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Showing posts with label strength. Show all posts
Showing posts with label strength. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

[for guys only] natural ways to JACK UP growth hormone

10 Rules of Fat Loss
3 Sneaky Ways Your Sleep Habits Are Messing Up
Muscle Growth
By Joseph Arangio, MS, CSCS

Seemingly innocent activities before bedtime can screw up the
natural release of muscle-building substances, like GH and
testosterone.

Sleep Tip #1: Avoid Stimulants

As a general rule, avoid caffeine six to eight hours before
bedtime. Caffeine blocks brain receptors that promote
sleep. "It causes physiological arousal which makes it more
difficult to fall asleep," says Shawn Youngstedt, Ph.D., sleep
scientist from the University of California, San Diego.

Plus caffeine decreases the deep, growth hormone-rich stages of
sleep.

Sleep Tip #2: Reduce Stress

Balancing your checkbook immediately before bed or discussing
business on the telephone is not a good idea.

In addition, watching scary stuff (like The Exorcist... google it)
too close to bedtime might make you anxious and unsettled and make
the transition into sleep tricky. "Anything that causes autonomic
nervous system arousal will impair sleep due to increases in heart
rate, breathing, and sweat production," says Dr. Youngstedt.

Sleep Tip #3: Skip the Nightcap

Sure, alcohol may make you sleepy after dinner, but the sleep that
you get is superficial and hardly restful. Alcohol prevents
you from achieving the deep, restorative sleep associated
with growth hormone production.
And when you don't recover from your workouts, muscle growth
suffers.

If you consume alcohol, moderation and timing are the keys to
ensuring deep, continuous sleep.
Want superhero muscles? One drink, six hours before bedtime, is the
limit.

==================

If you think this can help one of your drinking buddies, pass it
along.

Train hard,
Fast Fat Burning Workouts Revealed

Friday, August 31, 2012

US Sports Conditioning Online Boot Camp Demo


Welcome to another US Sports Online Conditioning Boot Camp! If this is your first time using the US Sports Conditioning Boot Camp, then please go at your own pace. You may lower the volume, to allow your body to become conditioned to these more challenging workouts. In other words: "Challenge by choice"
*Important Message:
This is a free Demo of the US Sports Conditioning Online Boot Camp Workouts:
Once or Twice-Weekly detailed sports conditioning workouts delivered to your inbox. Comprehensive Strength and Conditioning workouts with specific exercises, sets, reps, and weights. Videos and descriptions to help you execute each exercise with proper intensity and good form. Each training cycle will be periodically changed for maximal performance enhancement.
   Click Here to Sign Up
Once per week Delivered Tuesdays 5am EST= $2.75 per month
Twice per week Delivered Tuesday and Thursdays 5am EST=$5.00 per month

10 Rules of Fat Loss
Here it is Athletes! Your Free Demo* of our bi-weekly online Sports Conditioning Bootcamps.
Be sure to stay hydrated before, during, and after your workouts.
This program is generally geared towards the Winter Sports Athlete (Basketball, Wrestling, etc.,). We are going to stay with this multifaceted strength and conditioning workout until the first of December. This workout was originally designed as a Basketball  Conditioning program. This can be applied to conditioning for just about any sport*
The weights and intensities listed were originally programmed for a specific athlete. Adjust the weights as you see fit and have SAFETY FIRST in mind.
Equipment needed: Power Gym, Machines,
Week 1 - Day 1 (Friday) of US Sports Conditioning Boot Camp's Demo ProgramWeek Difficulty:Medium
 View Printer Friendly Version

    

SelectExercise NameSet and Rep Combinations
1
 
Warmup and Stretch
8 minutes
2 Theraband Internal\External Warmup Rotation (AD)
12 reps,8 reps,
8 reps 
3 Snatch Deadlift
5 reps @ 115 lbs,4 reps @ 135 lbs,
3 reps @ 160 lbs,5 reps @ 170 lbs,
2 reps @ 160 lbs 
4 Bench Press
10 reps @ 225 lbs,5 reps @ 270 lbs,
8 reps @ 315 lbs,10 reps @ 295 lbs,
10 reps @ 270 lbs 
5 Dumbbell Bench Press
12 reps @ 105 lbs,8 reps @ 120 lbs,
8 reps @ 110 lbs 
6 Med Ball Chest Pass (standing)
6 reps,4 reps
7 Med Ball Overhead Throw (standing)
6 reps,4 reps
8 Dumbbell Fly Stretch
60 seconds
9 Dumbbell Lateral Raise
10 reps @ 41 lbs,10 reps @ 41 lbs
10 Dumbbell Rear Lateral Raise
10 reps @ 32 lbs,10 reps @ 32 lbs
11 Dumbbell Side-Lying External Rotation
10 reps @ 26 lbs,10 reps @ 26 lbs
12 Cable Triceps Pushdown
10 reps @ 170 lbs,10 reps @ 170 lbs
13 Hanging Bent Knee Leg Raises
15 reps,15 reps
14 Alternate Heel Touchers
48 reps,48 reps
15 Med Ball Side Throw (standing)
12 reps,8 reps,
8 reps 

Great Job! Ready To Sign Up For as little as 9 cents per day? Click Here!

