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The Single-Leg Control Standard

April 20, 20262 min read

Recovery, Longevity & Athletic Health

“If you can’t control one leg, you can’t control real movement.”

Where Injuries Actually Start

Most injuries don’t come from big, dramatic moments.

They show up in the small ones you didn’t control.

  • A step that gets away from you

  • A quick shift your body can’t organize fast enough

That’s usually where it starts.

And one of the biggest indicators of that?

How well you can control your body on one leg.

Why Single-Leg Control Matters

Think about how you move throughout the day.

  • Walking

  • Going up and down stairs

  • Getting in and out of a car

  • Reaching for something

None of it happens evenly.

You’re constantly shifting, stabilizing, and reacting—often on one leg.

If you don’t have control there, your body finds ways to compensate.

And those compensations are where problems begin.

A Simple Drill

Here’s a drill we use to assess and build that control:

🎥 Single Leg Toe Touch

It looks simple.

But it tells you a lot.

What to Pay Attention To

This isn’t about how low you can reach.

It’s about how well you can control the movement.

As you go through it, focus on:

  • Keeping your hips facing the ground (not opening up)

  • Moving through your hip—not just bending your knee

  • Staying balanced without tapping your other foot down

Most people struggle with this at first.

You’ll see:

  • Tapping the ground

  • Holding onto something

  • Cutting the movement short

That’s not failure.

But it is compensation.

And those same patterns show up when movement speeds up.

Control First, Then Progress

If you can’t stabilize your body in a controlled setting, it becomes much harder to control it when things get faster and less predictable.

That’s when injury risk increases.

This type of training builds in layers:

  • Awareness

  • Control

  • Stability that carries over

Why This Matters

Improving single-leg control helps you build:

  • Better balance

  • Stronger joint stability

  • Improved movement efficiency

  • Reduced injury risk

Because most real-world movement happens one leg at a time.

Final Thought

Don’t rush through it.

Don’t chase range.

Focus on control.

Own the position.

Because that’s what keeps you moving well.

And that’s what prevents the small breakdowns that lead to bigger problems.

— Coach Shelby & The Shelby Trained Team

stability exercisesinjury prevention
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