Finding your passion: What do you want your legacy to be?

This past weekend I had the pleasure of heading up to Vancouver, Canada to lecture at the NSCA Vancouver Seminar with a great group of presenters. On Sunday, my friend and colleague, Nick Winkelman, and I stayed an extra day to do a few lectures to a group of University students up there who are all aspiring strength coaches, physical therapists, personal trainers, etc. Both days were great and it is always good to be a part of an event where other greater presenters are talking about things they are passionate about.

In lecturing to the students on Day 2 one of the main things I wanted to convey to them, before getting into my topic, was the importance of going on the journey of finding what they are passionate about. Nick discussed similar things and we actually talked about this over dinner one night with another friend/colleague, Dr. Greg DuManoir, professor of Exercise Physiology and University of British Columbia – Kelowna. Nick and I started in the field around the same time and I lived in Phoenix while he was developing his approach to training at, what was then, called Athletes’ Performance now called Exos. He said over dinner that he thought it was interesting to see the paths that both of us took from trying to start out as strength coaches and figure what is important in the field and in our respective systems to ultimately finding the topic(s) we are most passionate about and then doing a deep dive into those topic. I couldn’t agree more. Nick’s comment was, “In this field, I believe it is important that people go through the process of obtaining knowledge and being generalists in all things general – exercise physiology, biomechanics, coaching, nutrition, etc – and then, as they grow, find out what they are most interested in and become specifically focused on that.”

I got many questions from students that weekend centered around, “What should I do when I graduate?” Most were unsure if they wanted to go to more school, go to physiotherapy school, try and be a strength coach, go to massage school, etc. My answer is always the same, “I don’t know what you want to do or what you love to do so I can’t answer that for you.”

The statement I always make is:

  1. Know what you know.
  2. Be great at what you know.
  3. Know what you don’t know.
  4. Know enough about what you don’t know that you can surround yourself with people that can help you fill in the blanks.

Find that thing you are passionate about and be great at it. Know about all the other stuff (be a generalist) and then get people in the room and form a team that can help each other out and fill in the blanks. As my friend Charlie Weingroff recently wrote, “A legitimate High Performance Staff. Everybody can be the Head at one point, but everybody is always everybody’s assistant.”

It isn’t about trying to master everything under the sun. It is about trying to be great at whatever you are passionate about. What do you want your legacy to be? How would you like people to remember you? Whatever it is, if you want to be a great strength coach, researcher, physical therapist, chiropractor, doctor, nutritionist, massage therapist, etc. It doesn’t matter! Find that thing that wakes you up in the morning and spend your life trying to get better at that. Chances are you will have a lot more fun that way.

Doing Simple Things Well

This morning I read a nice article, 5 Ways to Use Data to Recover From Injury, which did a great job taking the reader through some simple applications of data we may collect as coaches, strength coaches, or rehabilitation professionals.

In today’s sports world of data collection and player monitoring it seems like many coaches in North America are chasing technology and trying to monitor everything without having a good system for making sense of it all. Which leads me to the title of today’s article, “Doing Simple Things Well.”

Like training, it is typically more effective to do a few simple things really well than try and do a number of things poorly (or mediocre).  I always say, in training, try and pick just a few exercises that you want your athletes to get good at and hammer those. Really learn to do them well before you start adding more exercises and making things more complex. With data collection it is the same thing. Do a few things really well before adding more things to collect and potentially overwhelming yourself with more information and excel spreadsheets that you can’t seem to make sense of.

One of the easiest things to collect is questionnaire data. Questionnaire data has been found to be a valid marker of internal training load, it costs pretty much nothing, and it is easy to set up and create a process around.

The questionnaire that we use comes from the research of McClean & Coutts (Int J Sports Phys Perf 2010):

Subjective_Questionnaire

The athlete will take the questionnaire in the morning upon waking (typically after taking their Omegawave reading if they are doing that as well) and the information comes back to me in a spreadsheet that allows me to make adjustments, if needed, to training on that day. The sheet looks something like this:

Screen Shot 2014-02-25 at 10.28.11 AMThe color coding allows us to quickly evaluate how the athlete is doing and offer the athlete immediate feedback or ask more questions and dig a little deeper into what may be going on. This sheet extends to the right for several columns and includes many of the factors we frequently track. By centralizing the data in one sheet it allows us to evaluate the different parameters against each other and be more descriptive with the athlete or coach regarding what is going on.