Be sure to cool down and stretch after each workout.
To get your very own customized Strength and Conditioning program, Click Here
*Please consult a physician before engaging in any exercise program. US Sports Strength and Conditioning assumes no liability if injury or ailment should occur due to your engagement of this program or any of the US Sports Conditioning Bootcamp Workouts.

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Monday, July 23, 2012

US Sports Strength and Conditioning News! (Lose it once and for all)



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US Sports Strength and Conditioning News23 July, 2012
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Hello Warriors!
I am the greatest, I said that even before I knew I was....
Muhammad Ali
...I figured that if I said it enough, I would convince the world that I really was the greatest.
Muhammad Ali
I hated every minute of training, but I said, "Don't quit. Suffer now and live the rest of your life as a champion."
Muhammad Ali
US Sports Strength and Conditioning Is Powered By WorkoutEngine Try our new service for 30 days FREE! Click Here
Many of you have been asking about sharing the new online service with friends, family, and neighbors. It's easy. Simply forward this link to anyone interested: http://www.workoutengine.com/a/418.html
If they sign up via your referral, I will have a free gift for you. Thanks so much!
Existing Premium Members: Do you need a new batch of workouts? Never received your weekly update? Never received any workouts after signing up? Please contact me
Want to know more about how the new US Sports Online Strength and Conditioning System works? Check out this demo video created by one of our trainers. Click Here To Watch
To former or existing clients; your chance to be a critic!
Whether it was one-on-one or if I consulted you online. Would you write a review of my services on Thumbtack?
Now in making this request I know all of the reviews may not be glowing, so you can be candid. I will not remove any posts.  As long as your review is PG rated or better! :) Thanks for your time.
Hello,

I need your help getting more business. I just posted my service on Thumbtack -- a website where clients like you can learn more about my services and book me without picking up the phone.

More people will book my services and my post will appear higher in search results if I have more reviews. Please help me get more business by writing a review about your experience with my work.

Write a review  or copy this link onto your browser:
http://www.thumbtack.com/reviews/services/GQDca0wSYRPjcw/write

Thank you,
Nathan

Nathan Lewis
US Sports Strength and Conditioning


What makes a good review?

  • Details about the type of work  US Sports Strength and Conditioning  has done for you
  • The length of time you've worked with  US Sports Strength and Conditioning
  • Traits that set  US Sports Strength and Conditioning  apart from other service professionals


What is Thumbtack?

Thumbtack is a website for you to list, discover, and book local services. Thumbtack has service professionals in all 50 states in categories from home improvement to health & beauty to tutoring & lessons and much more!

Need to book a local service? Tell us what you need done and we'll e-mail you 3-5 quotes on your job within 24 hours.
Gluten Free. Is it For Real?
This Gluten-Free meal planing is not just a fad. It can change or even save your life. Get the Free Report Here
Get Your Special Performance Meal Plan Delivered to you now! Click Here To 'smoke' the competition
The Last Weight Loss Tip You'll Ever Need
By now you've just about had it.

You've been exercising and eating healthy for ages, but haven't met your weight loss goal.

What gives?

It's an issue that every whole-grain-veggie-and-lean-meat-eating health-seeker faces at some point in their fitness journey.

Until you come face-to-face with one ugly truth about yourself, you'll always be stuck in this limbo of doing the right thing, eating healthy and yet not having the stunning body to show for it.

Once you conquer this last issue, you'll quickly achieve your ultimate goal and will slide into the on-going maintenance phase.

Here's your problem: You eat too many calories.

That's it.

Master this problem and you'll quickly and easily achieve the body of your dreams.

"But I only eat healthy calories, so quantity doesn't really matter," you're thinking.

While I applaud you for eating healthy calories, you're fooling yourself if you think quantity isn't an issue.

Calorie Counting Works
Have you heard of the professor from Kansas State University, Mark Haub, and his famous junk food diet?

As an experiment for his nutrition class, Haub put himself on a diet of almost exclusively candy bars, packaged cakes and processed snacks. The catch was that he only ate 1800 calories each day – when his previous diet, of normal and healthy foods, was about 2600 calories each day.

