Matthew Hauck

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Matthew Hauck

Matthew Hauck

@MdHCSCS

Sport & Performance Science, Coaching, Sports Tech Formerly Timbers/Thorns FC/Oregon State/Providence Health All views my own

Portland, OR انضم Mart 2013
278 يتبع644 المتابعون
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Matthew Hauck
Matthew Hauck@MdHCSCS·
A little update on a fun personal project. You'll be hearing a lot more from me on all things sports, sports tech & SaaS, human performance, sport science, and more on my new website. I don't have a subscription or product to sell you- just frontline insight from 20+ years in these fields. Here is a note from the editor (me) teeing up this new journey: sportpassportusa.com/post/a-note-fr… #Sports #SportsTech #HumanPerformance #SaaS
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Matthew Hauck
Matthew Hauck@MdHCSCS·
#MyXAnniversary reflection: I had a Twitter account prior to this one that was mixed with both personal and professional postings. What spurned me to delete the old account and create this MDHCSCS account that has been (mostly) field-related content to sports and human performance: I made an informed comment on a rash of injuries with a specific football team during August when daily doubles were still allowable in NCAA football circa 2012. This came in the form of retweeting a post from a "regional expert" of collegiate sports that reported a high number of starters sitting out during camp suffering from injuries. I, as a former collegiate football player, credential strength coach, and someone who had coached football myself, simply said something to the effect of: "practicing for 2-3 hours, twice a day, on most days of the week, without a day off is not conducive for preparing for the season if the result is that your best players suffer injuries and can't practice. Many other (more successful teams) don't have daily doubles anymore in 2012." The regional expert took exception to my informed opinion, and retweeted my post with their own comment: "If you don't think athletes need daily doubles to get in shape and prepare for the season, you are clinically insane." Those last words in bold italics are an exact quotation. 11 years later, this place is still as toxic as ever. But alas, I am still here. Maybe I've been the problem all along. Happy tweeting everyone. DM me and I'll tell you who it was 🤣
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Matthew Hauck
Matthew Hauck@MdHCSCS·
@johncanzanobft I hope Ricci is at a minimum kept in the room for consulting for the hire *if* this process progresses. He's well respected with fans and fellow alumni.
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John Canzano
John Canzano@johncanzanobft·
Lots of smoke at Oregon State around Athletic Director Scott Barnes this week. Is he the guy to see this rebuild through? President Jayathi Murthy holds the vote that counts. Column: bit.ly/4dKmYYj
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Matthew Hauck
Matthew Hauck@MdHCSCS·
@AndrewNemec Can confirm- and thank goodness they are on the delivery apps too (for now)!
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Andrew Nemec
Andrew Nemec@AndrewNemec·
Cibo in Portland is insanely good. Right there for best traditional Italian in Portland. Appetizers, pizza, pasta, hanger steak - all amazing. Highly recommend - and as an Italian I don’t do that very often.
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Matthew Hauck
Matthew Hauck@MdHCSCS·
@AdamArchuleta I trained under @Results_Period who was influenced by Jay for portions of our programming & cited you as an example. We did lots of isos, ballistics, and VBT in those days. I ran a 4.8 but got down to 4.44; not as fast as you of course 🤣 but the proof was in the pudding.
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Adam Archuleta
Adam Archuleta@AdamArchuleta·
I first heard this 30 years ago at age 17, when my trainer Jay Schroeder DRILLED it into my soul. I still remember the day we met. He told me, “I don’t want you to squat 450 pounds in 3 seconds… I want you to squat 350 pounds in ½ second. THAT’S power.” To train with him, he forced me to write a daily training log that timed the concentric portion of EVERY rep, EVERY set, EVERY exercise with a stopwatch. I did this for 6 straight months before he allowed me to train at his gym. It took over an hour daily to write the log, but what I learned about my body and performance was invaluable. Training with this intent changes everything: to move max weights at high speed, EVERYTHING matters. Technique and position must be flawless, no power leaks. You learn to eccentrically LOAD, not just drop with gravity and momentum. My body awareness skyrocketed. Speed is king. Details and intention matter. I stopped caring about increasing my max and started caring about moving my max FASTER. It’s the primary reason I transformed myself from a walk-on who ran 4.8 to a first-round pick who ran 4.3.
Josh Bryant@joshstrength

Division 1 football players training in a compensatory acceleration style (CAT) upper body strength regimen were compared to a traditional regimen in their off-season. The CAT group was instructed to perform the positive rep as explosively as possible. The traditional group performed repetitions at a traditional tempo. At the end of both off-season training programs, both power and strength were assessed. Power was tested with a seated medicine ball throw and a force platform plyometric push-up test. Strength was assessed by a one rep max in the bench press. Both groups increased strength and power. The group that trained in a Compensatory Acceleration Training (CAT) style improved their bench press by nearly double the amount of the traditional group. Average power, as expected, increased significantly more in the group that trained explosively. Jones, K. K., Hunter, G. G., Fleisig, G. G., Escamilla, R. R., & Lemak, L. L. (1999). The effects of compensatory acceleration on upper-body strength and power in collegiate football players. Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research (Allen Press Publishing Services Inc.), 13(2), 99-105. Practical Application Fred Hatfield was ahead of his time advocating Compensatory Acceleration Training. It is simply superior! Training adaptations are not just a result of weight on the bar. Adaptations from training are a byproduct of tension and duration. You respond to how much force produced, how fast the force was produced, how long you produced it, and how many times you produced it. Force=mass x acceleration. More tension is result of greater bar speed. Maximal strength training and power adaptations can result from lifting weights with maximal force; one more reason to compensatorily accelerate weights.

