StrengthCoachNetwork

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StrengthCoachNetwork

@StrCoachNetwork

🏋️‍♂️Where Strength Coaches Continue Their Education | 📚 Save on CEUs with SCN | Links For More Info ⏬️

가입일 Mayıs 2020
615 팔로잉5.3K 팔로워
StrengthCoachNetwork
StrengthCoachNetwork@StrCoachNetwork·
This might be a bit extreme. So if an athlete usually jumps 30" and then they jump 26.8" they do mobility work? I would push back on this. At the LEAST have the athlete jump again and see if they jump higher. Coach the athlete, connect with the athlete. They are people, they are not data points.
Coach Benages@CoachBenages

We use CMJ testing to guide how our athletes train. A simple jump helps us see how ready the body & nervous system are so we can push when we are fresh & adjust when fatigue is high. It also helps our athletes understand that the choices we make today affect tomorrow. #Compete

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StrengthCoachNetwork
StrengthCoachNetwork@StrCoachNetwork·
This applies to S&C Coaches. If we tell our athletes to sleep, we need to model the behavior too. It's not a badge of honor to brag about lack of sleep. Does this mean there won't be extreme times when you do lack on sleep once or twice? No - this will happen OCCASIONALLY. It will be the exception not the rule.
Coach Dan Casey@CoachDanCasey

“I used to think it was cool to get away with not sleeping. That’s the dumbest sh*t I’ve ever heard. When your job is to deal with people, you need to establish health habits to sustain [yourself] when there’s a lot of external stressors.” - Sean McVay

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Adam Archuleta
Adam Archuleta@AdamArchuleta·
I’m on team Wendi here.
Wendi A. Irlbeck MS, RDN, LD, CISSN@Wendi_Irlbeck

Removing dumbbells under 40 pounds from a college weight room is a shortsighted, reckless and a harmful decision, especially when many incoming athletes particularly high school transfers or freshmen lack foundational strength. Why ignore basic principles in strength and conditioning, progressive overload, injury prevention, and guidelines from the NSCA?? Many College Athletes Arrive with Inadequate Foundational Strength High school athletes often enter college programs without a solid base of strength, proper movement patterns, or neuromuscular control. Research shows that supervised resistance training is safe and effective for youth/adolescents, but many high school programs lack qualified supervision or progressive structure, leaving gaps in basics like core stability, scapular control, hip hinge mechanics, or unilateral strength. NSCA position statements on youth resistance training emphasize starting with light loads to master technique, build foundational strength, and reduce injury risk before progressing to heavier weights. Studies indicate that young athletes benefit from multifaceted programs that include lighter loads for technique-driven work, which can lower sports-related injury rates by improving biomechanics and joint stability. For these athletes, jumping straight to 40+ lb dumbbells risks poor form, compensatory patterns, and overuse injuries (e.g., shoulder impingement from unstable pressing or knee valgus in lunges). Light dumbbells (5–35 lbs) allow safe skill acquisition and volume building without ego-driven overload. Progressive overload involves systematically increasing demands (weight, reps, sets, tempo, etc.) to force adaptation. You can’t effectively progress if the entry point is too high. Beginners or underprepared athletes need lighter loads (often <60% 1RM) to accumulate volume, improve endurance, refine technique, and build work capacity before heavier training. Continued 👇 🧵