Within two months Haub had lost 30 pounds and his BMI dropped from the overweight category down to normal.

While I would never recommend eating junk food, this is quite a dramatic demonstration of how reduced calorie intake works for weight loss.

How many calories do you eat each day?

If you don't know the answer, then get excited because this one weight loss tool will change everything for you.

Start Your Food Journal
Food journaling used to be a cumbersome act that involved lugging around a journal, writing down each food item throughout the day then looking everything up at the end of the day to manually tally calories.

Not so anymore.

Today food journaling has gone digital. Tracking calories takes only seconds of your time.

Download a food journal application to your smart phone and at the touch of your fingers you'll be able to look up food items and instantly see your running calorie tally.

Meet with your doctor to determine a daily calorie count that will allow for safe weight loss and diligently maintain that number. Eat healthy, fresh foods and when you decide to indulge, do so within your target calorie range.

This one small, proactive step will give you structure and clarity when it comes to making food choices and will quickly result in pounds lost and goals achieved.

Once your goal weight is met, your target calorie range will be adjusted for maintenance.

To meet your weight loss goal quicker, pair your calorie-specific eating with a consistent and challenging exercise routine.

My exercise programs are specifically crafted to get you into amazing shape.

I'd love to hear from you. Call or email today to get started.
This Week's Feature Exercise: Total Gym Cardio Pull
 This is a great Exercisel to develop strength and body control applicable to any sport.  Also a great way to devlop stability and strength and the quadriceps muscles (front of the  leg above the knee).
 This exercise is a part of programs available to premium members of US Sports Online Strength and Conditioning.*


#1621   TG Cardio Pull
Aerobic/Anaerobic Conditioning
Total Gym
Exercise Description:
TG Cardio Pull
Classification:
Aerobic/Anaerobic Conditioning
Instructions:
1. Start by lying on the board with your head towards the top.
2. Grab onto the handles with your arms extended and your legs bent.
3. In one motion press your feet into the plate and pull with your arms down towards your hips.
4. No rest at the top and immediately return to the starting position to repeat.

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Your Digital Food Journal
If you have a smart phone, then doing your food journaling digitally is a no-brainer. The process is incredibly quick and painless. Here are 2 top-rated apps:
  • My Fitness Pal: This app is free and works on the Web, Iphone, Ipad, Android, BlackBerry and Windows phones.
  • My Net Diary: This app cost $5/month and works on the Web, Iphone, Ipad, Android or Blackberry.
Try out different food journal apps until you find one that is easy for you to use, works well with your phone and makes tracking your calories simple and fun.

Once you decide which app works for you, now it's time to get journaling!

Stay within your target calorie range and watch as the pounds drop.
Full Access to Digital Food Journals is included with all online training plans of the new US Sports Online Strength and Conditioning System Click Here To Get Yours Today!
Roasted & Stuffed Eggplant
Roasted veggies are low in calories and high in fiber, making them the perfect diet food. This dish will fill you up without adding too many calories to your daily tally. Add a side of lean protein for a complete meal.
Servings: 6

Here's what you need...
  • 3 medium eggplants
  • 1 teaspoon olive oil
  • 2 medium onions, diced
  • 2 cups cherry tomatoes, halved
  • 1/4 cup walnuts, chopped
  • 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
  • 2 teaspoons dried oregano
  • 1/4 cup reduced-fat feta cheese
  1. Cut the eggplants in half, lengthwise, and scoop out the flesh, leaving 1/2 inch on the shell. Chop the scooped-out flesh into 1/2 inch cubes and set in a colander. Sprinkle the eggplant cubes and the inside of the eggplant shells with salt. Let stand for 30 minutes, then rinse and pat dry.
  2. Bring a large pot of salted water to boil. Drop the eggplant shells in the water and simmer for 7 minutes. Shells should be barely tender when poked with a fork. Drain and pat dry.
  3. Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Saute the onions for 5 minutes. Add the chopped eggplant, tomatoes, walnuts, cinnamon, oregano and 1/4 cup filtered water. Cook for 8 minutes, until softened and browned.
  4. Preheat oven to broil. Place eggplant shells on a greased baking sheet. Broil for 5 minutes. Reduce oven heat to 375 degrees F.
  5. Fill each eggplant shell with the veggies, sprinkle with the feta. Bake for 35 minutes, or until browned on top.
Nutritional Analysis: One serving equals: 153 calories, 4.7g fat, 86mg sodium, 25g carbohydrate, 11g fiber, and 6g protein.

