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[01]Long Jump Warm-Up

How to warm up for long jump

General → activation → specific

Start broad, easy aerobic work to raise core temperature. Move to activation, glutes, hips, shoulders. Then phase-specific drills, takeoff drills if you're about to long jump, approach drills if you're working on rhythm. Each layer builds.

Phase drills as the bridge

Most warm-up errors are skipping phase drills. The body doesn't know it's about to long jump unless you show it the pattern first. Three to five reps of each phase, low intensity, sets the groove.

Priming reps before the real reps

Your first full long jump of the day shouldn't be at competition intensity. Build up, 60% effort, 75%, 90%. AI tracks the reps and tells you when your form is ready for full effort.

Race-day ready

Use AI form check on your warm-up reps

Most athletes don't film warm-up. They should. The first two or three full-effort long jump reps tell the AI a lot about how your form holds up under fatigue, way more than fresh reps from a rested practice.

Follow up in chat and ask questions. The AI remembers your analysis and speaks the language of long jump coaching.

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  • Offline history cached on your device
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  • AI chat follow-up on every analysis
Long jumper mid-flight in hitch-kick technique, Track & Field AI frame analysis (warm-up checked)
Long Jump · Sample analysis “Penultimate step is 4 inches shorter than your average, pushes your takeoff 3 inches behind the board. Extend the penultimate by 3 inches.”
[05]Warm-up sequence

Long jump warm-up, in order

The phases below are sequential, each layer primes the next. Skipping the event-specific block is the most common warm-up error and the most predictable source of cold-takeoff form on opening attempts.

01 Step
General8 min

Jog, mobility.

02 Step
Activation5 min

Glutes, hips, calves.

03 Step
Sprint drills5-7 min

A-skips, build-ups.

04 Step
Approach run-throughs5 min

2-3 full approaches without jumping.

05 Step
Pop-ups5 min

3-4 short-approach pop-ups for takeoff feel.

06 Step
Build-up jumps5 min

2-3 jumps at sub-PR distances.

[09]Methodology & sources

References

Primary sources behind the numbers and methods on this page.

  1. Biomechanics of the Long Jump (Linthorne)
  2. 3D Biomechanical Analysis of the Preparation of the Long Jump Take-Off (World Athletics)
  3. Changes in Long Jump Take-Off Technique with Increasing Run-Up Speed (Bridgett)
  4. The Four Phases of the Long Jump (Goodwin, NCAA)
[10]Common questions

Long Jump Warm-Up FAQ

Five common questions about long jump that come up in coaching.

How long should a long jump warm-up take?
20-30 minutes typical. The full sequence: general, activation, phase-specific, priming.
Should I film warm-up reps?
Yes, first full-effort reps tell the AI more about how form holds up than fresh reps.
Is the warm-up the same for practice and meet day?
Mostly yes. Meet day adds more priming reps, less general work, tighter time window.
What if I'm short on time?
Cut general work first, keep activation and phase drills. They're the parts that prevent injury and prime the rep.
Can a bad warm-up cost performance?
Yes, cold takeoff mechanics are common. AI flags reps where form looks under-warmed.
[INDEX]More ways to dial in your long jump

The full long jump index

A directory of every long jump page on the site, from broad analysis tools to specific phase deep-dives. Each entry points to a focused write-up.

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Track your long jump warm-up on video.

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60s
Time per analysis
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Coaching languagePlain English
Long Jump modelsEvent-specific