Don't do leg extensions. They shear your ligaments especially the ACL. No one does those except for physical therapy very very light (which sounds kinda weird).Leg presses
Squats
Jump rope
Jogging
Sprinting
Leg extensions
Leg curls
Core exercises
Most importantly - practice jumping.
Least important - Calves. Most overrated body part for jumping. Its all in your Thighs, Core, and butt. You can work them out but don't make it all about your calves. Besides, the less you weigh, the better
Ideally you want a really really strong thighs and stomach and a really light upper body. Strong but not heavy upper body.
At 15 I could dunk two hands and I'm only 6'0, I was 6'0" then too. 7'10" standing reach.
I can't gain weight, I have tried to. I am a solid 135 lbs, Lol.
Well here is to hoping I can grow a couple more inches.
Leg presses
Squats
Jump rope
Jogging
Sprinting
Leg extensions
Leg curls
Core exercises
Most importantly - practice jumping.
Least important - Calves. Most overrated body part for jumping. Its all in your Thighs, Core, and butt. You can work them out but don't make it all about your calves. Besides, the less you weigh, the better
Ideally you want a really really strong thighs and stomach and a really light upper body. Strong but not heavy upper body.
At 15 I could dunk two hands and I'm only 6'0, I was 6'0" then too. 7'10" standing reach.
When I was 16, I was probably around 6' tall. I haven't really grown much vertically since then, probably only an inch or two (6'3 and some with shoes on) but I really grew into my frame from 16-20. I probably only weighed 150 or so during my junior year, but I was up to 170 by the end of my senior year and 180 after my freshman year of college.
Calves aren't super important, but it does help. I only do two calve exercises per week, on the same days that I do my shoulder workouts. I can tell that it helps my one legged jumps.
One thing to add in, often gets overlooked, but really work on your flexibility. Make a routine of going through a set of lower body stretches every morning. That will help, especially if you have poor flexibility.
Calves help in reactivity more than they do in strength. Working out your calves by themselves is pretty useless. Increasing their range of motion helps with injury prevention (knee wont track correctly if you cant dorsi-flex well) and allowing you to squat/deadlift properly. Other than that calves get a lot of work during plyometrics. Plyometrics rely on what is called the stretch shortening cycle. Calves endure a large strain during this and the connective tissue in the area. The stretch shortening cycle is very important to jumping quickly high and getting back up for second and additional jumps. Anytime their is a counter movement this comes into play.
So how do you go about increasing the ROM in your calves?