viernes, 18 de septiembre de 2009

La Base de un Buen Programa de Entrenamiento

Otro excelente artículo del maestro Staley:

Understanding Training Foundation

By Charles Staley, B.Sc, MSS
Director, Staley Training Systems
http://www.staleytraining.com


Although people engage in fitness and sports activities for various reasons, the fact remains that they are inherently physical activities. So whether you exercise for stress reduction, weight loss, or sport, it makes sense to train in a manner which is consistent with accepted training principles and methodologies. Doing so will make the outcome of training less haphazard and more predictable. It will also enhance the appreciation of movement one should derive from any form of physical activity.


              As all coaches know, mastery of a sport is accomplished by developing a foundation before progressing to more advanced levels of training. As accepted as this principle is, many people possess only a vague understanding of what this means in concrete terms. The purpose of this article is to expose the reader to foundational training concepts derived from the world of sports science. And while you might not be a competitive athlete, I believe you can benefit greatly from recent developments in sport science. One such development comes from Dr. Tudor Bompa, former Romanian rowing coach and currently a professor at York University in Toronto, Canada.

Bompa has developed a useful schema called "The Training Factors Pyramid,"* which can be used to develop long term training plans, based on a foundational progression of factors over time. The Training Factors Pyramid helps to identify a logical sequence of training factors, and can be used by athletes and fitness enthusiasts alike to identify objectives and evaluate training programs and methods. When problems develop, as they inevitably do, The Training Factors Pyramid can be used to determine what level these problems originate from, which speeds up the corrective process considerably.

The pyramid consists of four ascending levels. The athlete enters the pyramid at the first level—physical preparation. This level is the cornerstone of an athlete's training, because without it, further progress is impossible. Physical preparation refers to the development of what sports scientists call "biomotor abilities"— strength, power, speed, balance, flexibility, agility, endurance, and coordination.

The second level of the pyramid involves technical preparation— or perfecting physical techniques. While some techniques can be mastered with a low level of physical preparation, many cannot. Many currently popular recreational sporting activities, such as in-line skating and rock climbing, to name two, require a fairly high level of physical development before many skills can be practiced.

Of course, technical mastery is not the final objective, for any athlete. We all know of athletes who have beautiful and "correct" techniques, but who lack the ability to apply them in a sport setting. This brings us to the third level of The Training Factors Pyramid: tactical preparation. Tactics simply refer to the ability to successfully apply techniques in a sport situation. It should be obvious to the reader at this point that technically sound technique must be established before entering level three. Further, the athlete must have a high level of physical development before correct technique is possible.

The fourth and final stage is called psychological preparation—a very important consideration for athletes who hope to compete successfully. But clearly, psychological preparedness— let's just call it confidence— cannot be established if the athlete has not successfully ascended through the previous three levels. How can The Training Factors Pyramid be used in an everyday, practical setting? Let's suppose you're a serious recreational beach volleyball player, and you're having problems with your spike. The first step is to determine whether or not you can execute a technically correct spike in an isolated situation (i.e., in practice).

If the answer is no, then we go down a level and try to find faults your physical preparation— perhaps you lacks adequate explosive strength to clear the net. Once your physical attributes are improved, you should be more successful in delivering the spike in competitive situations. If the answer is yes (you can deliver a proper spike), the problem lies in either tactical or psychological development. Both areas are closely intertwined— a lack of tactical skill can obviously impair confidence. And vice versa. Athletes commonly progress well through physical and technical training, but falter in tactical/psychological realms. The solution is more time in the trenches, with careful progression through gradually more difficult encounters. When tactical successes begin to outweigh the failures, confidence increases along with tactical ability.

Although the four training factors have been isolated for the sake of discussion, in reality, they must be integrated if a successful outcome is desired. For example, is a serve a technique or a tactic? At novice levels of play, it is primarily technical, but at high levels of skill, techniques and tactics are one and the same. Also worth noting is the fact that the direction of influence is not only ascending, but descending as well. For example, the techniques you'll use affect the physical preparation you'll need to do.

Aside from day to day considerations, The Training Factors Pyramid should also form a template for long term planning, as well. Accordingly, the first several months of training should be dedicated to improving physical attributes, although simple technical and tactical skills may be presented as well. The second phase of training is characterized by developing technical mastery of your sport skills. Physical condition must be maintained, but this involves less work than it took to develop it. Advanced stages of training target tactical and psychological concerns, with comparatively less time spent on physical and technical development.
 
While achieving mastery in sport involves years of hard work, those years yield far more result when they are spent wisely. The time you spend developing your foundation is miniscule compared to the time it takes to correct long-entrenched errors from years of poorly-conceived and executed training.