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US Sports Strength and Conditioning Partners
Nathan Lewis
US Sports Strength and Conditioning
4105 Duke Street 
Alexandria, VA 22304
571-501-5306
US Sports Strength and Conditioning
 

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The Front Squat/Back Debate: Part 4

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The Front Squat/Back Debate: Part 4
Jim Reeves
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In the last article we looked at the breakdown in the performance of the back squat and some of the reasons behind its typical technique errors. We also looked specifically at the low back and hip's role in the back squat and the requirements athletes must have for technical mastery of the lift. So, the question then has moved towards who can perform the back squat? In the discussion forum on Strengthcoach.com, it seemed there was a defensive stance taken by some that the purpose for my explanations was to discredit the back squat exercise and its performance. This is just simply not the case. I don't think the back squat controversy is founded within the exercise itself. I think the controversy has roots in the lack of critical thought applied by some in the safe and effective prescription of it as an exercise.
Questions were raised about "other" lifts that similarly were sources of controversy in many performance training circles. In fact, the answer of who can perform the "other" controversial lifts that have become focal points of discussion is found in the same reasoning. These "other" lifts being the traditional deadlift and the Olympic lifts of power clean and power snatches.
Well, taken from a performance coach's perspective, all four of these exercises have a very unique role in their own respective lifting genres, but may not be the best training option within the athletic population that a coach is responsible for. Again, for clarification I am writing this article from the standpoint of performance training for athletes who compete in team or individual sports that are unrelated to weight training.
Within their individual lifting competitions, the back squat, deadlift, power clean and power snatch are very unique skills. I think many times coaches of these lifts who are "married to the exercise" will make the mistake of translating world class athletes results and measurements and transpose these performance expectations onto athletes they are working with. It becomes a square peg / round hole scenario where a coach will force feed these exercises onto the athletes they work with, yet not see the limiting factor for many of these exercises is outside the athlete's control.
Anatomy Predicting Success
At the world class level, there are similarities in physique and body dimensions which allow a person who is performing one of these lifts to have a distinct advantage over other competitors. One observation I have had of people who successfully perform the back squat, deadlift and Olympic lifts at the world class level (and perform them with excellent form) is the presence of a long torso and relatively short femur.
Dr. Stuart McGill at a talk in Toronto in November of 2010 referenced his study of competitive powerlifters and the genetic advantage some people in this sport had whose ancestry was from certain regions within Europe; that advantage being a rather shallow acetabular socket.
Dr. McGill's research and comments reinforced for me that body structure and the relative length of an athlete's torso and appendages will give them a distinct advantage in one sport over another. Hence the commonality in limb and torso proportions within competitive lifters at a world class level.
Conversely, an athlete's anatomy can also be a limiting factor in the performance of specific skills within a sport. How many 5' 5" tall 100m sprint specialists do you see at the Olympics, or 6' 4" gymnasts? Not many 6' 0" tall athletes with short humerus' make it to the NBA. The examples are endless, but the message is clear: structural anatomy can predict success or failure within sporting movements
In many cases, an athlete needs to have the structural (bony) anatomy to perform these lifts properly. Too many of the athletes I work with have structural anatomy which gives them a competitive advantage in their chosen sport, but makes many weight room training exercises very difficult.
A perfect example is a hockey player who is gifted with long humerus and radius/ulna bones within their arms. Great for stick handling and keeping a puck out of the way of an opposing players attempts to get the puck, but terrible anatomy in the catch position of a clean, since the long forearms drive the bar into the throat in a proper catch position. Long femurs or short torso are a back squatters' nightmare. But they are great if you want to be an athlete that sprints or skates fast.
Predictable Process of Squat Performance
Having seen so many athletes attempt the basic squat movement and struggle with its performance, I have developed an understanding of how people squat and the patterns that typically follow as loading in this movement is attempted. I call it the "Predictable Process of Squat Performance" and really it is just the observation of how athletes tend to respond to having load applied to their squat movement when they are relatively new to the experience of weight training.
I outline the predictable process of squat performance in the following list. It is a progression of exercise choice and loading ability, not an absolute quantification of one athlete fitting into a specific category, but more of an average distribution of athletes across a large group that enter into a training environment.
The progression is from body weight squatting, to a Goblet Squat, Trap Bar Deadlift, Front Squat and then Back Squat.
