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Exercise Comparison

Alternate Leg Diagonal Bound vs Rope Jumping

Alternate Leg Diagonal Bound - starting position
Alternate Leg Diagonal Bound - ending position
Alternate Leg Diagonal Bound
beginner·None·compound
Rope Jumping - starting position
Rope Jumping - ending position
Rope Jumping
intermediate·Other

Side-by-Side

Alternate Leg Diagonal Bound
VS
Rope Jumping
beginner
Level
intermediate
None
Equipment
Other
compound
Mechanic
N/A
push
Force
N/A
Plyometrics
Category
Cardio
quadriceps
Primary
quadriceps
abductorsadductorscalvesgluteshamstrings
Secondary
calveshamstrings

Muscle Analysis

Shared

quadricepscalveshamstrings

Only in Alternate Leg Diagonal Bound

abductorsadductorsglutes

Instructions

Alternate Leg Diagonal Bound

1

Assume a comfortable stance with one foot slightly in front of the other.

2

Begin by pushing off with the front leg, driving the opposite knee forward and as high as possible before landing. Attempt to cover as much distance to each side with each bound.

3

It may help to use a line on the ground to guage distance from side to side.

4

Repeat the sequence with the other leg.

Rope Jumping

1

Hold an end of the rope in each hand. Position the rope behind you on the ground. Raise your arms up and turn the rope over your head bringing it down in front of you. When it reaches the ground, jump over it. Find a good turning pace that can be maintained. Different speeds and techniques can be used to introduce variation.

2

Rope jumping is exciting, challenges your coordination, and requires a lot of energy. A 150 lb person will burn about 350 calories jumping rope for 30 minutes, compared to over 450 calories running.

Verdict

Both exercises target the quadriceps. Alternate Leg Diagonal Bound is a beginner exercise using none, while Rope Jumping is intermediate and uses other. Choose Alternate Leg Diagonal Bound if you're looking for a more accessible option, or Rope Jumping for a greater challenge.

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