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StrengthCoachNetwork
StrengthCoachNetwork@StrCoachNetwork·
If you do not know who Coach Mason Bergen @MB1_Bergen is then you need to give him a follow and learn from him. His presentation on training the multi-sport athlete is fantastic. Basing it on 2 sport, 3 sport, or 4 sport principles. Bravo Coach
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StrengthCoachNetwork
StrengthCoachNetwork@StrCoachNetwork·
Shout out @NebStrength for the clinic they put on. First class. From the logistical organization down to the networking they put on a great event. Shout out everyone on the board that put this on - y'all should be proud.
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Joseph Potts
Joseph Potts@TopSpeedLLC·
Anyone vetted the OVR timing gates?
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StrengthCoachNetwork
StrengthCoachNetwork@StrCoachNetwork·
@ScottRussellOLY @the1jml @TopSpeedLLC Love Dashr Silver - just as accurate as the blue Have not seen coaches like Freelap. One coach I work with is trying to sell his cuz it stopped working - that is what just about all coaches say who what the FL. Dashr Silver makes COD timing better than any other gates.
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StrengthCoachNetwork
StrengthCoachNetwork@StrCoachNetwork·
@the1jml @TopSpeedLLC Dashr all day - especially the silvers. Way easier to set them up to time athletes 8 vector COD. Accel, max v, and curve work is easy of course.
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Noah Cornell
Noah Cornell@CoachCornell·
@the1jml @TopSpeedLLC Dashr is great…. When it works. Have had serious inconsistencies with it actually tracking the start/stop, especially when it’s sunny out. OVR all the way imo
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StrengthCoachNetwork
StrengthCoachNetwork@StrCoachNetwork·
There seems to be a new trend in S&C where coaches don't want to do conditioning work with their athletes. In this episode you will learn why you need to condition them. Jonah Rosner is a sport scientist, performance coach, and the founder of Marathon Science, a platform dedicated to translating cutting-edge endurance research into practical insights for runners and hybrid athletes. He previously worked in the NFL and now focuses on helping endurance athletes train smarter through evidence-based training, nutrition, and performance strategies. Click below for the full episode: youtube.com/watch?v=LUBGB4…
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Adam Archuleta
Adam Archuleta@AdamArchuleta·
@MarkHoover71 @StrCoachNetwork Just to be clear: My interest on this platform is NOT to debate. I’ve rarely talked publicly about my journey/story over the last 20 years (and even downplay it), but when I share what I think are simple anecdotes with people in my circle, it typically ends up leaving a profound impact on people that I never realized. Until a few weeks ago I didn’t participate on social media, but I’ve been strongly encouraged for quite some time by friends and mentors to start sharing, so here we are! I’ll be the first to say that Jay’s system isn’t the be all end all. I’ve met a lot of people with competing ideas who are doing great work. However, I will also say that what Jay and I did together almost 30 years ago WAS revolutionary and ahead of its time. While many have heard of my story, they only really know just the tip of the iceberg. What I learned and experienced during those years could fill dozens of books with life lessons and is far more valuable than any college degree. I’m want to share these I’m still learning how to use this platform - my communication style is brutally direct and can be off putting for some, but I try to be authentic and certainly don’t want to come across in a disrespectful way. Appreciate it all! 🙏
Mark Hoover@MarkHoover71

I warned you about choosing violence the other day 😂😂 jk of course. Love your takes. My honest thought is the word “conditioning” just has a different meaning for everyone. The debate is usually just semantics. I’m sure your son’s team is in quite good condition using Jay’s philosophy. I will say that Justin Lima @StrCoachNetwork is a A+ person and you will enjoy being on his pod. I believe it will be more of conversation of shared ideas than a debate. For selfish reasons (I want to hear you on this topic more!) I think it will be an excellent conversation!

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StrengthCoachNetwork
StrengthCoachNetwork@StrCoachNetwork·
@Coach_Moore_BU Amen on this Make practice the conditioning. Exactly! Get the number of players with the work to rest ratio you want to replicate in games and scenarios and bravo!
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Coach Moore MS, CSCS
Coach Moore MS, CSCS@Coach_Moore_BU·
This is good dialogue. My philosophy on conditioning is simple. You as the WR Coach, DL coach, etc, you have to motivate your kids to go full speed in practice during full speed periods. That’s our conditioning. I’m never doing sprints at the end of practice if I’m a head coach.
StrengthCoachNetwork@StrCoachNetwork

We can talk about this and other things. Here are my thoughts on your post: "The ability to hold perfect position, technique, and max speed/power longer than your opponent." You can say that there is never perfect position and therefore working with athletes to still make the best out of bad position is key. "Once you lose the capacity to maintain technique and position, your advantage is gone." You can say this is exactly why it needs to be trained at lower levels to make the skill automatic - much like referenced in Supertraining by Mel and Yuri "Sub maximal "conditioning" doesn't build that." Why not? You can work on it in practice and training - and then go let it rip in games. Athletes don't hit full speed every single play/snap in practice - yet they perform on gameday. "In fact, it works against it. It detrains the CNS and makes you slower, less powerful, and more prone to injury when it matters." How so? Where is the data to back that up. Detrains the CNS - again now? The nervous system can recover from the hard training (a game) with lower level work - but can still get work done during the week, and thus perform on gameday, "If being a high performer is king, then by its very nature "conditioning" will always be my sworn enemy!!" Again, why? Conditioning is the ability to recover from play to play, series to series, game to game, week to week, season to season, etc...why would that be your sworn enemy (with 2 exclimation marks none the less)? This ability to recover and keep performing helps make athletes higher performers. "Train to stay fast and dominant under real duress, not just to "not get tired."" 100% train to stay fast and dominant under real duress - which is game duress. Nothing in practice simulates the pressure of fans/TV/etc...nothing I said was advocating to train athletes to only not get tired. Not getting tired and being fast don't have to be something to choose between. It is a false dichotomy. Thanks again for considering!

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