Archive for the StrengthCoach.com Updates Category

Is Foam Rolling Bad for You?

Posted in Injuries, Low Back Pain, Random Thoughts, StrengthCoach.com Updates, Training, Training Females with tags , , , on April 12, 2012 by mboyle1959

I wrote this a while ago but finished it yesterday after getting three different versions of “Stop Rolling Your IT band”.  Please let me know what you think.

Is Foam Rolling Bad for You? ( originally written for StrengthCoach.com)

As is always the case in life an on the internet, someone has to decide to take the other side of an argument.

I often think that those who do so are simply looking for recognition in a crowded field.

Recently, we have had two widely distributed “articles” critical of foam rolling. The word articles is in quotes because both so-called articles were actually blog posts.

I find it funny because it seems difficult to me to criticize something that universally makes people feel better.  In one article (which was actually written four years ago), the author, Mike Nelson, makes the very basic case that pain is bad and the foam roller causes pain; therefore, the foam roller must be bad too. However, in reading the authors bio, I can’t help but notice that he has been a student for the last sixteen years as opposed to a coach, and moreover, carries a clear bias toward the neurological origins of pain.

I am not discounting the neurological basis of pain as that would be as illogical.  However the author’s primary premise seems to be that pain is bad and should be avoided at all costs. It is also worth noting that the author is a paid practitioner of a technique he feels is better than foam rolling.

It is obvious that I don’t agree and, I intend to make a scientific case for my disagreement rather than a personal one.

I am also of the belief that pain is bad. However, I will qualify that statement and say that most pain is bad. In the case of the foam roller, I will go so far as to say that pain is good. I frequently tell my athletes that the foam roller is the only violation of our Does It Hurt rule. In a nutshell, my normal reaction to any question as to whether someone should do any exercise is to ask “Does It Hurt”? If the answer is no, then the exercise is generally acceptable. In the case of foam rolling, however, I think we actually need top seek out painful spots. Foam rolling is very counterintuitive.

Mr. Nelson’s theory is based on the belief that pain is neurological and that pain causes reflexive actions, all of which are negative.  However, in the world of physical therapy, the belief is widely held that often painful techniques of soft tissue mobilization are in fact essential to produce long-term healing. What Mr. Nelson fails to acknowledge in his treatise on foam rolling is that in the end, the process is about chemistry, not electricity. All mechanical and neurological inputs become chemical inputs. It is clear scientific fact that the disturbance caused to tissue via mobilization (rolling, massage, Graston. ART)  in effect irritates the tissue. This irritation is painful in the short term, but the response is often a healing one, not a negative one. In soft tissue mobilization, the tissue is deliberately disrupted in order to produce the exact substances that tissue needs to heal and to realign.

Mr. Nelson also attempts to draw a line between massage and foam rolling by saying that the skilled hands of a therapist in essence make soft tissue mobilization OK. His premise is that soft tissue work done by a person is infinitely better than pressure provided by an inanimate object. Again, this logic is flawed.

Mr Nelson makes the case that a skilled therapist knows how much pressure to utilize while a person working on themselves will produce so much pain as to render the technique useless. To be honest , I think most people are much easier on themselves than a therapist would be on them. In fact, I don’t think I have ever seen a bruise produced by a foam roller but I have seen numerous bruises produced by a well meaning massage therapist.

The second, more recent, anti-rolling article focused on the IT band. The author, a muscular therapist, focused on the fact that the IT band could not be changed through foam rolling. He implores us to stop rolling the IT band. Again this “anti” article was widely distributed on the internet.

So, back to why we foam roll. In the simplest sense, rolling is step one on the preparatory process. Our goal pre-exercise is to prepare the tissue for the stresses about to be applied. Proper tissue preparation allows an athlete to perform a workout without injury. I think or hope that we can accept the position that tissue changes in response to stress.

If the tissue is stressed optimally, the resulting adaptation is positive. If the tissue is overstressed by inappropriate volume (too many reps) , speed of lengthening (too fast) ,  or inappropriate overload (to much weight) the tissue response can shift from positive to negative.  Although tissue soreness is deemed normal, we must acknowledge that there is an ideal amount of that normal response, and the response should be limited to the muscle tissue and not be present in the connective tissue. In other words, sore quads would be OK, but sore knees not be OK.