An example is the best way to explain how this progression works. It goes something like this:
Take 20 athletes that are 14 to 18 years of age. Sport doesn't matter. Training age is random with some of the group total beginners, others with some weight room experience, no-one really training longer than 2 years prior. I've listed how many athletes will acquire this squat skill right away versus the time it takes others to develop it as load is applied. Also, I have summarized the time it takes for athletes to become very proficient at the exercise, using loads that are near a repetition maximum value for them.
Body weight squat:
• Within two sessions, 16 of 20 athletes will have adequate technique to begin loading with the goblet squat.
• Beginning athletes will invariable feel every part of legs and low back under stress as their technique fails.
• Most athletes will achieve success in the first workout, they feel their legs working but are not overstressed with the exercise performance.
Goblet squat:
• Within five sessions of beginning loading, 18 of 20 athletes will be able to progress to TB Deadlift or Front Squat, they will have mastered the Goblet Squat.
• Beginning athletes will feel stress through the upper back but more physical work directed towards the legs, feeling loading in the posterior chain and quadriceps as fatigue sets in.
• Some athletes are still not challenged in the lower body by the loads yet, it is too easy for the lower body to perform the exercise, the weight of the DB is the limiting factor for the upper body.
TB Deadlift:
• Some athletes (x2-3) most likely have prior lifting experience and others are just good athletes (x3) and progress very quickly in developing the lift. Total: six athletes who will lift aggressively almost from the beginning.
• Within five sessions of beginning TB Deadlifting, loading will increase based on performance within the lift (beginning of week 3) for an additional eight to ten of the athletes.
• Total: 14 to 16 athletes who are aggressively loading within 3 weeks of beginning program.
• Prior to this, minimal loads and just grooving the pattern will be paramount for most (12 of 18 athletes), but half of these athletes develop the ability to load within the first three weeks.
• Two athletes still struggle with body weight and the goblet progression.
• Athletes are easily coached to produce a posterior weight shift with the hips, though upper body posture is a work in progress for some.
• Beginning athletes will feel equal stress through back musculature and legs.
• As loading progresses, reports of periodic back stress/workload are not uncommon, not painful, just muscular loading and adaptation. Athletes feel entire posterior chain contributing to the lift.
Front Squat:
• If we choose to go with front squat instead of TB Deadlift, two to three of the athletes will be able to begin loading aggressively within three sessions, mostly based on prior experience.
• Three more are just really good athletes and get it very quickly, so loading progresses for those athletes as well.
• Total: six athletes who are aggressively loading within 3 weeks of beginning the program.
• Eight of the athletes struggle with the technique but can begin loading adequately within ten sessions (approximately week 5 of program).
• Four athletes will struggle with the lift and use minimal loading to continue to groove the pattern, use other teaching exercises and supplemental exercises to complement their squat pattern development.
• Two athletes will continue to struggle to squat with any loading bilaterally even though they continue to participate in supplemental and teaching exercises well into the 6th to 8th week of the program.
• Beginning athletes will struggle with supporting the bar positioning, squat depth and foot alignment.
• Athletes will generally understand a posterior weight shift quickly and proprioceptively groove proper upper body and hip motion.
• Fatigue will set in early and technical errors will creep up fast within a set.
• For some really advanced lifters, supporting a heavily weighted bar becomes a problem as well. They are not strong enough in the shoulder girdle or upper back to support what their lower body can lift.
Back Squat:
• If we choose to go with Back Squat instead of TB Deadlift or Front Squat, one of the athletes will be able to begin loading aggressively within three sessions, based entirely on prior experience.
• Three players are really good athletes, but two of them struggle with back positioning at the bottom of the lift. They curl under and lose the lordotic curve. Loading is restrictive for these athletes.
• Total: Two athletes who are aggressively loading within 3 weeks of beginning the program.
• Four of the athletes struggle with the technique initially but can begin loading adequately within ten sessions (approximately week 5 of program).
• Twelve of the athletes will struggle with the lift, technical errors will continue as they work to try and correct the various Back Squat pattern deficiencies.
• Two athletes will continue to struggle to squat with any loading bilaterally even though they continue to participate in supplemental and teaching exercises well into the 6th to 8th week of the program.
• Beginning athletes will have trouble overcoming the tendency of an anterior weight shift and feel considerable loading through the anterior knee structures. Others will have considerable trouble with initiating a posterior weight shift.
• Most technical errors will center around an athlete's ability to sit into a thigh parallel position and maintain a lordotic curve in the lumbar spine. Invariably, whether due to bony contact between the femur and pelvis, a muscular dominance of the hamstrings or an inability of the back musculature to counteract the weight of the bar, the athletes will struggle to maintain proper back positioning throughout the entire range of motion.