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Matthew Hauck
Matthew Hauck@MdHCSCS·
@BrendanThompsn It’s refreshing to read thoughtful dialogue on this topic from an informed viewpoint. I think the FTC program has great qualities, and think the same as you regarding contextual aerobic capacity and cardiac development.
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Brendan Thompson, PT, DPT
Brendan Thompson, PT, DPT@BrendanThompsn·
Going to jump into this CIVIL speed vs capacity discourse… it feels right given Tony and I just presented at the same clinic on our systems. I’ll start with our similarities, our differences, and why we can strongly disagree on the presence / absence of items in our respective systems while remaining friendly, respecting one another, and do so without tearing each other down. @pntrack and I agree on the majority of what a sound system should be based around… • Prioritizing speed • Keeping kids healthy • Building up elements that complement speed such as strength, plyos, jump, etc. • Reinforcing a culture where athletes love to train, they trust you, they want to be coached by you, and everything adjacent to that Where we disagree: • I’m a fan of contextual tempo, fitness, “aerobic base”, etc as they pertain to various sprint events • I send my sprinters further than 200m in practice periodically • That’s pretty much it… though very passionate topics for both of us Why we can co-exist, respect one another, and be friends: • My system will have results that exist, no matter what Tony does or doesn’t believe in, disagree with, etc. • Tony’s system will have results that exist, no matter what I do or don’t believe in, disagree with, etc. • His success has no effect on my livelihood, nor does mine have any effect on his • While we have a difference of opinion on certain things, we are adult enough to joke with one another about said differences Once upon a time Tony and I didn’t speak for probably 2 years over our very public differences. We buried the hatchet and have spent tons of great, productive time on calls, presentations, zooms, and more comparing and contrasting our thoughts and ideas surrounding training. While we may not see eye to eye on 100% of our coaching ideologies, I leave every single one of our interactions better, sharper, and more refined than I was before. Tony deserves a lot of credit for the FTC movement, challenging the status quo, and standing up for athletes when some don’t even know (nor care) about their athletes’ all around wellbeing and desire to be in our sport of choice. There are many ways to skin a cat… and that’s okay! As long as we are getting consistent, sustainable results… athletes want to be coached by you… want to be in your program… their needs are being prioritized over your ego… and all of the other things… at the end of the day… do what you’re going to do… and you can do it without having to tear someone else down. “Blowing out someone else’s candle doesn’t make yours shine any brighter” Be kind. Thanks for reading. Have a great day⚡️
Tony Holler@pntrack

“You don't lose because you aren't fast enough. You lose because you can't repeat it.” ??? 🤔 Some people want to believe that repeat sprint ability is more important than speed. They want to tell hundreds of Sprint Based Football coaches they are wrong. People who focus their offseason training on improving strength and endurance have never witnessed the results of prioritizing speed. They don’t understand “prioritize” doesn’t mean “at the exclusion of everything else.” They don’t understand that effective football practices prepare players for the rigors of the game. They don’t understand that consistently-trained fast & explosive athletes are fit. They don’t understand that faster athletes are healthier athletes. They don’t understand capacity can be grown patiently on a foundation of speed and explosiveness. They don’t understand that you can’t maintain a speed you can’t achieve. “80% of all college football players never reach their ceiling of speed.” ~Boo Schexnayder I wonder why the NFL Combine doesn’t test 50x 40? #FTC

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Matthew Hauck
Matthew Hauck@MdHCSCS·
@_AlexGookin Was great being around him at Oregon State, and I’m very happy to see how he has progressed!
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Alex Gookin
Alex Gookin@_AlexGookin·
The Kyle Kempt story is one of the best in Cyclone history and I hope he continues to get his roses because there are few things cooler than a no-name walk-on becoming a CFB legend and then an NFL assistant. I love this guy.
Adam Rittenberg@ESPNRittenberg

Source: The Denver Broncos are set to hire Kyle Kempt as an offensive assistant. He spent last season as Drake’s offensive coordinator, after six years on staff at Iowa State, where he played quarterback under Matt Campbell.

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Matthew Hauck
Matthew Hauck@MdHCSCS·
@RyanTClarke I literally went to check his bio to see if you were just trolling him, and my goodness… lol You might even say, I clicked the link to read the original material 🤣
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Ryan Clarke
Ryan Clarke@RyanTClarke·
Your bio says “I don’t always get laid but when I do I tweet about it” I’m not sure I value your judgment on what is or isn’t embarrassing.
The Closer@ShmadsYoDad

@RyanTClarke Journalist trying to bully ppl into paying for articles might be the most embarrassing thing yall do but for some reason never stop!

