The added value of upper-body power training in vertical jump development: a comparative evidence-based review
- MOJ Sports Medicine
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Lea Farhat, Edgard Kazzi, Zahi Andraos
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Abstract
Background: The vertical jump
(VJ) is a key indicator of lower-limb power and is widely used for performance
monitoring in sports. While most VJ training programs focus on lower-body
exercises, biomechanical evidence indicates that upper-body motion—particularly
arm swing—can enhance take-off velocity, impulse, and jump height. However, the
comparative effectiveness of lower-body-only (LB) versus combined upper- and
lower-body (CULB) training remains underexplored.
Objective: To review and
synthesize post-2010 evidence on the effects of integrating upper-body power
training into VJ programs, comparing outcomes with LB-only approaches, and to
provide evidence-based programming recommendations for practitioners.
Methods: A
narrative–systematic hybrid review was conducted following PRISMA 2020
principles. Searches of PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, SPORT Discus and Google
Scholar (2010–2024) identified studies involving healthy adults or athletes
undergoing ≥4-week VJ-focused interventions,
either LB-only or CULB. Eligible studies reported at least one standardized VJ
outcome. Data were synthesized qualitatively, with effect sizes noted where
applicable.
Results: LB-only programs
consistently improved CMJ/SJ height by ~4–12% over 6–12 weeks. CULB programs,
particularly those incorporating upper-body plyometrics, Olympic-derivative
lifts, and trunk-stiffness training, often yielded an additional ~3–8%
improvement—especially when testing allowed arm swing (CMJa, approach jumps).
Benefits were linked to trainable arm-swing power, enhanced trunk force
transmission, and improved whole-system rate of force development and movement
sequencing. Greater effects were observed in sports where arm use is integral
(e.g., volleyball, basketball) and in athletes with underdeveloped upper-body
power.
Conclusions: Adding targeted
upper-body power and trunk-stiffness training to established lower-body VJ
programs offers a modest but meaningful performance advantage in applied sport
contexts. Practitioners should retain foundational lower-body strength and
plyometrics while integrating 1–2 upper-body power elements per session, with
weekly volumes of 40–70 explosive repetitions. This integrated approach better
reflects the full-body nature of sport-specific jumps and is more likely to
optimize realized performance.
Keywords: vertical jump, arm swing, upper-body power,
plyometric training, countermovement jump, complex training, trunk stiffness
Keywords
targeted upper-body, sport contexts, trunk stiffness