Typical progression of athletes who will be aggressively loading in a program:
Goblet squat: 18 of 20 athletes within five sessions, most within the first three sessions.
TB Deadlift: 14 to 16 athletes within three weeks.
Front Squat: 14 athletes within five weeks.
Back Squat: 6 athletes within five weeks.
The predictability of the squat process is a basic summary of the ability of a strength coach to introduce loading to athletes who are relatively new to the process of weight training. The prediction is really the observation of fundamental errors which occur with an alarming rate of consistency, regardless of the age or sport of the athletes involved. So often I have seen the initial loading patterns of athletes and the resultant errors and difficulties these athletes will go through as the movement is practiced and loads are applied.
Coaching is teaching and being taught is a process for the athlete that takes time. The predictability of the process for me has allowed our staff to implement a progression of loading and complimentary exercises to help develop the pattern of squatting. For most athletes the squat needs to be a learned skill with an appropriate progression and distinct levels of achievement to allow the athlete to acquire the skills at an accelerated rate in a safe but effective manner.
Though not a hard and fast rule, the predictability seems to give rise to the observation that athletes cannot skip too many steps in the loading process. Take a beginner and try to force the TB Deadlift on them and you will be fighting a losing battle from the outset. Or put an athlete into the Back Squat who has not established a significant level of proprioception and postural control in a lower level squat motion and you can be sure there will be significant technical errors within this exercise that are very difficult to correct while back squatting with any load.
Just forcing an athlete into a higher level of demand in the squat exercise continuum will not guarantee that athlete will squat aggressively with load in a safe and effective manner within a reasonable amount of time. Certain performance markers, such as a proper initiation of hip motion, femoral alignment, lumbar posture and even something as simple as full range of motion within the hips or ankles can become major limitations to proper squat performance if the loading prevents these markers from being achieved.
Role of the Athlete
One thing that can easily be missed by some strength coaches is based on the choice of exercises in the programs they give to athletes, has the coach been able to garner significant buy-in from the athletes themselves. It is so easy to lose a group of athletes if they do not invest themselves into the exercise program. We have all seen it, a group of athletes who want to lift, to work out aggressively and really feel like they made strides in their development that day. Then you watch as the air goes out of the balloon as the athletes feel the exercises they are performing are well below the intensity they want to work at.
What type of buy-in can you get with the majority of a group of 17 year old athletes who are relegated to corrective exercise to clean up their back squat technique when only a select few of their team mates are able to lift aggressively? Or the level of engagement as athletes attempt back squats with body bars or broom sticks. Not much in my experience.
It is far better to have the majority of the group lifting aggressively in a lower level demand squat exercise where the athlete feels the proper squatting motion and can challenge their muscular system to adapt to the loading. Have those same athletes grab ahold of a reasonably weighted dumbbell and perform a more technically sound Goblet Squat. Or use a reasonably loaded bar and perform a Front Squat, reinforcing the mechanics of a more technically proficient squat motion due to the load placement.
It's not the load that is important here; it's the recognition of load and thus the perceived accomplishment by the athlete that is the valuable tool here for the strength coach. The athlete buys in, and that is a huge step for the strength coach in the program.
The strength coach needs repetitions and ongoing performance of the squat motion to develop the movement pattern and strength levels. The buy-in by the athletes gives the strength coach the time and repetitions to do just that. Using leverage and manipulating an athlete's center of gravity is the trick of the trade that the strength coach is going to use to develop within the athlete a proper squat motion.
The great thing about the predictability of the squat performance model is that it serves as a double leg loading progression. Athletes will have a much higher level of buy-in and a significantly more aggressive workout with exercises and loads that are matched to their ability at that point in time.
Adding to this previous point, a systematic allocation of loading allows the athlete to perform to the best of their ability, with the development of the athlete along this progression being accelerated. Athletes acquire and master a lower level squat motion, add load, then progress onto higher level exercises as technique and their strength levels improve.
To summarize, I feel the time it takes for a lifter to safely load an aggressive weight in the Back Squat is too long and runs a lot more risk than the Front Squat, TB Deadlift or any other squat regression. My job is to get athletes as strong as possible in a short training window each year. Therefore I need to choose exercises which allow me to load aggressively and allow the athlete to develop their strength levels as quickly as possible. For athletes who progress to advanced lifting programs, the Trapbar Deadlift and Front Squat both have significant value within the programming I use with athletes, something I cannot say about the Back Squat.