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Diego Chara
Diego Chara@DiegoChara21·
Temporada 16. ¡Vamos! 💪🏿 #RCTID
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Matthew Hauck
Matthew Hauck@MdHCSCS·
@EuhusBeaver The stories that could be told- like the Vietnam vet I had as a position coach in HS🤣 I know basketball coaches have gotten the attention lately but my goodness… to be a fly on the wall during halftime- or a practice the 3rd week of August when things ain’t going well. HR = 😳
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Marcus McMaryion
Marcus McMaryion@MM2_Era·
Why do coaches care about GPA? Because there’s no such thing as a “dumb football player” anymore — especially in the transfer portal era. When I transferred from Oregon State University to Fresno State, I learned this fast. Same game. Different language. At Fresno State under Kalen DeBoer we called a coverage “4 Special.” At Oregon State? “4 Packer.” Strong Safety at Fresno = “SS.” On my board I’d tag it “R” (Rover). Post / Corner concept at OSU = “Peel.” At Fresno = “Scissors.” 10-yard out + MOS fade at OSU = “Sonic.” At Fresno = “Seattle.” Outside Zone run at OSU = “Dagger.” At Fresno = “Detroit.” Different words. Same concepts. If you can’t process information quickly... If you can’t translate terminology… If you can’t learn a new system in weeks instead of months… You won’t survive the portal. GPA isn’t about being a “school guy.” It’s proof you can learn, adapt, and execute. And in today’s game — that’s non-negotiable. Smart is the new strong.
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Matthew Hauck
Matthew Hauck@MdHCSCS·
Is building your own AMS creating leverage for your career, or putting your organization in a dangerous, never-ending hamster wheel? I've lived both ends of the story, and here is what sport scientists, performance & medical staffs, GMs & ADs should know:
Matthew Hauck@MdHCSCS

'24: #NUFC collected >16 million data points per player. '25: I outlined hidden dangers & why sports organizations need to evaluate how to manage data. '26: An update to my data management piece, with new issues. With AI tools, analysis plug-ins, and enterprise platform needs only increasing, an important question arises: Who is going to actual manage all the data, and how? sportpassportusa.com/post/updated-t…

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Matthew Hauck
Matthew Hauck@MdHCSCS·
'24: #NUFC collected >16 million data points per player. '25: I outlined hidden dangers & why sports organizations need to evaluate how to manage data. '26: An update to my data management piece, with new issues. With AI tools, analysis plug-ins, and enterprise platform needs only increasing, an important question arises: Who is going to actual manage all the data, and how? sportpassportusa.com/post/updated-t…
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Steven Ventura
Steven Ventura@StevenVent101·
@NobletStrength Fair point, I suppose I was trying to draw a more general conclusion that mimicking pro strength routines for teenagers is not a good idea.
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Steven Ventura
Steven Ventura@StevenVent101·
It’s commonly believed that training load should be REDUCED as younger player start to mature. A classic example is the PSV Academy, where teenagers move from + 10 hours on the football pitch down to 4 hours. But what does the research show? The training load hypothesis was studied at Bournemouth’s Academy. Before intervention, U13/U14 players trained 5 hours and 45 minutes including strength and conditioning (S&C), with 3 full rest days; U15/U16 players trained 7 hours and 15 minutes including S&C, with 2 full rest days. The study identified high-risk players and implemented the following interventions. Sessions replaced high-impact content (e.g. sprints, decelerations) with more technical drills; balance work; individualised strength training and generally lower high intensity exercise. The result? An 85% reduction in the total number of injuries at the academy, and a 92% reduction in number of hours lost to injury. Moral of the story for grassroots youth development coaches: train smartly (mainly with a football) and leave the fancy gym work to the fully matured pros. @TheS_Resource @afcb_academy
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Matthew Hauck
Matthew Hauck@MdHCSCS·
-A handful of OSAA POY's -Dozens of college players -NFL veterans, a Super Bowl Champ -An athlete Jim Harbaugh called "the perfect football player" LO's Strength & Conditioning coach Mark McLaughlin was no stranger to success before 2025 title. sportpassportusa.com/post/lake-oswe…
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Matthew Hauck
Matthew Hauck@MdHCSCS·
"If they don't want to be there for their own reasons it's not going to matter. I hope that point is well received" -Mark McLaughlin With #SBLX coming up and drawing football season to a close, a look back at Oregon's 6A high school football in 2025 tells a story about the seeds of dominance for @LOLakersFB laid by their strength & conditioning coach @Results_Period sportpassportusa.com/post/lake-oswe…
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Matthew Hauck
Matthew Hauck@MdHCSCS·
@johncanzanobft Best advice for someone carving a new path and telling stories from the sports ecosystem?
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John Canzano
John Canzano@johncanzanobft·
Monday Mailbag is out tomorrow. What's on your mind? Ask away. Have fun with it. Best questions make the cut.
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