Additionally, following training/practice we use a BORG-CR10 Scale to determine how difficult the athlete rated the session (session Rating of Perceived Exertion or sRPE, for short). We take this sRPE number and multiply it by the session duration, in minutes, to achieve a simple training load (in arbitrary units) for that session.

While it may not sound like much and certainly isn’t as exciting as GPS read outs and things like that (we get those as well) this simple approach can be very meaningful and impactful to the athlete, coach, and the training program. Best of all, it costs nothing to implement so there really shouldn’t be an excuse of, “Our team doesn’t have the money to monitor players”.

We need to do the simple things first and we need to do the simple things well.

High Intensity Training Part 4: Adding Resistance Training into the Concentrated Conditioning Phase

This final piece of this four part series will discuss how I plug resistance training into the training cycle example given in the Part 3. For those that are interested, here are the three previous pieces in the series:

To recap part 3, I discussed some ideas regarding a 4 week training approach (week 3 being the highest week in terms of training volume) and reviewed some of the points maybe by sports scientist, Inigo Mujika, in his lecture at the 2011World Congress on Science and Football. The 4 week training example I gave was as follows:

Week 1 = 1 aerobic power session & 1 short interval session
Week 2 = 1 aerobic power session & 2 short interval sessions
Week 3 = 2 aerobic power sessions & 2 short interval sessions
Week 4 = Recovery

*Note: If you are unsure of what I mean by aerobic power session or short interval session please review the part 3 of this series.*

One of the hardest things for a strength coach is to give up some resistance training time because they always feel like the athletes may get weaker or they wont improve. Rather than obsessing over the fact that guys may not be lifting 4x/wk in this phase of training I think you can look at it another way and say that, “Guys are doing work that is necessary for them to see improvements in their given sport.” I encourage strength coaches to analyze what the established goals are for the particular training phase, evaluate what you are trying to achieve from a fitness standpoint, and then feel good about the fact that most of the training in that phase is reflective of these goals. Finally, dropping from 4x/wk lifting to 2-3x/wk lifting is not a huge deal and wont have as much of a negative impact as you think. What is most important is that you manage lifting volume and intensity.

Example Resistance Training Workouts

In this phase, because of the intensity that is emphasized in the conditioning sessions each week, we actually lower the volume and frequency of resistance training to 2-3 days of lifting. Each day is a total body workout. The workouts can be broken up in this fashion:

  • 1-2 moderate intensity training sessions per week – 3 exercises (Ex., Squat, Bench Press, Chin Up) x 3-4 sets x 3-4 reps @ 70-80%.
  • 1 lactate based lifting session – 4 exercises x 3-4 sets x 8-12 reps with increased time under tension (slower rep tempos, higher reps per set, sets near muscle failure, short rest breaks, etc). It has been found that resistance training which produces a high metabolic load has some benefit to repeated sprint ability (Bishop et al, 2011). This specific workout is more supportive of the goals within this phase of training (increased metabolic demand) while the other 1-2 workouts (moderate intensity training sessions) are more used to maintain strength levels during this 4 week phase.

Example Training Phase

To put it all together, here would be one potential way to organize this four week phase taking the energy system training outline from part 3 of this series and the resistance training examples explained above:

Week 1

  • Monday – Aerobic Power Session + Moderate Lifting (3 x 4 @70-75%)
  • Tuesday – Aerobic restoration work
  • Wednesday – Lactate based lifting session
  • Thursday – Same as Tuesday
  • Friday – Short Interval Session

Week 2

  • Monday – Aerobic Power Session + Moderate Lifting (3 x 4 @75%)
  • Tuesday – Aerobic restoration work
  • Wednesday – Lactate Based Lifting Session + Short Interval Work
  • Thursday – Same as Tuesday
  • Friday – Short Interval Session (Moderate Lifting Session – 3×4 @ 75% – optional)

Week 3

  • Monday – Aerobic Power Session + Moderate Lifting (3 x 4 @ 80%)
  • Tuesday – Short Interval Session
  • Wednesday – Aerobic restoration work
  • Thursday – Aerobic Power Session + Lactate Based Lifting Session
  • Friday – Aerobic Restoration Work
  • Saturday – Short Interval Session

Week 4

  • Monday – Aerobic Restoration + Moderate Lifting (3×4 @ 75-80%)
  • Tuesday – Aerobic Restoration
  • Wednesday – Aerobic Restoration + Moderate Lifting(3×4 @ 75-80%)
  • Thursday – Aerobic Power Session
  • Friday – Aerobic Restoration

