The Efficiency Behind Explosiveness

June 02, 20262 min read

Speed, Balance & Game-Changing Athleticism

“The most explosive athletes aren’t just great at creating force—they’re great at controlling it.”

Why Some Athletes Look Effortlessly Explosive

You can usually spot explosive athletes almost immediately.

Not because they look like they’re trying harder.

But because they waste less movement.

  • They hit the ground and get off it quickly

  • They change direction without extra steps

  • They move with speed and precision without looking rushed

Everything appears efficient.

That’s real explosiveness.

And it’s often misunderstood.

Explosive Athletes Do More Than Produce Force

When most athletes think about explosiveness, they focus on output.

  • Jump higher

  • Sprint faster

  • Push harder

Those things matter.

But research on power development consistently points to another important factor:

Explosive athletes are also extremely good at absorbing force.

And that piece often gets overlooked.

The Landing Tells the Real Story

We were watching an athlete jump recently.

On the way up, they looked powerful.

Strong.

Athletic.

But the landing revealed something different.

  • Heavy feet

  • Knees drifting out of position

  • Extra movement just to regain balance

That matters.

Because explosive performance isn’t just about what happens when you leave the ground.

It’s about how efficiently your body handles force from start to finish.

Why Athletes Eventually Plateau

This is one reason athletes sometimes stop progressing.

They spend all their time training output.

  • More jumps

  • More sprints

  • More power work

But they never improve the quality of how they absorb and redirect force.

Eventually, that limitation catches up.

Because power without control is inefficient.

And inefficiency creates ceilings.

What Creates Efficient Power

The athletes who continue developing explosiveness over time usually share a few things:

  • Better stiffness through the ankle and lower leg

  • Cleaner force transfer through the hips and trunk

  • Less wasted movement during acceleration, landing, and change of direction

In other words, they manage force exceptionally well.

That’s what makes them look athletic.

That’s what makes them appear effortless.

Explosiveness Is a Skill

This is why some athletes seem "bouncy" even when they aren't the strongest person in the room.

Their body organizes force more efficiently.

They absorb it well.

Transfer it well.

Reuse it well.

That’s a skill.

And like any skill, it can be trained.

Focus on Both Sides of the Equation

So if your goal is to become more explosive, don’t just focus on producing force.

Pay attention to:

  • How you land

  • How you decelerate

  • How quickly you regain position

  • How efficiently you redirect movement

Because the next jump in performance often comes from improving what happens after force is created.

And that’s where true explosiveness is built.

— Coach Shelby & The Shelby Trained Team

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