Tuesday, July 8, 2008

STS 7-8-08 & The Development of Power


"The season is not about maintenance; it's about manipulation"- Dr. Craig S Duncan

"The most effective way to boost power is to lift weights rapidly. This trains muscles to contract quickly and react appropriately when it is necessary to exert force.- Mike Boyle"

Back at it again after a quick break. Summer has been stacked n' packed in the best kind of way, with 2 weddings, birthday, vegas, the 4th, and a full training schedule. Too much fun. Hope your training is progressing solidly as the season ramps up.

Some awesomeness:

- Impossible is nothing

- Some sweet stairs action. Check out the jump-to-sprints, among other things. Landing mechanics with flow= where it's at.

- Switch kicks. My new favorites.

- more impossible is nothing. So dirrty.

- A great video to get you thinking about your field workouts. where could you go from here? how could you incorporate a disc into these?

- Cool article on athleticism. Obviously as subjective as it gets, but still smart.

- Titans gettin' in on some kettlebell action

- Vern on recovery

- Ross with some great reads

- Once again proving how little we really know about the human body. This is just Mind-boggling.

- Such a great article on power. Another must read for any athlete.



Power is the ability to exert great force in a short period of time and
results in being able to move quickly and explosively, says Mark Verstegen,
founder of Athletes’ Performance in Tempe, Ariz. His facility specializes in
training competitive athletes, teaching them, among other things, to accelerate
and change direction quickly. That ability is developed by lifting weights
rapidly and helps athletes move more explosively during games and
other competitions.

A significant degree of power is the efficiency with which your nerves
communicate and your muscles respond to the need to apply force.


Workout:

MP- standard, see previous posts for description.

Med-Ball

20 front-squat vertical tosses
20 sumo-squat backwards tosses (against wall w/catch)
25 side twists each side
20 chest throws in lunge position (against wall w/catch)

Plyo Skills & Drills

1A: sitting box jumps
1B: depth push-up

2A: Box jump march
2B: Jumping pullups w/tuck

Jump Shrug

2x's through resting only when necessary

Functional Lifts

1: Hang Clean

2: Split Drops- same as these, but into a split-squat instead of regular squat. Love these.

3A: Overhead Squat- as fast as possible with proper form for 30 seconds.
3B: Walking superman pushups- 8x's (stand, walk hands all the way to front, perform superman pushup, walk hands back to standing)
3C: 1-leg squats (use the bench like this video if necessary)

2x's through each one resting only when necessary.

Upperbody/Core Circuit

40 arm swings w/5lb each hand
GHD's
GHD sit-ups

2x's through no rest. Finished in just under 55 minutes.

Couple of off topic items:

- A teammate of mine just bought a 40lb sandbag at OSH for $2.50. Yeah, that's right. 100+ difference awesome exercises for $2.50. That whole $$$-excuse for not lifting just got tossed out the window.

- Something that bugs me about the top teams in Ultimate is their unwillingness to share pertinent information with each other. I'm not talking about set plays, specific strategies, or other proprietary information (of course that information stays in-house, as it should.) I'm talking about frameworks of smart drills or Energy System Development (work capacity) programs, etc. Concepts that make the sport better for everyone. But for teams & players to straight stonewall each other, (especially mutually-respectful teams & players) just makes no sense to me and shows a lack of athletic professionalism. It's a very different attitude in other sports. HS football coaches meet the week before and trade game films. (college and pro's don't because tape is already available for them. Unless of course, it's defensive play signals. :) They do this for the same reason I post my so-called "secrets" in full view of my competition. First, because there's a HUGE difference between knowing about something and actually incorporating it into a progressive comprehensive program. And then actually bringing those refined abilities and combining them with your throwing skillset and incorporating it into the actual game. Secondly, because it's silly to think you could keep anything a secret anyway, the information is going to get out there somehow, most likely by a teammate changing teams and bringing what they've learned with them. So you're really just delaying the inevitable. But mostly because my philosophy of preparation & competition runs a little different: You can have my training, you can know what I do; and it won't matter for a second. Because I'll still beat you with it. Because you won't train as intense as I train. And you won't put train in as many creative combinations as I do. Your drills won't be as mentally & physically demanding as mine are. So you can watch all the tape you want on me (I'll even give it to you) and think you know all my tendencies; I'll just beat you with my 2nd & 3rd options. Because it's not about what the other team does or knows; it's only about what my team does.

So don't stonewall. Show some professionalism and give a smart framework that promotes thinking so that that framework can eventually trickle down and be passed along to all the other college, league, & youth, etc teams in that area that that team influences. It's not going to hurt your team (if giving away a drill hurts your team, you've got much bigger issues than drill strategies) and it's the only effective way to advance the sport: from within. Props to The Huddle for recognizing this and doing an fantastic job of getting smart information to players and promoting the on-field advancement of the sport. Only good things can come from the sharing of information like this.

My strong makes your strong look like cottage cheese,
#40

2 comments:

Bill Mill said...

A lot of those field workouts are familiar to me from Bryan Doo's DVD, especially those side to side jumps.

DLK said...

how the hell did you code those words with the links like that? man..that is ballerrrrr.

whoever told you how to do that is probably a sexy genius with a huge brain.