Www.englandathletics.org/east www.englandathletics.org The Dynamic Athlete Pete McKnight Strength & Conditioning Coach.

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Presentation transcript:

The Dynamic Athlete Pete McKnight Strength & Conditioning Coach

Workshops 1.The Healthy Athlete 2. The Robust Athlete 3.The Dynamic Athlete

The Healthy Athlete Warm-up Drills Mobility and flexibility Key areas of injury incidence & importance of addressing these weaknesses Foot and ankle conditioning Cool down Self management

The Robust Athlete Warm-up and drills Whole body conditioning -Hip and hamstring -Lower back -Foot and ankle -Foundation for weight training Trunk and core conditioning

The Dynamic Athlete Developing strength and power through weight training Olympic style weightlifting Partial lifts and their variations Plyometrics

Strength Characteristics Isometric force: time curve indicating maximal strength, maximal rate of force development, and force at 200 ms for untrained, heavy-resistance strength-trained, and explosive-strength-trained subjects (adapted from Häkkinen et al., 1985 a, b).

What is Strength? The ability to exert a force against a resistance. F=ma (Newton’s 2 nd Law of Motion) Dynamic strength is defined as the maximal ability (capacity) of a muscle to exert force or torque at a specified velocity (Knuttgen & Kraemer, 1987)

Strength is force generation

POWER = STRENGTH X SPEED

What is Power? Force-velocity curve showing how power can be related to these qualities

What is Conditioning? Capacity for training Building blocks for future work ‘Prevention’ of injury Physical preparation 3-D Training Lower level training – pre-strength Auxiliary training – parallel to strength

Priorities “Be careful over emphasising qualities that are not specific to the primary components or objectives of the training cycle, because you will have too many qualities competing for the draw on the nervous system.” Charlie Francis Neuromuscular demands Metabolic demands

Priorities Demands of the event? –What really matters –How strong is strong enough? Strengths vs. Weaknesses Biggest gains – best use of time Time of year/periodisation cycle Level of athlete/training age

Planning a programme Strength –Fundamentals e.g. Olympic lifts & variations –Squats –Dead lifts; RDL’s Supplementary exercises –Olympic variations –Conditioning Exercises

Strength Typical rep range 1-5; multiple sets Rest – full recovery Weight – % Bilateral leg; Unilateral leg Posterior chain Hips Upper body press Upper body pull

Power Typical rep range 1-6; multiple sets Rest – full recovery Speed – fast / explosive Weight – 30-60% 1RM Multi-joint

Power/Speed  Olympic lifting exercises  Squat based power exercises  Medicine ball / Powerbag throws  Power Jumps  High level of force, less focus on velocity  Reactive Jumps  Small amplitude, high speed of contraction  Resisted Running  Rotational Power  Upper body power

Other Considerations...

Choice of Exercise Must serve a purpose Must be executed correctly to maintain emphasis and function Phase dependant Speed dependant A assists B; B assists C; C impacts performance

Good Coaching/Good Training “Repetition is the mother of learning” Latin Proverb “Precise repetition is the mother of excellence” Quality is better than quantity, but a larger quantity of quality work is best Intent

Intent  “Intension to move the bar quickly rather than the actual speed of the bar is the goal” (Young & Bilby, 1993)  Better recruitment of motor units  Synchronisation  Muscles activated at higher frequency  Transfer of force  “You can’t push rope...”  Focus

Testing  1RM Strength Tests  Speed  Acceleration  Vertical Jump  Key Competencies  Goal setting  Motivation, structure, planning  Direct Training

The Clean Start Position First Pull Transition Second Pull The Catch Recovery

The Jerk Start Position Dip Drive The Catch Recovery

The Snatch Start Position First Pull Transition Second Pull The Catch Recovery

Variations – Hang Clean

Variations – Jerk Behind Neck

Assisting Exercises Good Mornings; Romanian Dead lifts Front Squat; Back Squat Overhead Squat Dead Lift High Pull Push Press; Behind Neck Push Press

Resources Explosive Lifting for Sports (book & DVD) By Harvey Newton

Resources