Achieve Anything…
You really CAN achieve anything, as long as you have the right tools.
The right physical tools, the right mindset, the right attitude and the right support. While we can help you with all of that, we’re going to focus on the right physical tools here.
No matter your sport, or combination of sports, there SHOULD be a method to your training schedule…this is called ‘periodization.’ In case you were wondering a little more about it, here’s a great article:
Essential to all athletes is an off-season program and year-round conditioning program. Athletes are often too late coming to the realization that they cannot expect to get in shape right before pre-season training without having a high risk of injury. Athletes should progress gradually in their conditioning so that they are not doing anything “too hard”, “too fast”, too far”, “too quickly”, predisposing themselves to injury.
Off-season conditioning programs should address conditioning, strength training and flexibility. During the off-season, the exercise program is at a lower level, thus allowing tissue healing; and the program should peak right before the competitive season. A structured program should be followed for the greatest benefit. A year-round program helps to prevent injury and a maintenance program helps to prevent recurrence. The training program should follow an interval fashion and should be formulated so that the athlete reaches peak fitness during the competitive season, or periodization.
Conditioning needs to be approached with the same motivation and organization as the competitive season. Without proper conditioning, muscles, tendons, ligaments and bones are more likely to suffer injury. A lack of conditioning contributes to poor performance and inconsistency. Proper conditioning cannot, however, be obtained in the 4-5 weeks of preseason practice. A well-planned, year-round program is needed to minimize the risk of injury and prepare for peak performance during the competitive season.
A good program includes more than strength training, as muscle strength is only one requirement for performance. Flexibility, speed, power, muscle endurance, aerobic/anaerobic capacity, agility and coordination/skill training are also components of a good conditioning program. In addition, the athlete must pay attention to nutrition and mental preparation. Here are some good components to adhere to:
1. It is important that the core of the body—thighs, hips, trunk, shoulder—be strong to provide a stable base for movement and reduce stress on the body.
2. Train for muscular balance. Joint stability relies on the contradiction of muscles on both sides of the joint; therefore, a program which emphasizes only certain muscle groups leaves an athlete susceptible to injury. It is also important to train both sides of the body.
3. Train strength before power or endurance. A base level of strength must be achieved before power drills and muscle endurance exercises can be successfully initiated. Bodyweight exercises must be maximized before external focus is added.
4. Emphasize quality of exercise, not quantity. Few understand that the training stimulus must also be progressively and periodically varied. All programs have positive and negative aspects no matter how well designed or specific – too much time on one program and you’ll lose to the positive aspects and accumulate the negative aspects
5. Train for muscle endurance. Muscle endurance is critical for preventing injuries. Once muscles are fatigued, the stability of the joint is disturbed which may lead to a variety of injuries.
6. Although a conditioning program is used throughout the year, the concept of periodization should be implemented. Strength gains do not occur by muscle fibers becoming larger, instead, strength increases when the nervous system becomes more efficient at causing muscle fibers to contract.
We believe in dividing the sports year up into four different training phases. Our work begins depending on where we’ve acquired a team in relation to the competition season. Ideally, we like to begin work with a team during Phase I; however, we design our programs to encompass all four different training phases. Here is a periodization sample by phase:
Phase I Preparation Phase–Begins eight to twelve weeks before pre-season training begins. Focus is on strength conditioning, both in muscle development and in core to ensure an athlete’s body is strong enough to handle the ensuing pre-season and competition. A focus is also put on flexibility (a longer muscle is a stronger muscle) and balance to ensure minimal risk of injury and maximum output of muscle. Speed and agility becomes the focus towards the end of the preparation phase.
Phase II Pre-Season–Begins four to eight weeks before the competition season starts. Now that the athlete’s strength is up, focus is more on power; combining their muscular strength, their core strength and their flexibility and balance with speed and agility and skill drills to maximize power output. Strength conditioning and flexibility is still emphasized along with their skill. At the end of this phase, athletes should have reached periodization, or their peak to take them right into the competition phase.
Phase II Competition Season–Focus now becomes on keeping their skill sharp, and their flexibility and mental focus high. Strength conditioning is still prevalent, but more focused in their core. Drills such as plyometrics and endurance training are decreased to ensure optimal energy levels for competition.
Phase IV Off-Season—The athletes are now given a ‘rest.’ Conditioning is dramatically scaled back and the emphasis is split between strength and endurance. The main focus is put on flexibility to reduce the risk of injury during the off-season, as well as core training to ensure their core muscles stay strong, producing good power output once preparation season starts.
Now you know a little more about periodization. Want to put it to good use?
Are you a basketball player? Is your kiddo a basketball player…Or wondering if they want to become a basketball player? Then we have the perfect camp for you or them!