Conclusions & Wrapping Up

That is just one example of what a four week phase would look like with conditioning and lifting. This phase is very difficult and the athlete needs to be fit enough to tolerate the training and fit enough to recover from the training. If it looks like a lot of work, IT IS! Remember, the whole goal was to create a phase of training that provided the athlete with a huge whack of stimulus in an effort to increase their potential for adaptation and fitness improvement once a recovery phase was undertaken and the residual fatigue had dissipated. The four week phase has a high intensity of work right from the start and slowly builds training frequency until week 3 where the greatest concentration of work occurs. Resistance training in this phase serves two purposes: 1-2 sessions of lifting that maintain previous strength training adaptations and do not interfere with the main goal/objective of this phase and 1 session of lifting that is supporting the training goal of this phase and is used to create further training stress. It is important to remember that no training program is etched in stone and the training should be adjusted, if needed, based on how the athlete is tolerating the workouts. If need be, training volume or training frequency may need to be adjusted for certain athletes (although if you are embarking on this sort of 4 week training program the athlete should be fit enough to tolerate it and the previous training phases should be setting the athlete up for success in this phase). Finally, while it probably goes without saying, this type of training would not be appropriate during the in-season period as this sort of training intensity and frequency would be too much for an athlete to perform along with practice and competition, which is the main goal/objective during the competitive season. This phase of training would be more appropriate as part of the off-season conditioning program to prepare the athletes for the pre-season period.

 

High Intensity Training Part 3: Training Approach to Conditioning

In this next installment of this series I’d like to discuss some approaches to using the high intensity training to improve conditioning.

If you are interested in the first two articles in the series, please check them out here:

In the previous article I discussed the concept of concentrated loading, basically performing a huge whack of training in a short period of time aimed at one targeted objective in order to obtain a large increase in fitness once the training stimulus is removed. How you approach this phase of training or sequence your way into it is key. A great video lecture on this concept comes from one of the top sports scientists in the world, Inigo Mujika. Below is his three part lecture from the 2011 World Congress on Science and Football. The portion most specific to this discussion begins at 7:45 in part 1. Following the lecture I’ll add some of my own comments.

My Comments

I really enjoyed this lecture and the methodical approach that was taken to using high intensity interval training. Some key things that stood out to me:

  • The coaching staff recognized a problem/limitation with the athlete and the athlete was allowed to be removed from regular soccer practice 2x/week for specific conditioning. I don’t know if most team sport coaches, particularly in the US, are in a position were they feel comfortable taking a player out of practice to do specific conditioning should the player need that. It is unfortunate because I believe that most of the team sport athletes at the elite level posses a large amount of skill and knowledge of the game yet they may sometimes lack the physical qualities to go out and display this skill night after night in competition.
  • Testing was used to individualize the approach for the athlete. This is a perfect case of using the test to help determine what the athlete needs. In this case they felt that aerobic power was the limitation of this athlete based on how his test results compared with those of athletes within his sport and within his position.
  • A test > train > re-test approach was used and following the re-test it was determined that the athlete still had room for improvement, despite seeing improvement from the first approach, which allowed the coaches to develop a program that targeted the athletes limitations.
  • Only two sessions per week of this high intensity approach were used along with regular soccer training. As I discussed in the previous articles in this series, oftentimes coaches will do a high amount of intense interval training year round or for weeks on end and, aside from this potentially leading to a fatigued athlete, it limits the novelty of that training stimuli that you may otherwise get when it is used in a more systematic manner. Interestingly, a study by Burgomaster, et al (2007) looked at the response of metabolite transport proteins to sprint interval training and de-training. During the 6-week training phase subjects performed three sessions per week (Mon/Wed/Fri) consisting of 4 sets x 30sec Wingate with 4min rest in weeks 1-2; 5 sets in weeks 3-4; and 6 sets in weeks 5-6. This was followed by a 6-week de-training phase, which consisted of no planned sprint interval training although the subjects were active individuals so they remained active during this period. Interestingly, several transport proteins (Ex., GLUT4, COX4) were increased after just one week of the interval training and even remained elevated even throughout the de-training period. Thus, a huge amount of volume is typically not needed and I have found 2-3x/week of this sort of work to be a good place to start with individuals when implementing intense interval training in a concentrated block of training (keeping in mind that as athletes develop they may require 4 or 5 sessions of this sort of work, as I discussed in Part 2 of this series).