In addition, muscle soreness and tissue damage can be the result of blows to the tissue instead of the planned application of stress. This tissue damage must also be mitigated, not just by time. It is important that tissue maintain its ability to deform properly. Loss of this tissue deformation ability results in what is called  a stress riser. These stress risers set up us up for later injury.

The big take away point is that thousands of athletes are rolling every day and getting a good result. Two blog posts should not be enough to relieve us of our common sense. Pressure to tissue when well applied seems to produce positive results. Even if we are not confident of the exact physiological response, the results of thousands of athletes speak for themselves. Don’t be fooled by internet writers looking to take a contrarian stance to get site hits. Focus on results. Massage works and so does foam rolling. Just ask anyone who does it.

PS- Quick note. I have often said that the density of the roller corresponds to the density of the athlete. If you lack muscle, try Yamuna balls or white soft rollers (yes, I know they don’t last, but it’s a compromise). Progress to the Perform Better black as your tolerance improves.

It’s Not the Program, It’s the Coaching

Posted in Random Thoughts, StrengthCoach.com Updates, Training, Training Females, Uncategorized, Youth Training with tags , on April 11, 2012 by mboyle1959

I wrote this for my StrengthCoach.com site but, wanted to share it with a wider audience.

Sam Dadd, one of my senior coaches at MBSC thought the concept mentioned in the title would make a great article. The discussion began, as many do, with a question in a staff meeting. Why does an assistant go to a new program, institute the same program used in his old job, yet fail to get similar results? Or, why when a head strength coach moves on and the assistant takes over are the results not the same? The obvious answer would be talent however I think that is an oversimplification.

My response to the question was simple and to the point. It’s not the program, it’s the coach.  In the football world legendary coach Bum Phillips described another legend, Paul Bear Bryant’s coaching this way . “He can take his’n and beat your’n and take your’n and beat his’n.” In other words if you and Bryant switched rosters, in a year he’d beat you with your own team.

A good coach with a mediocre program is much better than a great program and a mediocre coach. A program is a piece of paper or a file in a computer. Programs cannot motivate or create accountability. A piece of paper can’t figure out what is inside a person and how to get that out. A great coach can do all those things. A great coach will teach, motivate, and create an accountability system. He will figure out what makes each guy tick and then use that knowledge to get results. I have said for years that all of our programs are the same. Our base philosophy never changes. Want to get fast, run sprints. Want to get strong, lift weights. The difference is in the selling. The difference is in knowing what makes each athlete tick.

Another legendary coach, the late quarterback guru Tom Martinez, described it this way in the book Outliers. “Every kids life is a mix of shit and ice cream. If the kid has had too much shit I mix in some ice cream. If he has had too much ice cream I mix in some shit”. Martinez knew that there was a different key to every lock. To paraphrase Dan John, the key is to find the key.

Bottom line, there is a reason that strength and conditioning coaches Mike Woicek, Al Miller, Rusty Jones and Johnny Parker had a team in almost every Superbowl for about a 15 year period. They were great coaches who got the best out of their players.( Importance of the Strength and Conditioning Coach http://www.strengthcoach.com/public/1263.cfm )

There is a reason a coach like Phil Jackson succeeded in circumstances as different as Chicago and LA  . Coaching matters. Coaches change lives, programs don’t change lives. The people will always matter more than the paper.

Are College Football Players Bodies Being Abused

Posted in Guest Authors, Injuries, Low Back Pain, Media, Random Thoughts, StrengthCoach.com Updates, Training with tags , on April 8, 2012 by mboyle1959

This is a pretty good perspective from agent Jack Bechta. Nice to see that agents are waking up to some of the problems in collegiate strength and conditioning. Thanks to Cal Dietz for forwarding.

http://www.nationalfootballpost.com/Are-college-players-bodies-being-abused.html

Pretty Strong for a Girl

Posted in Core training, Fat Loss, Low Back Pain, Random Thoughts, StrengthCoach.com Updates, Training, Training Females, Uncategorized, Youth Training with tags , , on March 28, 2012 by mboyle1959

Yes, the title is a joke. This is another great female strength clip. As I have said for years, our female athletes suffer from low expecations and lack of role models. Neghar is a great role model because she is extremely strong and has developed a physique that most women would aspire to.

