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Progress Journals & Experimental Routines / Re: chasing athleticism
« on: May 28, 2016, 10:10:39 pm »
T0ddday did he ever get onto you about training over in LA?
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How we train through injuries or forced layoffs is really what separates the men from the boys. It's also what separates the pros from the amateurs...
I have to warn you this that is 100% do as I say not what I do advice... But that doesn't make it any less valid... Not since college did I really have the athletic team of trainers and coaches around me to be productive while injured... That environment is probably more valuable during Injury than any other time...
In a collegiate or professional environment when you are hurt you still have to show up for practice, your still there, still in the zone, getting a taste of it and itching to get back and being reminded of it. Your still going to conditioning only now you get to focus on your weaknesses and come back better...
In every other environment I have been in my injuries are made 10x worse than they need to be... Injuries mean no training... So no reason to get up early... So no reason not to go out w friends... No reason not to go to Vegas... No reason not to eat like shit because your not in a training mindset so what's the point of eating well... So you come back with the trifecta of bad change - heavier, weaker and less mobile.... And the cycle repeats and few times and then your old and retired...
After my last catastrophic injury I promised I wouldn't be like this... Haven't really been challenged but I did an ok job dealing w my jumpers knee and training myself through it...
Really if you can master this you have the key to longevity in sport... What every great masters athlete has is a commitment to sport away from sport... Gotta take 3 months off of training cause your wife had a kid and you literally have no time... Ok but then during those 3 months eat less than you do in training because tdee is lowered... 99% of us will eat more in that situation...
It's hard as hell but you can do it... I don't know the nature of your injury and I'm not an orthopedist but for most cartilage injury you can train through it with the following modifications:
1) first thing that is out is all track on track surfaces - however hill running can be resumed soon.
2) high intensity bounding is out but you might be able to do stuff legged ankling.
3) jumping is out for a bit but if you buy a crash mat you can quickly return to vertical jumping.
Almost the rest of your training can continue. The AED stuff can become truly ED. You can master mobility and strength. You can turn this into a blessing if you want. It won't be as fun but it's totally possible. Can't say I will blame u if you don't but you can decide how u want to let this effect you.
Well, there has to be a solution. Maybe you can do strictly hip dominant work like very heavy kettlebell swings? They would pretty much target everything: power, strength (due to the constant time under tension), fitness, posterior chain activation, you name it, while also taking away focus from your knees and programming you to be more hip dominant. Sounds like the perfect idea.
damn.. ;/ it's so much easier to give advice than to take it.. you know exactly what you need to do, but it's just so hard to suspend training when you're driven. (that's also the Story of my life).
IMHO you should probably listen to your gut & take some time off to heal it.. you're not going to "lose much" if you're rehabbing 3-4x/week, hitting upper/core 1-2x/wk.. and potentially (after a few weeks) hitting hamstrings/glutes via RDL's perhaps. You could bring up some weaknesses while avoiding plyo/squatting/deadlifting etc.
Once you're on your way back, just progress a bit slower.. You don't want to be worrying about your knee when doing bounds and such, becomes too much of an inhibitor. ;/
pc man!
You tell me? My back is really bad for the last 6 months... I can't "afford" to miss time training, especially since that keeps me somewhat mentally stable, doing it, thinking about it, planning it etc.
Personally, maybe I should just focus on eating right instead of training. Maybe acole can focus on something similar.
Good stuff mate! You'll cut time from that in weeks, if not days. Whereabouts is that track? Don't recognise it.
Thanks mate. It was my first time sprinting in months and my first run since the start of April.
It's in Berwick. It's a brand new one that apparently doesn't get used at all now that little ath's is over. I've also got another one near me in Wantirna which will get a run when I redo them tomorrow.
Where do you normally run?
I really need to get better descriptions on film. My day job is killing me right now but for the more esoteric exercises this is a must. As far as your ade exercises your confused on.
For the elevated split squat. You have the front of your shoe on the box, like a bss. I want your toe on the box. Like put your entire foot on box flat like your going to jump off it and then jump forward so only your toe remains but you could still push off your back foot w your foot in exact same position it would be in to run (toe off). The box your using might be a tad high for when you make this change.
