Hop and Landing are both cross-sport athletic movements that people often meet — and mix up — together. This page sets out, from each movement's own definition, how they differ, what they share, and how to tell them apart.
How they differ
Landing is only the force-absorption half of a flight phase; a hop is a complete take-off-and-land cycle performed on a single leg.
What they share
- Both build on the jump pattern.
- Both develop power, balance, coordination and agility.
- Both work the calves, quadriceps and glutes.
- Both show up in basketball, netball and figure skating.
What each emphasises
Neither is “better” — they simply ask for different things.
Hop
PowerBalanceCoordinationAgility
Landing
BalanceCoordinationPowerAgility
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Related skills
Related techniques
Exercises that train them
The science behind them
Sports that use them
Common questions
- What is the difference between hop and landing?
- Landing is only the force-absorption half of a flight phase; a hop is a complete take-off-and-land cycle performed on a single leg.
- Are hop and landing the same movement?
- No — although they are often mentioned together, they are separate movements with their own mechanics. They do share some ground: both build on the jump pattern.
Educational, not a verdict
This is a general, educational comparison of how two movements work — not coaching instruction or a claim that one is better. Build up gradually and, if in doubt, check with a qualified professional.
More movement comparisons
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Follow the threads that connect Hop vs Landing to the rest of SocialSportHub.
Movement patterns
- HopA single-leg spring that takes off from and lands on the same leg, using the stretch-shortening cycle to project the body vertically or horizontally.
- LandingThe controlled absorption of force at ground contact that ends an airborne phase, dissipating impact through eccentric triple flexion of the ankle, knee and hip.
- BoundAn exaggerated, horizontal springing stride that transfers from one leg to the opposite leg with a long flight phase, amplifying the mechanics of running.
- JumpThe plyometric pattern of projecting the body off the ground through explosive triple extension and controlling the landing — the core expression of lower-body power.
Practice & sessions
Knowledge Atlas
- Explore by EquipmentThe gear of sport — grouped by kind and linked to the sports and beginner guides that use it.
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- Explore by TechniqueThe specific, named ways skills are executed in each sport — linked to the skills, movements and sports behind them.
- Explore by RuleHow sports are governed — the rules, and the officiating and scoring that enforce them.
- Explore by MovementThe fundamental patterns and cross-sport athletic movements the body is built on.
Glossary
- SupersetA superset pairs two exercises performed back-to-back with little or no rest between them.
- EagleIn golf, completing a hole in two strokes fewer than its par.
- Half TimeThe interval that separates the two halves of a match, giving teams a break before they change ends and resume play.
- OffsideA rule that penalises an attacking player for being in an illegal forward position when the ball is played to them.
- DOMSDOMS (delayed onset muscle soreness) is the muscle soreness that appears a day or two after unfamiliar or intense exercise.