Save the Date for BSMPG in Boston

Posted in Hockey, Injuries, Low Back Pain, Media, Seminars, StrengthCoach.com Updates, Training, Training Females, Uncategorized with tags , , on March 27, 2012 by mboyle1959

The last few years Art Horne and Dan Boothy over at Northeastern University have put on an amazing seminar in the late spring. Art and Dan really have their finger on the pulse in the area of sports medicine and performance training and bring in speakers that you might not have heard yet. Think about it as seeing a breakout band before they hit the big arenas. This spring is no different. Make sure you save May 19th and 20th for what I think is the fourth annual BSMPG Conference. http://www.bsmpg.com/2012-summer-seminar/

Presenters include:

Joel Jamieson

Sean Skahan

Pete Freisen

Craig Liebenson and many others.

More Evidence Against Early Specialization

Posted in Random Thoughts, StrengthCoach.com Updates, Training, Training Females, Youth Training with tags , , on March 20, 2012 by mboyle1959

If you regularly read this blog you know how I feel kids specializing in one sport too early. I continue to search out the best athletes and find their stories. I can tell you that it is rare that I find a professional athlete who says “my parents pushed me to choose one sport and that is why I am here today”. This is a great read on Jacoby Ellsbury and is more evidence that great athletes are mutli-sport athletes first.

http://www.news-press.com/article/20120318/SPRINGTRAINING/303180051/Ellsbury-once-athlete-all-seasons

Human Locomotion- Great New Book.

Posted in Core training, Injuries, Low Back Pain, StrengthCoach.com Updates, Training, Training Females, Youth Training with tags on March 7, 2012 by mboyle1959

I just got a copy of Dr Tom Michaud’s new book Human Locomotion. It is a Sahrmannesque read ( long, detailed) that I have only skimmed but it is a keeper for sure.

http://www.newtonbiomechanics.com/

Why the Rock?

Posted in MBSC News, Media, StrengthCoach.com Updates, Training, Training Females, Youth Training with tags on March 3, 2012 by mboyle1959

My daughter’s video caused a little tempest in a teapot on my Youtube Channel. She’s proud of her strength and so am I. To be honest I am more proud of the way she attacks the bar than of her strength.

Every time we post a clean video we get the same questions/ criticism. Some politely ask “why the rock?”. Others are not so kind and call us out on our execution of the lift. Because the topic comes up so often I figure an explanation is in order.

First, let me explain the evolution of the rock ,or the shift, or the scoop depending on your choice of name. My athletes have been performing the hang clean in this manner for over twenty years. To be honest, initially I never taught it. It just happened. Our better lifters soon realized that trying to hang clean a heavy weight from a dead stop was difficult.  Many began to rock or weight shift. They also began to hang clean a lot of weight. For a few years I simply let the lift evolve and at numerous points in the eighties and nineties had 30 football players hang cleaning over 300 lbs. Not bad for 1AA football.

A few years later I made the foolish mistake of listening to my critics.  They said that rocking was wrong and that we needed to stop. Like a good coach I agreed and vigorously coached my athletes. I forbade them from rocking. The results were simple and obvious. Our numbers dropped and dropped a lot. One of my athletes actually came up to me and said “nice job you’ve managed to make us all weaker”. His hang clean max had dropped from 370 to 340. ( Please note- this players vertical increased 12” in 4 years from 20 to 32”). I was conflicted. I just wanted to do what was best for my athletes. However, no one was injured rocking and, everyone could lift more weight. I began to do some analysis of the situation and came to the conclusion that rocking was a normal part of both athletics and of Olympic weightlifting.