About The Author
Charles Staley...world-class strength/performance coach...his colleagues call him an iconoclast, a visionary, a rule-breaker. His clients call him “The Secret Weapon” for his ability to see what other coaches miss. Charles calls himself a “geek” who struggled in Phys Ed throughout school. Whatever you call him, Charles’ methods are ahead of their time and quickly produce serious results.

Drillear para ganar, un artículo de Paul Greenhill OG




Ask The Wise Grappler: 
"I bought the last product you had out [21 Mat Laws of Grappling] and you talk about drilling being very important. Can you explain drilling to me?  I know it sounds like a dumb question but another proverb says, 'A wise man can learn more from a dumb question than a fool can learn from a wiseanswer.'  Do you drill a move, a position, a series?"


Well, there's a long and short answer to that question and I'll give them both to you:

The short answer is yes, you drill a move, position, and technique until the moves become mechanical and can be executed without thinking about it, like you tie your shoelaces or even breathe.  You've been doing both of those activities for so long that you're no longer aware of the fact that you do them without thought, especially the breathing part!

The long answer on how you drill the moves, techniques, and positions until they become mechanical and reflexive have been captured and broken down in the following 5 key points:

1. Drilling the Technique Right - This mean having the mechanical motion, grips, body position, correct breathing pattern, and proper visual alignment so that you can see the "mat battlefield" to know when your opponent is vulnerable and susceptible to the technique.

2. Drilling to Execute the Technique Quickly - Now that you know how to do the technique right, you have to master doing the technique quickly before the window of opportunity closes on you.  Just because you can do the technique on a willing partner, that won't guarantee that you'll execute it with the same sense of urgency during a live match.

3. Drilling the Technique under Stress - Just because you can do the technique right and fast, that doesn't mean that you'll do it under a "live" (stress) situation and you have to account for that as well.  You need to apply your techniques at different stages of successfully locking in the technique (etc. 30% applied, 50% applied, 70% applied, etc.) and have your partner fight out of it at different levels of resistance (30%, 50%, 70%, etc.).

4. Drilling under Common and Uncommon Scenarios - Every technique should work under ideal conditions, but will your technique hold up when you're tired, your opponent's sweaty, your opponent is (or isn't) wearing a gi, you're injured, you develop a cramp in your  arm or leg, etc.?  That's why you need to drill those techniques in  common or uncommon scenarios that are likely to occur, especially  if you're competing.  You should RARELY encounter a situation for  the first time during a competition.  If you do, your training plan has holes in it that need to be closed.

5. Drilling with the Technique Failing - This mean that we're expecting to execute the technique in such a way that it's not effective enough to submit or gain a dominant position on our partners and we've thought out the common "mat tendencies" on what the opponent will do to resist.  Once you're able to determine the tendencies and integrate that into the drilling, that will allow you to account for your opponent's ability to counter and fight off  your triangle attack... but walk right into your armbar attack.

jueves, 17 de septiembre de 2009

Inspiración Diesel...

What is Best in Life?

conan-the-barbarian-arnold

Mongol General: Hao! Dai ye! We won again! This is good, but what is best in life?
Mongol: The open steppe, fleet horse, falcons at your wrist, and the wind in your hair.
 
Mongol General: Wrong! Conan! What is best in life?
Conan: To crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and to hear the lamentation of the women.


As I get older and wiser (much wiser than I was when I was younger) I often go back to this scene from one of my favorite movies, Conan the Barbarian
As I guy I have a passion to be the best, “to crush my enemies”.  Now if you are a women reading this post, I am about to do the unthinkable in the man’s world.

Let something out of the vault.

conan-chamber

I remember a speaker at an NSCA event many years ago talking about how you have to treat AND motivate male athletes different than female athletes. In athletics and team sports here is a truth: When a team loses, a guy is still happy if they themselves played well.  Women are only happy if the team, as a whole, played well. Why?

We got the testosterone.

It makes us do crazy stuff sometimes, like drive like a madman toward a goal or a task.  This can be great if your passion is helping others. For me, this means being a good Dad, being a good friend and always try to help others reach their goals. But sometimes it isn’t easy.  The kids drive you crazy, your friends have their ups and downs and sometimes people don’t want to be helped.  You have to be certain and relentless in the wake of all adversity.

Think about Conan pushing the Wheel of Life around for years.  Think that was easy?  I don’t know if you know this but the story of Conan was real, that sh*t actually happened.
conan-wheel

So what is my point?  Life isn’t fair, life isn’t easy, life isn’t certain. The ONLY thing you can be certain of is you only get to do it once.  So you dominate, go for your dreams and kick ass.

Never quit, never surrender, just kill it. Try to let actions speak louder than words!