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Author: Clayton Smith

You don't need an expensive facility to train. Coach Lindsay takes a sandbag for a walk.

5 Problems with your High School Strength and Conditioning Program…(and solutions)

… and some ideas on how to solve those problems with your strength and conditioning program.

1. Lack of Equipment

Not all facilities are created equal, that’s a pretty obvious statement. Strength and Conditioning is often an afterthought for most coaches and therefore an afterthought for administrators. If only three teams are using the weight room, why should they invest already-limited funds into upgrading it? This creates a chicken-and-the-egg scenario where teams are not using the facilities because they are not updated, and resources are not spent on training facilities because they are not used.

Solution: You don’t need a high-end facility to still get the benefits of strength and conditioning. For about $1,500 a school could outfit themselves with everything they need – in fact, this is precisely what we did to prepare for a deployment to Afghanistan.

You don't need an expensive facility to train. Coach Lindsay takes a sandbag for a walk.
You don’t need an expensive facility to train. Coach Lindsay takes a sandbag for a walk.
  • $25/ea – military surplus duffel bags filled with wood pellets, rock salt or powder Quickrete can make weighted duffel bags from 40lbs to 200lbs.
  • $15/ea – a sheet of plywood and two 2x4s can build a standard plyo box (16″x20″x24″).
  • $200 – a few sets of bands can go a long way towards adding resistance training options to a Spartan weight room.
  • FREE – go to a farm or construction company in the area, I guarantee they have a collection of old tires they don’t need. Flip them, slam them with sledgehammers, carry them as a team across the field, get creative.
  • FREE – logs make a great team building training tool. Contact your local electric/powerline company and see if you can get free sections of broken wooden light poles.
  • $2/ea – PVC pipes make an excellent technique instruction, mobility, and stretching tool.

Now, the challenge is how to utilize this new equipment so that athletes see results.

Athletes of all sizes and abilities can use the same equipment!

2. Athlete Schedule Conflicts

Very few high school athletes are single-sport athletes, especially the more accomplished ones. It’s tough to balance their in-season commitments, a needed dose of downtime and an offseason strength and conditioning program for the season ahead. Young athletes need downtime to recover, both mentally and physically, and it’s unfair to take it from them. Athletics are supposed to be fun, after all!

Solution: Try to look at other sports your athletes participate in as complimenting your efforts. Our general rule of thumb is that 2 weeks before your first game, the focus should shift on specific drills and skill work related to the sport. The 2-week to 8-week window is the time to work on the “accessories” or the middle tier of the Ektelo Atheltic Performance Pyramid. Anything before 2 months from the first game of the season is when athletes are focusing on their foundation of strength. If you don’t have 2+ months between seasons, then focus on a foundation of strength in your off-season program. Squat, Deadlift and Overhead Press.

3. Lack of Time for Coaches

This is the toughest problem to see as an outsider. There are many well-intended coaches who just don’t have the time to research, create, and run a strength and conditioning program in addition to their other responsibilities. Most coaches are part-time or volunteers, and there just are not enough hours in a day.

Sports Performance Method
Ektelo Athletics Performance Pyramid

Solution: Keep it simple. A strength and conditioning plan does not have to be flashy to be successful. Use a program that focuses on the basics to reduce complexity for both coaches and athletes. If possible, partner with a coach or gym that specializes in working with athletes. In fact, this is a major reason why we created Ektelo – a simple, plug-and-play system that coaches can use without needing a degree in exercise science and extra hours in the day to figure out.

4. Outdated Coaching Methods

In many clubs and schools, your coaches may be people who played 10, 20 or even 30 years ago. These are volunteers with great intentions, but a lot has changed since they laced up their cleats. Science is continually changing the landscape of strength and conditioning, and unfortunately, many legacy coaches are teaching what they learned as an athlete, which may be flawed. Equipment has changed, science has changed, and the industry has added an information dump to the ever-growing database of knowledge provided by Google.

Solution: This is a tough one, as there is no easy solution. Hopefully, legacy coaches are open to new ideas, like bringing in recent college graduates or interns for a season – or hiring Ektelo Athletics for a weekend Coach’s Workshop – and being open to learning from them. As a strength coach, I’ve encountered this before, and it’s why we at Ektelo approach things as a partner with a clear line of demarcation. I know very little about soccer formations so I shouldn’t teach them to a team. That is why I ask legacy coaches to take a leap of faith on a change to their strength and conditioning program, and I promise to stay away from coaching any technique or skills. I try to explain that I’m there to help them and add something new to their toolkit.

