In sports performance, there are few topics more misunderstood β or more impactful β than stiffness. Coaches often hear the word and assume itβs a bad thing. But in reality, stiffness is a performance amplifier, especially when we understand how it works in the muscle-tendon complex (MTC) and how to apply it to different types of plyometric training.
Letβs break it down.
Stiffness is the ability of a tissue or system to resist deformation when force is applied.
The more stiff a structure, the less it will stretch under a given force β and the faster it can recoil. In physics terms, we refer to Hookeβs Law:
F = kx
Where F is the applied force, x is displacement, and k is the stiffness constant.
In biomechanics, we care about three main types of stiffness:
Each tells us something about how athletes store and return elastic energy.
Compliance is the inverse of stiffness. A compliant muscle-tendon unit deforms more under the same force.
While stiffness helps with fast, explosive transitions, compliance is valuable when you need:
The real magic happens when athletes have the right amount of stiffness or compliance for the task at hand.
Think of the muscle-tendon complex as a two-part system:
|
Hardware |
Software |
|
Muscle architecture, fascicle length, tendon length, CSA |
Motor unit recruitment, firing rate, reflexes, co-contraction, inhibition |
From a structural standpoint, the MTC consists of:
And the SEC β the tendon β is where most elastic energy storage and recoil occurs.
β Drop Jump
Best for:
β Countermovement Jump (CMJ)
Best for:
β Squat Jump (SJ)
Best for:
πΉ Too much stiffness β bone stress injuries, poor deceleration control
πΉ Too much compliance β reduced force transfer, injury in high-load tasks
Instead of chasing stiffness blindly, athletes need:
Research from Kubo, Burgess, and others shows:
|
Training Method |
Affects Muscle |
Affects Tendon |
|
Strength training |
β Yes |
β οΈ Only if very heavy or isometric |
|
Plyometric training |
β Yes |
β Minimal tendon adaptation |
|
Sprints / bounds |
β Yes |
β Only moderate effects |
|
Static stretching |
β Decreases stiffness temporarily |
β |
|
Core training / balance |
β Indirectly improves control |
β |
Note: Tendons only adapt with heavy isometrics or long durations under tension β not from jumping alone.
Old school tools like the Just Jump Mat gave us raw jump height, but lacked insight into ground contact time β a critical part of assessing reactive strength.
Thatβs where RSI and tools like Plyomat come in: