Seminars, Workshop, and Class Information

Subtitle

News

view:  full / summary

4 Components of Athletic Performance

Posted by roberto on May 24, 2011 at 11:22 PM Comments comments (0)

Components of Athletic Performance

No matter what sports you participate in it requires a combination of the following 4 components:

  • Strength
  • Mobility
  • Balance
  • Timing

Granted each respective sports has its own unique combination of the aforementioned 4 components.

Example, a football lineman needs a significant amount of strength followed by mobility, balance, and timing. Conversely, a place kicker requires a significant amount of timing, balance, mobility, followed by strength. There is an old saying “a chain is strong as the weakest link”. An athlete must know their strengths and weaknesses. I have seen to many athletes over-train in areas where they already have significant amounts of strengths. Over a period of time if one continues to over-train there are diminishing returns of muscle imbalances, weakened immune system, fatigue, loss of motivation, and an immense amount of frustration.

I have worked around quite a few baseball athletes who will head to the weight room and do a ton bench press work and arm curls. Yet many of them neglect pull-ups, chins, rotational core work, medicine ball drills (core), posterior back work (lats, rear delts, and spinal erectors). I often ask them why is bench press important to baseball performance? Their answer is “ that’s what my high school coach has the team doing” or “I read in a muscle magazine”. These athletes training is completely out of balance and their coaches need to attend some workshops or classes on functionally training athletes. The athlete also needs to quit reading body building magazines that promotes muscle building without any functional purpose with the exception of posing on a stage and flexing. If you training is out of balance you are not maximizing your competitive athletic potential and you are increasing your risk of injury.

How are we meant to train?

The human body is a multi-dimensional design that was meant to be trained in integrative patterns of movement (compound movements), such as bending, twisting, lunging, squatting, pushing, and pulling. These are the movements that you use in athletic games and competition. Incorporating compound movements in your training sessions will train the muscle and nervous systems to fire and activate dualistically in the heat of competition. To often I see athletes training with isolated( body building movements) which trains the muscle and nervous systems to activate and fire separately which leads to poor timing/coordination and increasing injury potential. Isolation movements are exercises such as arm curls, bench press, lat pull-downs, and a few others. Please do not misunderstand what I am saying here, I am not advocating anti bench press, arm curls, and lat pull-downs. There are times when you may need to isolate muscle groups to build more strength and bulk for athletic purposes, however, management is the operative word . Do not over do it while compromising other areas of your total training package.

By the way, one can also perform too much stretching, timing drills, and balance drills. Know your strengths and weaknesses.

Conclusion

Lets revisit our baseball example. What are the important components of baseball? Do you need to able to bench 300 pounds to effectively swing a bat, throw a fast ball, or throw a man out at 2nd base? Obviously the answer is no. However, you better have good timing, good balance, good mobility, and good explosive strength to bat, throw, and sprint effectively. It is matter of knowing your strengths and weaknesses.

Flatten Your Gut and Shape up the Butt

Posted by roberto on March 24, 2011 at 10:27 PM Comments comments (0)

                    6 Simple Steps to Losing Unwanted Fat

These are no nonsense steps to losing that unwanted fat from around your midsection, arms, hips, buttocks, legs.

As a trainer/coach for 22 years I have done extensive research and observation on this topic. It is my professional conclusion that you must “work smart and work hard”. There is a reason I listed “work smart” first.

The USA spends billions of dollars on Health and Fitness products yet 2/3 of Americans are overweight and 1/3 of those are considered obese. What is wrong with this picture? Stay tuned for the answer!

Over the course of 20 plus years I have seen college/pro athletes, young kids, house moms, weekend warriors,

and a host of others, intensely train 10-20 hours per week and never accomplish their athletic or health/fitness goals. How can this happen?

The answers are:

  • Improper exercises and/or incorrect exercise techniques.
  • Poor eating habits (processed junk foods/alcohol consumption/over eating/ lack of eating).
  •  Lack of proper rest and sleep
  • Stress and anxiety
  •  Lack of goal setting

It comes down to the quality of your lifestyle and personal management. Exercise is an important piece of the puzzle, however, it is about 1/4-1/5 of the overall puzzle.

“Flatten the Gut and Shape up Your Butt” is an 6 step approach in which I have researched, experimented with, and have had much success with during the past 22 years of strength coaching and training. Stay tuned and you will be well informed to information that will take your Health and Fitness to the next level!

 

In the words of Sun Tzu “ know yourself and know your enemy, if do not know neither one of them you are doomed to defeat”.

Exercise vs. Diet. Which is more Important?

Posted by roberto on March 24, 2011 at 4:12 PM Comments comments (0)

From the Primal Bleprint by Mark Sisson

It all comes down to this: fat loss depends 80% on what and how you eat.

Retrain your energy systems to burn fat and not glucose. Cutting out all simple carbs is the key. It’s about insulin management. If you can readjust the diet to encourage the body to burn fats, you won’t need to replenish lost glycogen every day. You’ll always burn fats and you’ll always have energy. The low level aerobic stuff becomes “filler”…so you only do it if it’s fun, like a hike or walk with friends or golf or mountain biking. The real muscle growth will come from the short anaerobic bursts like sprints, intervals or weight-training. I’ll do a piece on this later, but check out my friends at http://www.crossfit.com . They get more done in 20-30 minutes than most of the gym rats doing 90 minute weight sessions. And because it’s a “circuit training” concept, they get plenty of heart-training (cardio) as well. And growth hormone release and insulin sensitivity, and….you get the point.

Parker Comments:

I agree with much of mark's statement. I woud differ a litle bit with regards to the 80% number. In my opinion it is about 40-60% exercise and the rest nutritional habits and sleep. Having said that, I am a huge proponent of primal workouts and primal eating. Americans are have become too comfortable relative to physical activity and eating foods that are chalk full of refined preservatives.

 


Rss_feed