Application & Approach

Following Mujika’s discussion of the individual athlete he then goes into a short talk on how he implemented this approach with a few soccer teams, using individualized intensities (based on physiological testing) to program the athletes with one high intensity interval training session per week. As I discussed in Part 2, I typically have one high intensity session every 7-10 days (or 4 or 5th conditioning workout) in the initial phases of training with other conditioning sessions being lower in intensity (tempo runs, aerobic interval training, 5-10min continuous intervals just below AnT, or cardiac output sessions). This would precede the concentrated loading phase I discussed in Part 2, which would then precede the phase that is most specific to the athlete’s sport (IE, performing more of the conditioning work with the ball or running drills specific to that sport). In Mujika’s example he discussed Aerobic Power work for the athletes. I have talked about Aerobic Power previously in the article on the Power-Capacity Continuum. Generally, I think of Aerobic Power as being work that is too intense to do for a long-slow duration but not so intense that you burn out in 60sec. The typical interval combinations I use are:

5x3min @ > 85% maxHR; Rest = 3min

4x4min @ > 85% maxHR; Rest = 3min

4x5min @ > 85% maxHR; Rest = 3min

Note: Of course this is a very internal way of looking at Aerobic Power. Mujika’s example is more focused on output as the intervals are based on speed rather than HR response. But that is a blog article for a different time as I have some ideas on how I look at this stuff and determine training.

As I get into the concentrated loading phase I use these Aerobic Power sessions 1x/week as well as 1-2x/week of short duration interval work (generally 2-4 series x [5 min of 20-30sec work : 20-30sec rest] Rest = 2.5min). We typically will do this for 3 weeks before unloading the athlete in week four. The concentrated loading, highest weekly volume/frequency, of the intense interval training comes in week 2 and 3. For example:

Week 1 = 1 aerobic power session & 1 short interval session

Week 2 = 1 aerobic power session & 2 short interval sessions

Week 3 = 2 aerobic power sessions & 2 short interval sessions

Week 4 = Recovery

The other sessions during this week are set up to provide the body with some restoration and are very aerobic in nature, keeping the athlete away from work that is very lactate producing.

Hopefully that provides some ideas to play with. There are a number of combinations and things to try and I haven’t even discussed resistance training or how I fit resistance training within this sort of program yet. At the end of the day the goal is to understand the athlete, their needs, the demands of the sport, and apply the test > train > re-test model to ensure you are getting what you want.

High Intensity Training Part 2: Concentrated Loading for Conditioning

In part 1 of this series I talked a little bit about this concept of the “shock training cycle”. This of course led to some debate on the internet (if it weren’t for debate we might not have an internet!) regarding my use of the phrase “shock training cycle”. Purists of this concept are very strict on the application of this type of training as it is incredibly taxing on the body and typically only used for athletes at the most elite levels of training (to read further about this check out Supertraining by Siff & Verkhoshansky). I cannot disagree with that as I have spent a long time reading Russian training theory and this is the most known approach of shock training and Verkhoshansky did coin the phrase (I believe).

However, my application of this is a bit different as I think of it more from the idea that any sort of short, 1-2 week, increase in volume and/or intensity, as discussed in part 1, would be successful in over stressing the system, “shocking” the system if you will, provided that the right amount of stimulus is applied and the right amount of recovery, following that phase, is given to allow the body to restore itself from that block of training and new fitness gains to manifest.

This is what we could call “concentrated loading” as we concentrate a very high amount of work in one single area (one physiological quality) in order to force an improvement. Thus, the approach I am suggesting could be used with a variety of athletes (not just the most elite trained) and over a variety of different physiological qualities (not just strength/power) provided that the right amount of work is chosen for the athlete and the quality being trained is specific to the needs of their sport.

The Cost of Doing Business

When we train we get two outcomes – fitness & fatigue. We gain some fitness and get faster, stronger, more conditioned, etc. We also gain some fatigue and break down a little bit (remember, training is a stress that the body needs to recover from). Together, these outcomes can be represented graphically in the Fitness-Fatigue Model:

fitness-fatigue

As I like to say with training, “There is always a cost of doing business”. When we train a lot, we may have a large spike in fitness but the cost of doing business is also higher, thus we end up burning out a lot quicker. If we train with a more long term approach in mind, slow and steady over time, we accrue less fatigue and fitness gains can keep being made. When we apply this brief period of concentrated loading there will be a very large cost of doing business, fatigue will rise higher than fitness (causing the athlete to report a greater amount of fatigue and perhaps even a bit of decrease in performance); however, once the recovery phase is performed and fatigue dissipates the new gains in performance made will be revealed and the athlete’s level of preparation (seen as the middle line in the graph above) will rise higher.

