Student-Athlete & Adult Performance Training

Fuel Your Body with this Smoothie

I love smoothies. Easy peezy to make, and you can shove countless vital nutrients into the blender to knock out multiple birds with one stone. It also gives me something to take with me to work, so I can ensure - once the hunger cravings strike - that I fuel my body with QUALITY foods as opposed to reaching for snacks that will only leave me feeling more lethargic and depleted (read: processed snacks, muffins, etc.).

I'm the first to admit I don't have very much self-control; so if I have my trusty smoothie alongside, then I can be sure that I can reach for a nutrient-rich shake as opposed to a belly-enlarging sugary snack.

See the video on the right (or, you can view it HERE) for a quick tutorial on how to make it! It tastes great and is super easy to pack for the road/workday. You won't be disappointed. 

As Summer (swimsuit season!) quickly approaches, this shake would be a perfect addition to SAPT's fat-loss program that we have available. Even though we can provide you with the best fat-loss training in the region, we can't (unfortunately) be there in your home to force you to hold up your end of the bargain. So be sure to watch the video and get started!

Yeah, my cat decided to make noise for a good portion of the instruction. Don't worry, I rewarded you with a glimpse of her at the end if you can make it through the video- Steve

Your ADD Fix for the Day

Unfortunately, I've spent the last few days absent from SAPT due to an injury + fever. I'm still a bit foggyheaded (not sure if that's a word, but it's how I feel), so rather than attempt to write something training/nutrition related that may quickly turn disastrous, I've decided to provide a bunch of videos that I'm sure many of you will enjoy in one way or another. 

To those of you at work who often spend more time on YouTube than doing actual business: You're welcome.

THIS is the most outrageous hiking trail I have ever seen (it's in Spain). I think you'd have to be some form of crazy to complete it. I love hiking, but my fear of heights would probably prevent me from going anywhere near this. If anything, fast forward to the 1:30 and 4:45 mark to get an idea. 

HERE is a great (and short) video on some fantastic mobilization drills you can do RIGHT THERE IN YOUR OFFICE!. If you have three minutes to watch a youtube video, then you certainly have a couple minutes to mobilize your stiff joints right there at your desk. You'll thank me later.

Click here to see Nia Shanks easily pull 275lbs with some change (chains to add some additional resistance). I believe her bodyweight is around 130lbs. Very cool to see the women representing. 

HERE is a woman named Neghar doing a Turkish Get-Up to Windmill with a 28kg kettlebell (that's over 60lbs) with great form. She makes it look easy (trust me, it's not). For those of you - after watching the previous two videos - still believe that a woman will miraculously become a hulking she-man if she picks up anything over 10lbs in the gym, then I'm really not sure how to help you. 

Ben Bruno does 11 pullups (mixed grip) with 100lbs added weight. He does them with GREAT form, too. This is a great example to those of you in SAPT who loovveee to add weight to your pullups when you can barely get your elbows above 90degrees of flexion without jerking around like a fish out of water. I love watching Ben train because 1. He refuses to add weight to an exercise until he can do it with perfect form and 2. He's just freakishly strong for his size.

This is an awesome inspirational video put together by EliteFTS. You know you're in a good place if watching this video makes you want to drop everything you're doing and go train. 

For the nerds in the crowd: Here is a 10-minute video of Peter Jackson discussing the making of The Hobbit! Apparently he's going to be keeping a video blog updates as they film the movie(s). I have no shame in letting everyone know that I'll most certainly be buying tickets for the opening show as soon as I possibly can.  

Very cool (new) motivational video from Michael Jordan. No words needed here. 

If you watched all of these videos and didn't take a second to perform a couple stretches (shown in the second video) to help yourself feel/move better, then shame on you. -Steve


Slightly on the outside part of the foot, toe-up, he says…

Yesterday, in the midst of coaching one of our Sterling volleyball players on how to perform a proper step-down, the girls’ father interjected with, “what’s with all the, slightly on the outside part of the foot, toe-up stuff?”We use this coaching cue all the time at SAPT when teaching single-leg and bilateral movement patterns.

The reason we give this cue is to ensure proper knee tracking.If we don’t give this cue, you’ll typically see the athletes’ foot fall immediately into pronation (arch collapses, and body weight falls towards the inside of the foot).Subsequently, you’ll then notice the knee become valgus (tracking towards, and out over the big toe rather than the middle of the foot) as the glute medius is prohibited from performing its most important function…aiding in proper knee tracking.And for those who don’t know, valgus knee is something we never want to see whether it be in the controlled environment of the training facility, or on the court/field of play…ACL go buh-bye…

The accumulation of “toe-up” repetitions will also begin to condition the foot to become more comfortable in, and improve, dorsiflexion.Improving dorsiflexion is significant as it allows for proper force absorption and propulsion during landing, take-off, or any single-leg foot contact (i.e. sprinting).