And tomorrow only (Saturday, June 23rd), we have the perfect special to register for the camp.
The 3-day camp, which focuses on physical performance, basketball skills and life off the court is regularly $249 ($199 if you’re a College Bound or i9 Athlete). But tomorrow ONLY (Saturday, June 23rd), we’re registering athletes, regardless of original cost at ONLY $99.
But hurry! There are limited spots in each age group – they are partly filled and will go fast tomorrow. So call (614-735-9890) or email (info@power-flex.net) immediately with registration details (we accept cash, check and/or credit card).
For more details, check out the blog page. Register today…Stay Healthy & Active!! Greg (614-746-9185)
The Balanced Athlete
Being an athlete at any level – from just starting out in pee wee to the pros – is all about balance. And while this picture is pretty impressive, this isn’t the kind of balance we’re talking about. We’re talking about balancing your conditioning, your skill and your lifestyle. It is so important to not only be the best competitor you can be, but also to be the happiest person you can be.
Which is why we’ve comprised the Top Ten Tips for Athletic Success (at any age, gender or sport):
- Train to the Nth Power – This one covers a lot of ground in terms of conditioning, so we’re going to cheat a little and give you several tips under #1. Essential to any athlete is an off-season program and year-round conditioning program. Athlete should progress gradually in their conditioning so that they are not doing anything “too hard”, “too fast”, too far”, “too quickly”, predisposing themselves to injury. Off-season conditioning programs should address conditioning, strength training and flexibility. During the off-season, the exercise program is at a lower level, thus allowing tissue healing; and the program should peak right before the competitive season. A structured program should be followed for the greatest benefit. The training program should follow an interval fashion and should be formulated so that the athlete reaches peak fitness during the competitive season, or periodization.
- Train Body Weight Before External Resistance – If you cannot perform 20 perfect push ups while stabilizing your shoulders, core, spine and hip flexors you do not need to get under a weighted bar…Period. Younger athletes shouldn’t be training with external resistance anyway. Athletes and coaches often underestimate the power a good body weight program can bring.
- Train Your Muscles Through Range of Motion – Going along with the above tip, stationary machines should seldom be used. You do not play the game (any game) in a seated or fixed spot, so you shouldn’t train that way. Body weight exercises, resistance tubes & bands, medicine balls, stability balls and other functional training methods help to increase your muscle mass AND range of motion.
- Work Out Your Joints – Going along with the above tip, leg extension machines and bicep curls develop useless strength. You cannot possess coordination in your skill unless you train your muscles to work in groups.
- Train With Movement & Explosiveness – Again, isolation training of muscles does an athlete no good. Focus on specific movements and focus on perfecting those movements with explosiveness and power…all body controlled.
- Vary Your Conditioning - Use all primary methods to train: Strength, Dynamic, Speed, Agility, Endurance, Static, Skill. Your training program must be progressive AND varied. If you spend too much time on one aspect (particularly skill set), your positive attributes will suffer and the negative ones will come out.
- Truly Training With Balance - Every action has an opposite and equal reaction. Although each of us have slight ‘flaws’ to our bodies, they are basically made to be in perfect balance. Train your left side as much as your right. Address pushing and pulling on horizontal and vertical planes. If you can’t handle the load or skill on one side or plane as much as the other, adjust to increase the volume and repetition of the weaker. This will make you better than your competition on the court, field, whatever, but it will make you a healthier athlete, less prone to injuries.
- Core Training - Think outside of the box and the weight room. Core training should begin at the very beginning of Phase I, or when an athlete comes off the off-season (8-12 wks before pre-season). If an athlete’s body isn’t strong and stable enough to take what’s going to be thrown at them during conditioning, pre-season and competition, it WILL break down.

- Flexibility Training - See above. It’s the same thing. Many athletes overlook the importance of a structured flexibility program. Both dynamic and static stretching is all-too-important when approaching Phase I of conditioning and all the way through. A longer muscle is a stronger muscle. Again, a flexible athlete will have an edge over their competition and come away the healthier athlete, being less prone to injuries.
- Avoid Mimicking Skills - This is BIG and might be hard for athletes to resist. But throwing weighted balls or the like will do very little to improve your strength and range of motion and very MUCH to mess up your technique and balance. Loading a technique will do a lot to mess up that technique’s mechanics. Just don’t do it.
- Avoid Burn Out - I know. I know. You love the court, or the field or the pool, or whatever. You join leagues and other teams, enter tournaments and play every second you can get. Take a time out. At least from the competitive mindset. There’s nothing wrong with keeping your skill set sharp, but the point is to become a better ATHLETE. From that you will become the best at your sport. So focus on the other 8 factors necessary here for you to do that.