By taking the long term approach to training (lowest cost of doing business) we can now see that during certain weeks of the year an application of this concentrated load to a specific physiological quality can be very beneficial, force us to have increased gains in fitness, and perhaps help us to break through some plateaus. A cautionary note: A lot of people want to use these high intensity methods all the time, year round. Unfortunately, this tends to break the body down a significant amount and lead to burnout and overtraining. Additionally, if used too frequently there is less potential benefit when we attempt to apply a concentrated phase of work as the body has already adapted to that training stimulus – the stimulus is no longer novel.

Concentrated Loading For Conditioning

In 2013, Ronnestad and colleagues conducted a study using a block periodization type format over 4 weeks on endurance trained cyclists. There were two training groups who were matched for training volume:

  • Block Training Group
    -The block training group performed 1 week of very concentrated aerobic intervals. During this week they trained 5 times alternating each day between intervals of 6x5min @ 88-100% max HR; Rest = 2.5min and intervals of 5x6min @ 88-100% max HR; Rest = 3min.  The following three weeks consisted of only 1 high intensity workout per week (one of the workouts from week one) and the rest of the week they performed high volume/low intensity training in one of two aerobic training zones: (1) 60-82% max HR; (2) 83-87% max HR.
  • Traditional Training Group– The traditional training group performed two high intensity training sessions per week for four weeks (they did one session of 6x5min and one session of 5x6min with the intensity and rest interval parameters being the same as the block training group) and the rest of the week they performed high volume/low intensity training in one of two aerobic training zones: (1) 60-82% max HR; (2) 83-87% max HR.

Key Findings

  • The block training group reported a greater amount of perceived heaviness in their legs during week one. However, this dissipated over the remaining three weeks of the program.
  • The block training group saw greater improvements in VO2max, Max Aerobic Power, and Power Output following their one week of high volume/high intensity training.

Take Home Points & Application

Only one week of the high volume/high intensity training was needed to force an improvement in the cyclists’ fitness. As I discussed in part 1 – whether you call it “shock training”, concentrated loading, or block periodization (I am not too worried about the naming convention that surrounds such things) – these training phases are best utilized when they are brief, 1-2 weeks, with higher intensity, volume, and/or frequency. Subjectively, during this 1 week phase the athletes reported greater heaviness in their legs, which is typical during a week with that much intensity and frequency, and this heaviness dissipated during the following 3 week period (and the athletes also saw performance improvements).

Following the high intensity/frequency week the athletes only performed one high intensity session per week. This could be thought of as a a way of stimulating the system following the high intensity block so that continued improvements can be made at a much lower cost of doing business (lower training volume and frequency of the high intensity work). I do wonder what would have happened if after this four week phase (1 week of concentrated loading and 3 weeks of low intensity with one stimulation workout) the athletes then took a 7-10 day restoration phase? Perhaps the fitness gains would have been even higher?

The traditional training group did a more mixed approach with some high intensity workouts and some high volume workouts throughout the week. I don’t think this concurrent approach is wrong or bad and I would hope that people don’t interpret the study to be saying that this approach is inferior. I believe there are times when this sort of training structure can be helpful and warranted. Typically, when we are in a phase of training where the goal is to build the athlete’s fitness I program high intensity workouts, similar to what was used in this study, once every 7-10 days, which usually ends up being every fourth or fifth conditioning workout. I find that this is enough to keep the system stimulated and provide us a good period of time between high intensity workouts that, when they are performed, we have a chance to look at any KPIs we are trying to improve upon – it is sometimes amazing to see how much higher volumes of submaximal work can improve maximal efforts when programmed properly. We then use the 1-2 week phase of concentrated loading as we approach certain periods of the year to get the most out of those training methods.

This sort of concentrated loading can be very powerful. It is important not to overdo it and risk burnout or overtraining. A less is more approach is best utilized here. Thus, if you think about something like a 10-12 week training cycle this week of concentrated loading/shock might be used somewhere towards the end of the training cycle a week or two prior to testing or competition, depending on how long it takes the athlete to recover (and each athlete is a little different so some trial and error may be needed first). Athletes who are more fit and have a larger training background may be able to tolerate two 1-week phases within the 10-12 week training cycle (for example in week 5 and week 10) provided that this training cycle. Finally, if volume/frequency are slowly built up (which is the opposite of what they did in the study, opting to go straight to the one week phase of with high amounts of work) the cycle can be drawn out over a longer period of time and can have greater undulations in it.