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Youth Training Programs
Most Trainers and Coaches don’t have a clue.
That isn’t meant to sound horribly negative, just something I’ve
noticed a lot recently.
I was reading a textbook on Youth Training Programs recently that contained the following program for a high school football player:
a. Hang Cleans – 4 sets, 8 reps
b. Bench Press – 4 sets, 6 – 8 reps
c. Incline Bench Press – 4 sets, 6 – 8 reps
d. Front Pull Down – 4 sets, 8 reps
e. Dumbbell Shoulder Press – 4 sets, 8 reps
f. 1-Arm Dumbbell Row – 4 sets, 8 reps (each)
What do you think?
Is that a good program to you?
If you’re like me, it strikes you immediately as a horrible
program.
But let me ask you to take a second and answer this one question:
Why?
If you agree it’s a poorly designed program, what makes it so
bad in your eyes?
What I’m getting at here is the most important and critical
aspects of being able to write quality programs of your own.
Dissection.
The ability to assess and analyze a program based on three
critical factors:
1. Timing Requirements
2. Even Stimulus
3. Understanding Objectives
These three elements, and your ability to dissect them, is
going to change your ability to write effective youth training programs of your
own.
Let’s take the program from above and dissect it from those three
variables:
1. Timing Requirements
Here’s what we know.
The average 6 – 8 rep set takes roughly 45 seconds to perform.
Each exercise lists ‘4 sets’ as the objective.
There are six exercises in total.
Six exercises at four sets each, is a total of 24 sets for the
session.
At 45 seconds per, that totals 18 minutes of working time.
Roughly 2 minutes of recovery time will take place in between
each set, which amounts to 8 minutes of total recovery per
exercise.
With six exercises in total, that amounts to 48 minutes in
total.
Combined with the 18 minutes of total work load, this training
session will take roughly 70 minutes to perform.
Here are my concerns:
a. 70 minutes is far too long for high school training programs
b. 70 minutes does not include any sort of warm-up or cool-down
c. The work/rest relationship is roughly 1:3 – unacceptable
2. Even Stimulus
One point here, but it’s a biggie –
12 sets = pushing
8 sets = pulling
You don’t need to know much about athletic development or
functional anatomy to know that this ratio is entirely
unacceptable.
3. Understanding Objectives
Do high school athletes really need to perform a horizontal
pushing motion from two different angles?
Are bilateral movements from start to finish the best option
when trying to create a functionally fit and injury resistant
athlete?
Does the program outlined above seem way too much like a
standard bodybuilding program?
The key to creating effective training programs is to start with
objectives.
Yet ANOTHER reason I am not a fan of assessing biomotor abilities
in young athletes.
If you are intent on testing there vertical jump, bench, squat
and 40 time, than your youth training programs are going to naturally focus
on improving these elements – and be limited in other areas as
a result.
What do your young athletes need in terms of:
– Injury Prevention
– Age Related Factors of Development
– On Field Performance
– Correction of Body/Structural Dysfunction
When you identify your athletes’ needs, you have a much broader
and more complete understanding of the objectives necessary in
creating an effective program.
The point of this email is to show you that training program
dissection is critical in understanding how to create programs
of your own.
Not everyone can write programs that work well – it is a skill
that requires time, trial and error as well as practice.
But rather than starting with a blank canvas, use the 3 points
I mentioned above to assess your own youth training programs –
1. Timing Requirements
2. Even Stimulus
3. Understanding Objectives
I hope this helps!
Brian