Obviously this greatly decreases ROM and you won't get much depth. That's ok. What I'm looking for is at the top of the ROM back leg straight, pushing off tip toe. Forward leg straight hip pushing out. This should be a very strong hip activator and stretch - far more than its a strength exercise. How to know if your doing it right is to compare it to squats. When we do barbell squats and track the bar we should feel "lightness" across the knees. That is do some squats, rack bar, bend your knees, stand up tall and feel "lightness" across the joint cause of the lack of resistance. This exercise should make you feel it across the hips. Very rare to know what that feels like.
One note is the bss foot position you have... Not a bad position for a multitude of stretches. Before the squats I like tight athletes to go through a circuit of hip flexor and quad stretches with this foot position. But I don't like the foot position during the exercise for an ade exercise. Remember for ade stuff - if your unsure of how to do it and one way is much harder and more intense - it's probably the other.
About the pistols... Are you doing them on a slant board? I can't tell. The greater the slant the harder it is to get anywhere close to parallel. I'm not worried about your depth.... But SLOW down. Remember this is prehab. This is a modified version for a healthy athlete of eccentric slant pistols. The protocol for them is 3-4 seconds down with pause at bottom and then standing up with both feet. I allow healthy athletes to do the concentric with one leg if it doesn't cause pain but we are not trying to blast quads daily w these. Go down slowly, take note of knee and foot tracking, be stable, don't use momentum, feel stretch at bottom, and then go up. This is a stretch and mobility exercise first and foremost. You have your heavy squats, band squats, bounds, lifts, etc. where you blast the training and go all out.... What makes this amount of volume in your program possible is the variation in intensity and tempo.
As far as the jumps. Nothing wrong w a walking approach but it doesn't look like your approach jumps work. That's ok. Cut them until they do. So do drop step jumps. Then do two step jumps and three step jumps. If and only if those provide more height then move to 4/5 step jumps. I think LBSS has mentioned this method as the "toddday" rule or method of earning your steps. It's pretty important for movement efficiency. The only exception I have made for athletes is testing extra steps in terms of pairs for athletes who put a lot of torque in the plant.
What that means is an athlete might drop step 35". (Left toe raises and right foot is swung into plant)
The I might allow athlete a two-step takeoff. So left step, right step, take off. Athlete might only jump 35.5" or less. Technically that might suggest that we shouldn't add steps... However a RLR takeoff might result in 38" jump. This is because athletes (especially track/jumper background) can be really uncomfortable starting with their right foot in front of left (or vice versa) and moving their left foot first... So for those athletes the testable steps are basically drop-step, RLR, RLRLR, etc. same principle applies though.***
Your not much of a one footed jumper I see! Strange given your track background. Again I wish I had video but I think you can make a lot of gains here by fixing your mechanics. One drill I would like you to force your self to do is what I call the euro step take off. Run toward hoop from top of key, force your penultimate step to land outside of key on right side and your left foot take off to be from not much farther forward but back inside the key. I really would like to film this to explain but I find it does wonders for athletes who jump like you.
***last note. I think for now you may want to keep weight vest on and even add additional weight for your rim jumps. Two reasons. Easier to learn approach mechanics for some people at slower speeds. Also, I personally don't like your target touching achievement... This is somewhat psychological so if it doesn't bother you then you can ignore me but imo what I see is: your standing vertical allows you to touch the rim. Your drop step... You can touch the rim. Your 3 step can touch the rim. Sure, you can touch more of the rim or something but imo that doesn't allow as much progress. A vertec where you are constantly removing vanes and touching a measurably higher distance works. Touching with two vs one hand is OK but not ideal in my mind. Adding load so the rim is very difficult or out of reach without an approach is good too. I have trained atheltes in aerobics rooms where the ceiling is only 10'1 and the athlete is over 6'. We begin w standing vertical and a 20lb vest, finishing w 60-75 load and a running vertical of about 25".
Finally... Those backboard touches. You spend way too much time on the ground and go way too deep on rebound... Like I said before don't try to change this too much consciously but do the following... Switch to a one handed touch of hopefully a slightly higher object. Work to get x touches in 10 seconds.