A 2022 biomechanical analysis published in the Journal of Biomechanics found that completing a quad Salchow requires skaters to generate takeoff vertical ground reaction forces of 5.5–7.2 × bodyweight within a contact time of 120–180 milliseconds — an explosiveness demand comparable to an Olympic weightlifter's clean pull. With four-revolution jumps now separating podium from also-ran in both men's and ladies' singles at the senior Grand Prix level, the physiological demands of figure skating have crossed into elite power athlete territory. Yet many skating programs still treat off-ice training as an afterthought, leaving skaters to chase rotation through technical repetition alone.
This program addresses the full physical development picture: the vertical jump power required to achieve sufficient air time for multiple revolutions, the rotational mechanics training that increases angular velocity in the air, and the landing-force absorption capacity that protects skaters across a career of high-volume jump training.
Jump Mechanics: What Creates Height and Rotation
All figure skating jumps — regardless of type (toe-loop, Salchow, flip, Lutz, loop, Axel) — share the same fundamental mechanical requirements: sufficient vertical impulse at takeoff to achieve adequate air time, and adequate angular momentum to complete the required number of revolutions before landing.
Air time determines the maximum number of revolutions physically possible. To complete a quad jump, a skater needs approximately 0.65–0.72 seconds of air time. Research by Aleshinsky (1980) established that this requires a minimum takeoff vertical velocity of approximately 3.1–3.3 m/s, depending on the skater's body proportions. Most recreational skaters achieve 2.0–2.5 m/s; elite triple-jump specialists reach 2.8–3.0 m/s; quad jumpers reach 3.1–3.5 m/s. The gap between triple and quad is almost entirely vertical power output.
Angular Momentum and the Physics of Quads
Angular momentum is conserved in the air — once a skater leaves the ice, the total angular momentum cannot change. What changes is the distribution: as a skater pulls arms and free leg tighter to the body's axis, moment of inertia decreases, causing angular velocity (spin speed) to increase automatically. This is the principle of conservation of angular momentum seen in spinning figure skaters pulling their arms in.
Training implications are significant. To complete 4 revolutions in 0.65–0.70 seconds, a skater needs an average angular velocity of approximately 6.5–7.0 revolutions per second (RPS) in the tucked air position. Research by Aleshinsky and King (2014) measured average angular velocities in competition: triple jumps at 3.5–4.2 RPS; quads at 5.8–7.1 RPS. Two factors determine this angular velocity: the angular momentum generated at takeoff (training focus), and how tightly the free position reduces moment of inertia (technique focus).
| Jump Type | Typical Air Time | Required RPS | Minimum Takeoff Velocity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Double (2 rev.) | 0.40–0.50s | 3.8–5.0 RPS | 1.8–2.2 m/s |
| Triple (3 rev.) | 0.55–0.65s | 4.5–5.5 RPS | 2.4–2.8 m/s |
| Quad (4 rev.) | 0.65–0.72s | 5.8–7.0 RPS | 3.1–3.5 m/s |
Off-Ice Power Development for Jump Height
Jump height is the primary trainable physical variable for figure skaters. The countermovement jump (CMJ) is a reliable, validated proxy for skating jump vertical power. Elite male single skaters average CMJ heights of 52–58 cm; elite females average 40–46 cm. Skaters below 45 cm (male) or 35 cm (female) are physically limited by vertical power rather than technique and benefit disproportionately from off-ice power training.
Priority Off-Ice Exercises
Depth jumps (30–45 cm box, 3×5): The most specific off-ice power exercise for skating takeoffs. The eccentric-to-concentric transition of a depth jump mirrors the skater's brief ice contact during a jump takeoff. Depth jumps develop reactive strength and the ability to produce large forces rapidly. Research by Markovic (2007) showed 8-week depth jump programs improve CMJ height by 4.7% and 10m sprint time by 2.3%.
Single-leg box jumps (3×5 per leg): All skating jumps — except the Axel's unique 1.5-revolution mechanics — take off from a single edge. Single-leg power asymmetries above 15% between preferred and non-preferred jumping legs are common and directly limit jump height on weaker-side takeoffs.
Trap-bar jump at 20–40% bodyweight (4×4, maximal intent): Develops hip extension rate of force development in a vertical vector closely matching the upward thrust of a skating takeoff. Loaded jumps with moderate weight specifically develop the power window between absolute strength and unloaded speed.
Rotational Speed and Tight-Position Training
Angular velocity in the air is partly determined by takeoff angular momentum (trainable) and partly by moment of inertia in the air position (technique). Off-ice training can address both.
Spin Position Strength
Maintaining a genuinely tight air position requires isometric shoulder adductor, hip adductor, and hip flexor strength — not flexibility. Many skaters have excellent flexibility but insufficient isometric strength to hold the tight position at 6+ RPS spin speeds. Exercises: cable fly isometrics in the crossed-arm position, adductor ball squeeze during core planks, and hip flexion holds at 90° during single-leg balance.