5. Athlete Buy-in

Maybe the only people more stubborn than the coach who has been running the team for the last 30 years are some of the athletes on that team. Change is hard and implementing a new strength and conditioning program is guaranteed to see resistance from some of the athletes. That resistance is a good thing because it shows they care about the program. The challenge is gaining their trust and not making them do something “just because you said so.”

Solution: Lean on your captains and hold them accountable. Your team captains are your most dedicated athletes, and their buy-in carries clout for the rest of the team. Get their input and buy-in before you implement any changes to your program, and have them advocate for it. Warm-ups, group workouts, or even controlling the attendance roster – empower your student-leaders and watch the team come together.

Sports clinic coaching

Foundation of Sports Nutrition Clinic

What should I eat before a workout? After a workout? During a meet? How do I eat better to achieve my athletic goals? What is sports nutrition?

Well, it’s time to start working on an answer. Lindsay, a Precision Nutrition Level 1 certified coach and lifelong nutrition aficionado, is hosting a Foundation of Sports Nutrition Clinic and it is will cover the basics of diet, hydration, and recovery.

What: Fundamentals of Athletic Nutrition
Where: TruStrength Athletics, Norway, ME
When: March 3rd, 12:00pm-1:30pm
Cost: $10 for TruStrength Athletics members, $20 for non-members

Sports clinic coaching

The clinic is a 90-minute session that focuses on the fundamentals of sports nutrition. The end of the clinic will be open for a general question and answer period so feel free to come with your questions. Trust us, with nutrition there is no question too simple or silly.

Topics Covered:

  • What YOU need to eat before, during and after a workout
  • Food is fuel (for you, the well-oiled machine)
  • What are “macros” … and why should you care anyway?
  • Nutrition and supplements for recovery

Lindsay approaches nutrition coaching from a personalized point of view – one size does NOT fit all. The fundamentals are the same for athletes, but different body types need different fuels. Not to mention the demands of types of activity! Attending this clinic is a great first step and sets a foundation for success. If you are looking to take a deeper dive into optimizing your sports nutrition needs, view our Nutrition Coaching services.

Note: Lindsay is not a Registered Dietician Nutritionist in the State of Maine. Her expertise is in sports nutrition, which differs greatly from the general practice of RDNs. Most RDNs work in the medical field and have different clientele, goals, and standards as they try to get clients to a baseline of health, not optimize for performance. You can read more about Lindsay’s coaching background.

This clinic is hosted at TruStrength Athletics, but if you’re interested in having us teach this clinic at your gym or arranging private instruction, please drop us a line and let us know what you’re thinking!

 

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What a Powerlifter Learned From His First Endurance Race…

… and why I’ll do it again.

In April of 2017, Metallak Race organizer Bridget and I met over a coffee to discuss her plan to revive an endurance race in Coos County, New Hampshire. I loved it. I loved the idea of it so much that I volunteered to compete in it. I had no idea what I was getting myself into.

It didn’t sound that bad, in theory. A little bit of biking, running and paddling over the course of the day. I didn’t own a mountain bike at the time I committed, but, whatever, I had time to practice. A bit later I learned the course: 35+ miles of mountain biking, 6+ miles of “running” (part of it was straight up a cliff) and 2 miles of paddling. All of that was with an 8-hour time cap and 5,000′ feet of vertical gain. Did I mention that I went into this as a 230lbs Powerlifter/Strongman?

Well, here’s what I learned and why I’m doing it again next year.

 

  1. Strength is the Foundation

    I’ll be the first to admit that I was in over my head. I went into the training relying on my foundation of strength to allow me to complete the race. I wanted to prove why we put strength as the foundation of athletic performance in the Ektelo Methodology. Without a doubt, there is a direct correlation between strength and athletic performance; I made up for my lack of skill with strength. On every single hill.

    My race partner, a former pro-am mountain biker, noticed this every time we went up the many hills. I did (apparently) what you’re not supposed to do. I stood up on the pedals and hammered away, sometimes for a mile or two at a time. Away I went and pulled ahead as he kept grinding. Granted there was nothing I could do when I was terrified on the downhills, riding my brakes, as he went screaming past me at 40mph on gravel, but I crushed the uphills.

    Clay and Russ get ready to start Metallak 2017. Bridget Freudenberger (the sadist organizer) sending us off.

    Now, we didn’t come close to winning. But we finished 3rd of 5 teams, and I only trained three months for the “long course” that some work years towards tackling. Strength is king.

  2. Don’t Underestimate a Reputation

    The Metallak Race has a reputation as one of the toughest endurance races in New England.

    Clay and Russ “running” to their first paddle leg

    It’s not the best known in the racing community, nor does it have the most extensive field of competitors. I soon learned why. The 8-hour long course was no joke.

