Youth Sports Training Protocols.
I couldn’t agree with Dave Gleason more than I do…
Watch this and tell me what you think:
Posted on: May 4th, 2011 by IYCA 5 Comments
I couldn’t agree with Dave Gleason more than I do…
Watch this and tell me what you think:
Posted on: July 7th, 2009 by IYCA 2 Comments
I’ll just come straight out with it.
I wrecked my car last weekend.
Something I likely won’t forget anytime soon.
I was driving from Chicago to Minnesota in order to present at a
seminar in St. Paul.
Scheduled to speak at 10:40 in the morning on Sunday, I opted to
leave my house at around 11pm Saturday night.
I had slept a bunch that day and was completely rested, so felt good
about making the 6 hour drive through the night.
At roughly 3am I found myself driving on a very poorly lit stretch of
the Wisconsin country-side. Wide awake, in great spirits and enjoying
an educational CD playing from my car’s stereo.
I won’t belabor the details or try to write in any sort of suspenseful
way.
Just the facts.
Without warning at all, an animal of some sort ran across the highway
and struck the front of my car.
Posted on: December 15th, 2008 by IYCA No Comments
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I’ll be blunt, brief and to the point with this email.
And it’s the same mistake virtually every single Coach and Trainer makes.
It’s got nothing to do with speed, agility, flexibility or strength.
It has nothing to do with sets, reps or program design.
It’s got to do with assessment and training session length.
And I don’t mean the kind of assessment where you take your young
athletes through a specific battery of tests in order to discover any
dysfunctions or asymmetries.
I mean the kind of assessment in which you actually pay attention to
how they feel on a certain day.
That’s your mistake.
You don’t alter your training program on a given day even though on
most days it’s 100% necessary to do so.
We think that the quality of a training session is measured in sweat and
effort.
Lots of sweat and tons of hard work = good.
No sweat and minimal work = bad.
Nothing could be farther from the truth.
‘John’ came in for his training session with me this past Saturday morning.
Exhausted from the night before and preparing for a basketball game later
on that day, he just wasn’t ready for the training session that I had planned
for him.
So I scrapped it.
Pure and simple.
Of course I have an agenda for this young man.
Places I need to take him in terms of speed and strength, but I can’t force
him to improve.
More over, I have to hang in the balance the fact that my ultimate goal is
to make him a better athlete – which includes limiting any injury potential
he may be facing.
Here’s the advice that you simply must heed when training young athletes.
And it’s the mistake virtually every Coach and Trainer is making –
What you want to do in a training session doesn’t always matter. You have
to be sure that the organism in front of you in prepared to receive it.
Words to live by.
I will be explaining the key points of this concept at my first annual
International Summit in February of 2009.
Until this Friday (December 19) you can gain access to this event through a
very basic and easy payment plan.
With the Holidays around the corner, no one wants to shell out big bucks for
something other than presents for their loved one’s.
Well, I’ve taken care of that for you with this incredibly easy 3-month
payment plan to assist you with Training Young Athletes.
Have a look for yourself by clicking on this very exclusive link –
http://www.iyca.org/2009summit
‘Till next time,
Brian