Rope and floor in alternation: basic bounce, bodyweight squats, boxer’s skip, push-ups — 40 seconds each with 20 seconds between, four laps of the rotation, and a one-minute break after each lap. With warmup and cooldown the whole session runs 19:40.
The skipping keeps your heart rate up between strength movements, and the floor work gives your calves regular relief from the rope — each half of the pairing covers for the other. It’s a complete session from one rope and a couple of square meters. Open the preset in the editor to trade either strength movement for one that suits your space.
Ten rounds of 0:30 basic bounce with 0:30 rest. The simplest rope session there is — relaxed shoulders, light feet, breathe through the nose. Build the engine before chasing speed.
Five three-minute boxer's-skip rounds with one minute rest between — the cadence fighters use to warm up and condition. Alternate-foot bounce, light on the balls of the feet, eyes up.
A short, varied flow to dial in technique: basic bounce, alternate-foot, then a few seconds of light side-to-side. Asymmetric on purpose — each block is as long as the drill needs to be.
Eight rounds of 0:20 hard skipping with 0:10 rest — four minutes of pure conditioning. Pick one style and push the pace; basic bounce works fine if you keep the cadence high.
Six rounds of 0:30 double-unders with 0:45 rest. Honest, awful, effective — drop in singles when you trip and pick the doubles back up. Pace the first two so you can finish the last two.
Four skip styles rotated for four rounds at 0:40 work, 0:20 rest. Mixes patterns so the calves don't cook on a single stance — boxer's, side-to-side, criss-cross, high knees.
Three skip styles, five rounds each, finished one style at a time before moving to the next. Group format keeps the focus on a single pattern as fatigue accumulates — fight to keep the cord clean.
A ladder of skipping: work intervals climb from 0:20 to 1:30 then back down, with proportional rests between. Asymmetric on purpose — the descent feels easier than the climb, but it isn’t.
A boxer's-style finisher: three rounds, each a different mix of skipping and footwork, with corner rests scaling longer as fatigue builds. Asymmetric on purpose — the third round is the longest, the rest before it is the shortest.