I can remember reading Carl Miller’s Olympic Lifting manual in the early 80’s and reading about “double knee bend”. Boy do I wish I still had a copy. My first reaction to the concept of “double knee bend” was to think it was impossible. However, after watching lots of good Olympic weightlifters on video it became obvious that it was not only not impossible but that every great lifter did it.  Watch some video in slow motion and you see it.  In order for the bar to clear the knees the hips  and knees extend. After the bar clears the knees, the knees actually flex or rebend to move the hips into position. In the jump portion of the lift the knees extend again. The cycle is extend-flex-extend. This has been referred to as rocking, scooping, or double knee bend. In any case, it is real and it happens.

The rock you see in our Olympic lifts is this same action. Weight shifts back to the heels, knees extend. Weight shifts forward, knees flex. Hips explode and hips and knees extend. What we are doing is what every athlete does to create maximal explosive power. Watch the vertical jumps at the NFL Combine. What do you see? Rocking, pre-stretch, weight shift. Call it what you want but it is the best way to produce a powerful, maximal effort. Since that one time  I have always said, damn the critics, full speed ahead. I have lots of females cleaning 135 lbs for reps and the majority of my male hockey players hang clean between 250 and 320? Am I wrong? You be the judge. Healthy athletes, great clean numbers, great speed improvement, great vertical jump. Where do I go wrong? As Lee Cockrell says in  Creating Magic what if the way we always did it was wrong?

 

 

 

Gaining Knowledge from Reflection

Posted in Guest Authors, Random Thoughts, StrengthCoach.com Updates, Training with tags on February 25, 2012 by mboyle1959

Great guest post from Jim Keilbaso originally published at StrengthCoach.com but, too good not to share here:

Gaining Knowledge From Reflection

Good coaches and trainers are constantly looking for ways to increase their knowledge base. We spend a great deal of time reading books and articles, watching videos, attending clinics, and talking to other coaches. Yet, there is another very simple practice that people often forget to use. I was taught this concept a long time ago, but it took me years to actually put it into practice. Another excellent way to learn is to simply take the time to thoroughly reflect on your own experiences.

For example, earlier this year the University of Kentucky brought me in to work on acceleration techniques with their Men’s Basketball Team. The coaching staff recognized that there was an opportunity with their ultra-talented recruits, and they had a very clear picture of what they wanted. I stayed in Lexington for three days with the specific purpose of getting each player to accelerate more efficiently and cover the court faster than ever.

I spent my time in Lexington doing a lot of teaching, individual evaluation and consultation with their staff on how to approach training. Everyone I worked with — coaches and athletes — were very professional and 100% committed to improvement. The training sessions were very successful, and I left feeling like I taught the team a lot. It wasn’t until later — when I took the time to sit down and reflect on the experience — that I realized how many valuable lessons I learned from my time with the team.

None of these concepts were completely new to me, but they were all hammered home in a way that can only be done through experience. Here are 8 valuable lessons I learned from my experience with the University of Kentucky basketball team:

1. Skill is king in most sports.

In most team sports, speed, strength, power and conditioning are all important, but great skills kill them all. You can be a physical specimen, but if you can’t play the game, your best sport option will be the CrossFit games (not that there’s anything wrong with that). Watching the amazing skill level of these guys drove this point home. Sure, helping them accelerate faster was helpful, but their ability to shoot, dribble, defend, etc. is hands-down what makes them so exceptional, and will ultimately be their ticket.

2. Recruiting trumps training.

Strength coaches can boast about their programs as much as they want, but the bottom line is that finding the right talent is the best way to make a training system look good. There are some things that strength coaches don’t really teach, like being 6-foot-9, 250 pounds and moving like a cat. Don’t get me wrong. A great training program can elicit fantastic results, but we sure look a lot better when we have superior athletes to work with.

3. Size matters.

I was watching sophomore forward Terrence Jones play 2-on-2 with an incoming freshman trying to check him. Terrance has put in a lot of hard work in the weight room with strength and conditioning coach Mike Malone, and he has gotten a lot bigger and stronger. He was dominating the younger player, saying things like “you’re too little!” and flexing his muscles. He told me later that because he’s bigger and stronger, he feels like he can do things he couldn’t do before. What a confidence booster! You can train an athlete however you want, but putting on some size and strength sure seems to make a difference.