·  The Front Squat/Back Squat Debate: Part 3

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Friday, July 20, 2012

The Myth of In-Season "Maintenance" Training

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The Myth of In-Season "Maintenance" Training
Ben Bruno
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When I was in high school it used to annoy me so much when adults would start sentences with "Back when I was your age, things used to be so much different…" It just sounded so lame, and it made them seem old.
But alas, at the ripe old age of 26, I find myself saying it all the time to my athletes. I've become that guy.
They probably think I'm lame too, but it's true. Even ten years ago, things were so much different than they are today.
In high school, I didn't have a cell phone, the Ipod hadn't come out yet, and it used to be a big deal to swear. Now, all of that stuff is commonplace.
I can only imagine what it what it must've been like for Mike Boyle before the advent of fancy things like electricity and motor cars ;)
Seriously though, if you really take the time to stop and think about it, it's crazy how fast things have changed. At 26, I'm certainly not over the hill by any means, but it's a completely different world than it was just ten years prior.
Nowhere is that more true than the field of strength on conditioning.
I was an avid athlete growing up, but aside from some push-ups and sprints here and there at the end of practice, I never partook in any sort of organized physical training program all throughout high school. Nobody that I knew really did either, at least not on any meaningful level. I started messing around with some bodyweight training and light weightlifting when I was around 16, and I was first of my friends to do so. Keep in mind that I'm from New Hampshire, so trends take a little longer to catch on up there (kidding, sort of).
These days, it's become the norm for high school kids to participate in a strength and conditioning program, and it's really almost a requirement if you want to make it to the next level. MBSC is packed all year-round with high school kids looking to get a leg up on the competition.
It's great to see, and it's something I wish I had back in high school. It's a huge opportunity to make the most of your potential…if you take advantage of it.
I think that's why it grinds my gears a little bit when I hear about in-season "maintenance" training.
To me, training for maintenance is wasting a prime opportunity to get stronger and separate yourself from the pack.
The argument for in-season maintenance training is that you don't want to fry your athletes in the weight room and take away from their performance in their chosen sport.
I absolutely understand this rationale, and I agree that you don't want to fry them, but where I differ is that I absolutely believe you can get kids stronger in-season without frying them, and to take it a step further, doing so will in turn have a tremendously positive carryover to their ability to perform at a high level. The key is to keep the volume low and the intensity (and expectations) high.
For the past two years, I've worked with a high school varsity hockey team during their season, and about 75% of the boys come in to train with me year-round. This has been my first experience with coaching a team, but I'm lucky because being at MBSC, I have some great people to call on for assistance. I've made some mistakes along the way, but I've learned from them, and overall it's gone really well.
Both years the team has increased their strength over the course of the season. I say this based off simple testing we did prior to the start of the first practice and again at the end of the year. The tests included vertical jump, max reps on the bench press with 135 pounds (95 pounds for kids that couldn't bench 135), and max reps for bodyweight chin-ups. I do not like the idea of doing heavy one rep maxes with kids with a relatively low training age, so these tests allowed us to gauge their progress safely while still giving us some valuable objective data to see if the program worked.
It did, and it translated positively to the ice.
Well, I should amend that statement slightly because I think it's impossible to measure how much it truly translated, but I have to think it helped on some level because they've had two of their most successful seasons in quite some time, and in both seasons they've played their best hockey at the end of the season when other teams are fizzling out. More importantly, with the exception of a freak accident in the locker room with someone stepping on another boy's bare foot with a skate, they've incurred no serious injuries. In the brutal game of hockey, that's saying something.
The Program
The program we use is very simple. Games typically fall on Wednesday and Saturday, so we lift Thursday and Sunday to allow them time to recover. Workouts usually last 40-45 minutes: 10 minutes to warm-up, and 30-35 minutes to lift. We don't normally do any additional conditioning work since they are getting enough of that skating six days a week, but sometimes, depending on how they're playing and how they're feeling, we'll do some sled relays at the end of Sunday's lift-- partly for conditioning purposes, but more so for team-building.
The workouts are set up as follows:
Workout A (Thursday)
Dumbbell Snatch
Mobility Filler (Squat Stretch, Toe Touch Squat, etc.)
Trap Bar Deadlift
Chin-up
Core
1 Leg Squat
Pushup
Core/Mobility
Workout B (Sunday)
Jump Squat
Core
Bench Press
Rear Foot Elevated Split Squat
Mobility Filler
Inverted Row
Single Leg RDL
Core
Sometimes we have to change around the order of the exercises slightly to account for equipment logistics when the gym is crowded, but that's the basic setup.
For the bench press and trap bar deadlift, we work up to one top set per workout, waving the reps every three weeks or so from anywhere between 3-8.
On the rest of the exercises, we do 3-4 sets within a consistent rep range (depends on the exercise, as different exercises lend themselves better to different rep ranges) and shoot for modest weight increases from week to week.
