis or landing side is valuable since it usually helps skaters lock out the axis knee, connect and lock the feet together, and activate the rear kinetic chain of muscles (think glutes) for stability and control. It can also be helpful to prevent pointing the landing toe and getting called for under-rotated jumps.

Michelle begins by having the skater demonstrate single loop jumps with a flexed landing foot in the air. She follows this exercise with a back spin in h-position entered from a common loop jump entry (loop jump walk-through) where the skater steps down from the h-position back spin on the axis foot to the non-axis foot and then flexes the axis foot (off the ice) while remaining in a d-position. Michelle notes that this can create a small amount of “orbiting” but she likes the exercise anyway as it helps skaters feel the correct position at the feet. She also has the skater perform two-foot loop jumps which are also a great way to develop foot flex. The common error to avoid in this exercise is having a piked position where the hips are pressed out behind rather than correctly in line with the head and feet.

Michelle then has the skater attempt to flex the landing foot in the air on double loop. We get to see video and we also get to see the skater make a change and improvement in air position. This is more difficult than it seems, as most skaters will struggle with this kind of change. Michelle recommends not worrying about landing the jump when training this so the skater can put all their focus into flexing the foot.


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2 responses to “Creating Ankle Flex in Jump Air Positions (Michelle Leigh)”

  1. spinningandjumping

    I’d love a video on how to go from a flexed foot position to a good landing! Do you aim land with the foot flexed and where does that put your weight on the blade? Also how does that affect the edge pressure needed for a stable check out on a landing? I do inline figure skating and I usually land on my toe stop and rock down to my wheels for stability, so i’m having difficulty getting a flexed foot in the air for doubles. I’m not sure if the same principle applies to inline but it seems doable in theory. Thank you!!!

  2. Trevor

    Hi spinning and jumping, Skaters that flox in the air tend to point the landing toe just enough prior to impact with the ice so that they make initial contact with the bottom toe pick. The weight is definitely forward on the blade. Elite skaters performing quads generally minimize this toe point at the very last moment so they remain “in the air longer” to complete more rotation. Very very few good skaters land jumps without touching the toe pick first, as the pick provides a moment of stability that is crucial for landing consistency. I do not know how well this concept will translate to inline skating, but I assume it should be similar.

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