4. Fine tuning can make a big difference.

Elite athletes already have most of the puzzle pieces in place. Athletes at this level only need slight advantages, so making one small improvement has the potential to pay big dividends. My only job was to get every player better at covering half the court. They already excel in most areas of game, are in great shape, can jump out of the gym and they work on fundamentals every day – that kind of stuff is in place for most elite level athletes. Getting an elite basketball player one or two steps faster down the court could mean the difference between a breakaway and having to reset your offense. It could mean running down an opponent’s fast-break to block a shot at a critical point in the game. All of the players bought into this concept and recognized that it could give them a significant advantage. When you get elite athletes looking for tiny advantages over their competition, exciting things can happen.

5. Strengthen weak links.

Most athletes have a lot of strengths and a few weaknesses. Of course, you should always capitalize on your strengths, but finding an athlete’s weak link may prevent a lot of problems down the road. Maybe he has terrible foot or ankle flexibility, which is altering his running mechanics. Maybe she lacks internal hip rotation which is making it difficult to perform certain movements. Whatever it is, finding and improving it can make a huge difference to an athlete’s career. It may improve his game or it may just keep him healthy. Continue to capitalize on strengths, but attacking the weak link can be a difference-maker.

6. The basics are not broken.

Athletes in all sports and all levels often need similar training. There are way more similarities than differences because the basics just plain work. Sure, every athlete may need some individualization, but just about everyone can benefit from improvements in strength, speed, power, and conditioning. You may attack them differently for each sport or athlete, but the basics should be the foundation for most athletes. Here I was teaching elite level athletes the same concepts we show middle school kids….and it was helping! We don’t need to find revolutionary new methods. The future of training more likely lies in figuring out better ways to apply what we already know works.

7. There are no cushy jobs.

The grass is always greener on the other side, and I hear coaches all the time saying things like “Man, I wish I had that situation.” Well, watching Mike Malone bust his tail with these guys drove this point home. A job like this sounds great (great athletes, great program, great facilities) but there’s a lot of pressure in situations like this. Expectations are high. A lot of hard work is put in, and coaches get fired from great situations all the time for reasons completely out of their control. Jobs like this don’t come easy, and you never get to sit back and enjoy the scenery while you’re there. A lot of people think certain jobs would be great, but be careful what you wish for. It’s tough being at the top.

8. The “out-of-towner” theory is true.

For credibility, there’s nothing like being an expert from out of town. You can tell an athlete something a million times, but having an “expert” come in from out of town grabs their attention like nothing else. It’s kind of funny, but everyone seems to respond to this. The same holds true in parenting. You can tell your kids that something is important, but when an influential coach or teacher says the same thing, it’s a total revelation. I’m sure the coaches at Kentucky could have taught acceleration and speed training, but they also knew the value of having someone else say it.

I was only at UK for a few days, and while I taught a lot, I think I ended up learning even more. Often, in situations like this, you never sit back afterward to reflect on the experience. You get wrapped up in what you’re doing and teaching, and it’s hard to turn it into a learning experience for yourself. I see this all the time with interns, grad assistants or volunteers who are working so hard they don’t take the time to reflect on their experiences. I even see it with coaches and trainers who are so busy teaching, that they miss out on valuable lessons. I’m absolutely guilty of this.

A lot can be learned when you’re open to it. It’s going to be difficult, but from now on, I’m going make an effort to spend a little more time reflecting on important experiences in my life. This helped me gain more than I ever thought it would, and I don’t want to miss out on that in the future.

Jim Kielbaso MS, CSCS is the Director of the Total Performance Training Centers in Wixom and Rochester Hills, MI. He is a former college strength & conditioning coach and the co-founder of www.UltimateStrengthAndConditioning.com. Jim has written three books, produced several training DVDs and speaks at conferences and clinics around the country. You can follow him at http://JimKielbaso.com.

600,000 + Views

Posted in MBSC News, Random Thoughts, StrengthCoach.com Updates, Uncategorized on February 10, 2012 by mboyle1959

I don’t pay a lot of attention to site stats but the other day I was curious as to how many views Strength Coach Blog had received since I started. I was surprised to see that it was over 590,000 views. Well today I passed a milestone, 600,000. Thanks to all of you who read here. I’m looking forward to 700,000.

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