Using this program, 22 of the 23 kids increased their bench press, 20 of 23 increased their vertical jump, and all 23 increased their chin-ups. For the younger kids with a lower starting point, that's probably to be expected, but we have kids that bench 265 lbs, jump 31.5 inches, and knock out 22 chin-ups so it's definitely not all "newbie" gains.
The "Secret"
The program itself is really nothing special on paper, but I think the real "secret" lies in the simplicity, the execution, and the expectations.
Since the overall workload is low, we can push the intensity, both literally and figuratively.
Literally speaking, we urge small incremental weight increases from week to week, provided the form stays good.
Figuratively speaking, we demand full effort and clearly set the expectation of getting stronger.
If you have it in your mind that you're trying to maintain, it can lead to complacency. That's not the mindset we want. We want people expecting to get stronger and fighting tooth and nail to make it happen.
Now that's certainly not to say that all of the boys add weight every single workout because as we all know, that's just not realistic. Some of the younger kids actually do for the most part, but that's just because their training age is so small and their starting point is so low. Our freshman and sophomores made tremendous strength increases over the course of the season. For the stronger kids that have been lifting longer, there are days where they just don't have it or aren't feeling good and we have to adapt and either lighten the loads, reduce the volume, or both. If you've lifted heavy weights yourself, then you know that at a certain point, progress slows down and even maintaining strength levels is a tall order. For these guys, it's especially important to have them in a mind frame for improvement because otherwise it will surely lead to not only maintenance but strength loss. Even training for strength, stronger athletes may end up maintaining, but they'll at least be better off than if they had just trained to maintain in the first place.
Clearly you can't put the pedal to the metal day in and day out, and part of the art of coaching is knowing when to back off. The art is something that I think comes with experience, so I'm working on that and is something I will undoubtedly get better at with time. There's no substitute for experience, and at some point, you just have to try things, be ok with making mistakes, and then learn from them. With that in mind, there have actually been a few times throughout the season after particularly physically demanding games and/or late nights where I've called an audible and used the normal lifting time for extra foam rolling and stretching.
For the most part though, we push them to get stronger, and the general trend is in that direction. It's not linear, but I'm ok with that as long as the end result is better than a starting point.
Mistakes
I mentioned before that I've made some mistakes along the way, so I'll share those now.
The first one was not monitoring the players' bodyweight enough.
Most high school boys have an atrocious diet, which when coupled with a crazy practice and game schedule, is recipe for losing serious amounts of weight in-season, particularly in metabolically demanding sports. Last season, we tested their weight and body fat at the start of the season, but we didn't do much beyond that. Not surprisingly, when I rechecked their bodyweight at the end of the season, most of them had lost more weight than I would have liked them to.
This season, we did weekly or bi-weekly weigh-ins on Sundays to keep track of them more closely and to serve as a constant reminder for them to be cognizant of their diet. This system worked really well and the kids have been much better about keeping their weight up, which has translated to better strength in the gym and on the ice.
The other mistake I've made was switching exercises too frequently and/or progressing exercises too much.
Last season I felt compelled to progress exercises every 3-4 weeks, even if what we were doing was working fine. I did it because I didn't want them to get bored, but the result was a lot of unnecessary soreness, and in some cases, pain. For example, I progressed them too quickly to ab wheel rollouts and it resulted in several of the boys complaining of excessive ab soreness and/or back pain.
It also didn't give them enough time to master some of the exercises. For example, after three weeks of offset single leg RDLs, they were just beginning to remember which hand to hold the dumbbell in, let alone master the balance aspect and start increasing strength.
This season, I tried to learn from my mistakes and followed the mantra "if it ain't broke, don't fix it." I told myself I wouldn't change out an exercise unless one of three things happened:
- They stopped making progress
- They started complaining about being bored
- They complained of pain
Much to my surprise, they never once complained of being bored. In fact, overall enthusiasm was sky high. It really makes you realize that a lot of time as coaches, we probably make changes from our own boredom, and garnering excitement is much more about creating a positive culture than it is about creating a sexy program.
Also much to my surprise, we didn't run into any major plateaus with any of the exercises. In fact, their progress was actually better because they had more of an opportunity to master the movements they were being asked to perform. Again, it makes you realize the power of a well-executed, simple program, especially for trainees with a relatively young training age.
The only major change I made to the program was to take out trap bar deadlifts and replace them with single leg "skater squats" with about a month left in the regular season because a lot of the guys were complaining of feeling beat up.
Aside from that, the program stayed largely intact except for small modifications for certain individuals working around minor injuries.
Conclusion
I guess it goes back to what Dan John says about "simple, but not easy." In-season training obviously needs to be shorter and more focused, but I don't think it has to be (or should be) maintenance work. I don't think it's just of semantics either. It's a philosophy, and it's a mind frame. Remember, it's called strength training for a reason.
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