Ya I said valgus,

Chris

On My Mind Grapes

Over the last few months I’ve been battling with some programming that seems easy, but is actually a pretty complex problem to solve: the proper progression and periodization for some of the most talented sprinters and jumpers in the country. It’s like when something is so simple it becomes paralyzing in its complexity!

Let me give you a little background on the team… the George Mason men’s sprinters and jumpers are extremely talented. Extremely. This past weekend they won the outdoor season’s conference title for the second year in a row. And we didn’t just win - the team annihilated the rest of the conference. In fact, the win was so “in the bag” that the 4x400 team didn’t even run the 4x400. Why? Because they didn’t need to. Those guys are focused on the NCAA National Meet and nothing else. Currently, they’ve posted the 9th fastest time in the NATION. There are some other high points with guys ranked nationally, but I think you get the picture.

Outside of great talent, the unique quality about track and field coaches is that they actually understand and apply sound programming for their kids. So, for the first time in the 6 years I’ve been a NCAA D1 strength coach, I’m interacting with coaches on a daily basis who understand some pretty important concepts that most team sport coaches don’t appreciate: how to get individuals to “peak” at the end of a season. (I’m not trashing team sport coaches, they have many other things to worry about: skill, technical aspects, X’s, O’s, etc.)

To ensure my programming efforts are matching those of the coaching staff and athletes, I’ve been doing a lot of research on training and coaching practices for elite level sprinters and jumpers.

Recently, I came upon Charlie Francis’ lecture on “Weights for Speed.” Charlie Francis passed away almost exactly one year ago (May 12, 2010) and was best known as the coach of the first ever athlete to be stripped of an Olympic Gold Medal (Ben Johnson) for doping. Outside of what, in reality, is a tiny blip on the radar of a great career, Charlie Francis has contributed some wonderful information to the sport. I liken him to Mel Siff in the unbelievable volume of precise training information he managed to produce in his lifetime.

Two of Francis’ closely held coaching tables are the Force/Time Curve and something called Vertical Integration.

In the Force/Time Curve (see my beautiful sketch below), Francis has marked up the curve to reinforce his argument for why the Clean exercise is a poor choice for sprinters (especially as they advance in training age). Francis points out that while plyometric jumps and the Clean come very close to the Sprint in terms of the Force/Time Curve the closeness is actually a problem as it's consistent execution/practice actually takes away from sprint performance. He recommends, instead, to focus on General Strength exercises ONLY for the duration of an athlete’s career. Francis points out that a coach and athlete must develop ALL qualities of the Force/Time Curve (including maximum strength, strength-endurance, etc) to make overall progress, i.e., faster sprinting and longer jumping. I agree wholeheartedly.

The Clean uses 85% of the same muscles that is used in an actual sprint, Francis admits that while being counter-intuitive, this is simply too close for comfort. Especially if using the Vertical Integration style of coaching.

What is vertical integration you ask? It is the concept of training session organization by training age. You can see in the picture below that as years pass the speed work takes up increasingly more training time while plyometric training all but disappears. But general weight training remains an important part of the training week and career long constant. Francis states that the Clean does not fit into this model of training because it TOO closely resembles the sprint. So, in Vertical Integration, an athlete would be walking into the weight room after a speed and light plyometric training session, and then would be required to perform a high skill lift that recruits 85% of the same active muscle that has already been fried in the earlier sprint session. Overtime this continued practice will STALL PROGRESS.

Charlie Francis claims that NO sprinter who has ever broken into the 9.7-9.8s 100m dash time has EVER had a Specific Weight Training program. He claims they have ALL been on General Training programs.

So, what’s the moral of this story? Honestly, I’m not sure. As a general rule, I rarely implement the Olympic lifts with any of my teams. George Mason strength finds its roots with Conjugate Sequence System programming based off the power lifts (squat, bench, deadlift). But, I’m not yet ready (nor have I ever been)  to write off Olympic lifts entirely. I believe it’s important to keep as many training “tools in the toolbox" and have a thorough understanding of what to use at the proper moment to ensure an athlete continues to progress safely forward at a higher level of performance.

Does anyone get the 30 Rock “mind grapes” reference? - Sarah

Mother's Day

Over the weekend my mom, Arabella, and I visited Annapolis for a three-generation Mother’s Day celebration. It was my first Mother’s Day as a mother and was a wonderful way to acknowledge a new aspect to my life. The weather was beautiful, the hotel luxurious, and the family time unforgettable.

I haven’t posted a picture of Arabella lately… here she is, standing on her own and inseparable from my sunglasses at 10-months old.

Before I was a mom... I had never been pooped on. - Sarah