    While my foundation of strength allowed me to finish with a reasonable result, it didn’t make it easy. This was one of the toughest physical challenges I’ve undertaken since parts of US Army Ranger School. Training for a 500lbs squat does nothing to lessen the crushing grind of 8+ hours of racing. This race was just as much a mental challenge as a physical one, and I loved it. I haven’t been challenged like that for a long time and, in a masochistic way, it was therapeutic.

  3. Nutrition Makes or Breaks You

    Grinding, and sweating, up yet another hill. Look at those thighs tho!

    There is a reason that nutrition stands at the center of our Sports Performance Pyramid. It is THAT important. Just like fueling up after a 2-hour weigh-in, having race nutrition and hydration dialed-in is a must. Especially as a 230lbs dude that sweats a lot.

    The biggest thing I took away from this race is that you can’t underestimate nutrition either. We ended up adding an extra hour to our team time because my partner crashed on one of the very last legs. I carried a lot of bars and baby food pouches, and next year, I’m bringing more.

  4. Have FUN!

    Clay and Russ cross the finish line. In matching, baby blue romphims. It was about having fun!

    This is a hard one for me because I don’t typically compete for fun. Whether I’m stepping onto the platform at a powerlifting meet, lifting atlas stones at a strongman, or flipping cabers at a highland games, I’m there to win. This time I was certainly the wrong body type to win and my partner was recovering from a life-threatening illness less than a year ago. There was no way we would win, and it was almost liberating.

    I learned from Metallak that, at least once a year, I need to compete in something just because it’s fun. Racing with Russ was a blast and one of the all-time highlights of my athletic ventures. I challenge anyone reading this (especially those type-A personalities like me) to go sign up for something that you like the idea of, but you’re going to suck at. Racing in the Metallak Race might have been the best decision I made in 2017.

  5. Endurance Athletes are Alright Afterall

    I haven’t competed in the endurance world since a 50k ski race in Talkeetna, Alaska in 2013. I have to admit; after a few long-distance Nordic ski races in Alaska, I didn’t have a very good impression of the endurance community. I thought it was an elitist community that didn’t welcome outsiders. I’m so glad I was wrong on this too.

    Granted, every fitness community has a few oddballs that run around in bright colored spandex. Nonetheless, the pre-race and post-race parties were a blast. We ended up drinking beer and eating delivery pizza until 1:00 am that night… and despite my ability to ride a mountain bike down a hill, no one in the skinny-legged endurance world was going to beat me at that!

Lindsay coaching overhead squat

Introduction to Strength Clinic

***UPDATE: THE CLINIC HAS BEEN MOVED BECAUSE OF WEATHER TO 2/3/2018***

We are excited to announce our first official clinic of 2018. We couldn’t have picked a better place or group of people, as we are partnering up with the members of The Big Top and TruStrength Athletics.

What: Introduction to Strength Clinic
Where: The Big Top, Norway, ME
When: February 3rd, 10:00am-2:30pm
Cost: FREE!

The clinic is a 4-hour class that focuses on the barbell fundamentals and the basic strength moves. Now, 4 hours might sound like a long time, but, you’ll be up and moving for most of it and the time is going to fly. Plus, we’ll have snacks! (If you have to leave early but want to participate still, let us know, and we’ll help you out)

Lindsay coaching overhead squat

The clinic will focus on squats, presses, deadlift and KB swings and is almost all hands-on. As the club has moved to the new facility, there have been a lot of new members (and instructors)! We’re hoping that the new club members will be able to join the clinic and get rid of the unknowns of working with barbells. We will teach the technique through a progression that is beginner friendly, but intermediate/advanced members can still benefit from. You’re going to do a lot of technique reps, but with low weight, so everyone should be walking out just fine at the end of the day!

Clinic Schedule:
10:00-10:30: Introduction and Warmup10:30-11:30: Back Squat and Front Squat
11:30-12:30: Bench Press and Overhead Press
12:30-1:00: Break
1:00-2:00: Deadlift and KB Swing
2:00-2:30: Weight Progression and Programming
**The schedule is subject to change. If people want/need more time on a movement, then we’re happy to adjust as needed.**

Both of our coaches will be teaching the movements, so you’re in good hands. Lindsay has been introducing barbell moves to athletes of all ability levels for the better part of a decade. Clay is pretty sure he can teach a chimpanzee a proper deadlift in five to ten minutes, although we haven’t scientifically proven that, just yet. You can read more about our coaches, as long as you promise to laugh at our witty bios.

This clinic is exclusive to Big Top members, but if you’re interested in having us teach this clinic at your gym or arranging private instruction, please drop us a line and let us know what you’re thinking!

 

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