- Nutrition - If I had a penny for every time I told a client “You Are What You Eat” I could buy out Mark Zuckerberg and put him out of his misery! But it is soooo true. I know that it’s hard. You have school. You have practice. You have friends and a social life. You have a family and parents that unfairly make you do things around the house. And it’s so easy to grab something at the gas station or cruise through the drive through, picking up whatever’s on the value menu. You’re only messing up everything that you’re training so hard to do on the court or field. Plan ahead for the week, or even the day. Make smart choices. If you need some help, ask parents, coaches, trainers and us some things you should be eating, particularly during pre-season and competition season.
- Hydration - Ok, so this one goes along with #8, but many athletes don’t properly hydrate. Best case scenario, you’re not performing at max capacity. Worst case scenario, you have a heat stroke on the field and don’t make it. Not pretty, but it happens EVERY year. And chugging a glass of water or bottle of Gatorade when you feel thirsty is not gong to work. You need to hydrate throughout the day. Good rule of thumb: Take your body weight, divide by 2. This is the number of ounces you should be drinking every day. Add in a glass for every serving of caffeine you drink. Add in a glass for every hour that you’re doing profuse sweating.
- Off The Court - Be a good athlete, but just be a good person. While there are plenty of athletes to look up to these days, there are many who are less than stellar role models. Trust your instincts. Do what you feel is right. Do, say and act towards others the way that you would want to be treated. And please, please, please…think before you post or tweet. Once you do that, it DOES NOT go away. Your friends, family, coaches and scouts WILL see your social media activity. Get involved in community events. Somewhere there is a younger athlete that wants someone to look up to…be that someone.
So we hope these tips help you…both on the court or field and off. Our goal is to not develop athletes in a particular sport, but to help all kids be the best athlete they can be. Our camps and clinics focus on this ideology, which is why we believe they’re met with so much success.
Check out our blog page and website for camps and clinics near you; and check out our first annual Summer Basketball Camp details. In the meantime, stay healthy & active!
Erin Morrow & Greg Holmes
Co-Directors, Power Flex | 614-735-9890 | info@power-flex.net | www.power-flex.net | BLOG www.power-flex-oh-net | Facebook | Twitter | Linked In
Fitness & Wellness With an EDGE!
Why Power and Flex Go Hand-in-Hand
Training for any sport is multi-faceted. Skill training for your particular sport and often positions within your sport is necessary. Strength training is also very important; and speed and agility training has come to the forefront in recent years.
But one medium of athletic training that is often overlooked is flexibility. Athletes typically go through some form of warm-up and cool-down stretching, but these regimens are often antiquated and are performed with little or no instruction or enthusiasm on the athlete’s parts.
All that is beginning to change. Professional athletes have come to realize the importance of a good flexibility program, and athletes at the collegiate and high school levels are quickly catching on.
Exercise mediums such as Pilates and yoga have garnered national attention with the participation of high-profile athletes such as Tiger Woods, Kobe Bryant, Tony Stewart and various teams. One member of the Cincinnati Bengals even opened a Pilates studio in the Cincinnati area.
So what’s making these athletes sit up and take notice of an exercise medium that was once thought of as something traditionally geared to the soccer moms?
Flexibility is needed for, among other things, improved range of motion and power output. Stretching properly allows the muscles to grow to their full potential providing increased speed and vertical height. It also prevents the possibility of over-training or likelihood of an injury. Here are some of the benefits Pilates and yoga have to offer:
- One session of yoga can provide dynamic stretching cycles for proper warm up, as well as static stretching poses more appropriate for cool down;
- Stretching cycles used in your yoga practice can be used to target different muscle groups to help prevent or overcome injury;
- Increased flexibility leads to better range of motion and core-strengthening leads to maximum power output, both of which lead to better performance;
- Having good flexibility and a strong core lead to decreased risk of injury and quicker recovery coming off an injury;
- Balance helps with agility and body control — both Pilates and yoga are exercise mediums that isolate balance exercises;
- Every form of competition is 90% mental – regular practice of Pilates and yoga works out your mind to improve concentration and mental focus;
- Regular yoga practice also helps with breath control – deep breathing techniques help deliver oxygen-rich blood to your muscles preventing fatigue.
The benefits of a good flexibility program, especially combined with a great core-strengthening program, are endless. Give your body the edge; athlete-based flexibility programs are available through our individual and group training, as well as our camps and clinics.
Thinking of starting a flexibility program but don’t know where to start? Contact us today, we can help you get that edge over the competition. In the meantime, stay healthy & active!
Erin Morrow and the rest of the Power Flex Team
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