Get a large group of athletes’ ages 15-18 in a strength and conditioning facility and you’ll have a testosterone level higher than the sales of Jillian Michael’s new Kettlebell training DVD (hopefully not). Through my experience-training athletes, this can lead to the “one up” mentality where form and execution are compromised in favor of heavy weights. The “next biggest plate” philosophy where the athlete thinks, “hey I’ll just add another 25lbs to each side” is a humble lesson that no well-instructed athlete should learn in the presence of an educated coach. As a coach, I have personally learned this lesson and now consistently remind my athletes of “progressive overload”, five pounds at a time.
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Youth Strength & Conditioning
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I just had the opportunity to read an incredible book that was impossible to put down. Dan John’s “Never Let Go” was a gem full of information from a coach with decades of experience in program design, application and trial and error experience. I enjoy learning so much from coaches like this. Whenever I look for good read, I always look at “suggested readings” from coaches that I respect. I also look for two variables that I think are important attributes the author must have: experience and application. Does he/she train athletes’ regularly and what have they learned along the way? I want to learn from someone that doesn’t sit behind a desk all day. I also want to learn what not to do through previous experience and mistakes. I want to learn from the great coaches that have gone before me. This is the essence of true understanding.
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