Good, or great?

Posted June 15th, 2009 by Mackey and filed in Fitness
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Was away playing this weekend–recap coming later this week (short version: ’twas awesome).

In the meantime, Vern Gambetta is to the point (and on point): are you happy being good, or are you driven to strive for greatness?

If you’re content, you’re useless. What have you done to get better today?

Energy Systems and Training Demands–What’s Missing in the Big Picture

Posted June 7th, 2009 by Mackey and filed in Fitness
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In light of Xi Xia’s article on the Huddle about the brevity of ultimate points and the ensuing discussion, I thought the topic bears some revisiting.

Re-framing of the energy demands of ultimate

Taking the average point (not play segment) duration rounded up to 40 seconds, and with a conservative estimate pegging every game at 15-15 for 30 points/game we get an estimated 40 sec/pt x 30 pt/game = 1200 seconds, or 20 minutes, of “active” play per game. And we’re not even factoring in stoppages or “standing time” for your pulls, stack-setting players or non-active handlers, etc.

20 minutes.

In a conservative estimate1. Football seems to be in a similar timeframe for active play with all its stoppages…in terms of a single game’s demands, ultimate doesn’t strike one as particularly taxing endurance-wise, at a glance.

Set the notion of “taxing on endurance” aside for a minute. We have 20 minutes of action a game as a baseline figure. How spread out are those 20 minutes (In other words, what’s the work-to-rest ratio)?

You have to figure your typical ultimate tourney has rounds of at least an hour, some closer to 1:40-2:00 rounds. This pegs your work:rest ratio at anywhere between 1:3 and 1:6.

NOW, factor in that a given player likely only plays one way2–let’s assume again our 15-15 game, which presupposes even O/D loads (give or take a point depending on how the breaks lay at halftime). We can halve the effective workload, so now we’re talking about activity in the 1:6 to 1:12 work:rest range! You don’t have to be a sport physio to know that those kinds of rest intervals put activity squarely in the sprint/explosive range. Granted, it’s not just work:rest interval but the duration of effort that determines aerobic vs. anaerobic, but XX has established pretty well that typical play segment durations are not extending significantly beyond stressing your glycolytic (in other words, you’re still operating primarily in your anaerobic range).

All of this suggests that preparation should first and foremost be sprint work–exactly what XX advocates in the article.

But there’s more to it than just one game.

Parinella brings up a good point that we should perhaps be training for those points at the long end of the tail. Those can be more important than the quick, “easy” points–think of the morale swing that comes with winning/losing hell points3. The last thing you want is to lose for lack of conditioning on a drawn-out universe point.

More relevant in my mind, though, is the issue of ultimate as a Tournament. We almost never play just One Game of Ultimate–summer league, perhaps, but at any serious level of commitment you’ve got 3,4,5 games a day for 2-3 days (your extended 2-a-day Nationals formats are the exception, rather than the rule). That’s your 20 (10) minutes of action multiplied a few times and spread out. Regardless of how you’re training at home–whether it’s sprint-focused, or more aerobically inclined–you’re not putting your body under that kind of prolonged yet intermittent and intense demand, so your body invariably hates you by the time you’re piling in cars and vans Sunday afternoon (if not on Saturday night at the hotel).

The issue I’ve always had with training for tournaments revolves around this dichotomy between the intensity of a game–start, stop, change direction, sprint, break–and the extended timeframe of it all. Sure, you can get up for a single game, but can you get up for two? three? four? The third game the day after you’ve played four?

What impacts day-of performance?

For one, recovery.

While not directly relating to training itself, tournament nutrition is crucial for effective recovery of energy (primarily glycogen and electrolyte) stores over the course of a day and weekend. (To say nothing of pre-tournament nutrition). Even the best-conditioned athletes will run out of gas and cramp up if they don’t eat/hydrate properly.

For two, work capacity.

I refer you to Ross Enamait for a brief explanation and example workout4, but in short: work capacity is the ability to repeatedly perform at an intense (high) level. Sound familiar?

How do you train work capacity for ultimate? (Ross’ workouts are geared more toward the fighter’s short rounds–definitely some carryover there too). Seigs posed this question on his blog back when it still existed, and conventional wisdom seemed to be “play in more tournaments,” and let the principle of SAID (more here) take over, but I’m convinced there are better strategies than that, or at least alternatives.

I figure enough sufficiently strong training stresses in sequence–the equivalent of your football double sessions or the like–might do a good job of training work capacity; generally, I’m thinking in terms of stressors you can apply to ultimate athletes and then force them to perform at a high level in relatively short (but no too short) interval afterwards. For Dartmouth, where winter practice times tend to fall at late-night indoor locations or early-morning outdoor turf, perhaps having an intense track workout in the afternoon before an intense scrimmage/workout that evening, or a really hard conditioning session the evening before a morning hard scrimmage might do something to simulate that late-Sunday soreness that can be all too common–and, importantly, learn to work through it.

What are your thoughts? In college the two-a-day (two-a-<24 hour) seems to be fairly few and far between, but I'd love to hear your thoughts or experiences with that sort of thing, as well as any other thoughts on training/preparing to perform in the tournament setting.


1 Admittedly for elite men’s play; I’d love to see somebody do similar analysis for other levels (bring a stopwatch to a tournament!) and compare–factoring in the fact that not all games make it to 15-15 and myriad other conditions (weather forcing a relatively less physically demanding zone, etc), I don’t know that 20 minutes is too far off base for other levels too.

2 Yes, some players routinely play a larger percentage of points. However, even taking the baseline 1:3-1:6 figure you’re still getting enough recovery to sustain anaerobic activity.

3 There’s another topic worth exploring: how often does winning the hell point correspond with winning the game, or at least exceeding expectations? I’m thinking you take games and compare actual results to RRI predictions–of course, you’d need to time points and/or have some objective criterion to define a “hell point.” Time out use? Turnover count?

You could also frame it in terms of looking at “momentum”–does the hell point winner then go on to break the next point(s)? With relatively higher frequency than at other points in the game?

4 I highly recommend Infinite Intensity. Really sound advice and workout resources and ideas–it was the foundation which I built my original summer workout plan upon.

Treating Chronic Knee Issues: An E-Mail Case Study (Part 2)

Posted May 31st, 2009 by Mackey and filed in Fitness, injury treatment, lifting, workout plans
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Continued from the last post:

The pain has only been debilitating once: back in December on day 2 of a hat tourney. I basically couldn’t run, strong limp when walking.

By march (Dream Cup) it was fine, basically no irritation.

But then i kind of tweaked it training for Jeju, and it got worse over the tourney weekend. I played all the way through, but was maybe 70% in our last game. That was five weeks ago, been resting since.

The pain has now subsided significantly. Normal activity is fine, I feel a slight twinge on stairs sometimes, and when I have to run (to catch the train, etc.) it will sometimes hurt a bit. But not debilitating.

I’m determined to heal it properly this time. Would much rather miss a few summer tourneys than risk further damage and chronic pain.

I’ll give the Samson stretch and the other similar one a try — pictures would be great.

Yeah, the “reprogramming” concept makes sense. Think I’ll give it at least another week or two before starting squats/lunges, but I will definitely add that to the regiment before attempting a comeback. I do have pretty skinny and relatively weak legs, and have tended to focus on upper body lifting in the past — it’s time I gave my legs more attention.

Nope, never heard of foam rolling — any resources you have on that would be appreciated.  I’m open to trying anything, as long as it’s not too much too early.

Many thanks for the help.

What about your knee history? Did you get a doc or specialist to diagnose, or did you figure it out yourself? How long did it take to recover? How does it feel now?

I‘ll send you more info, etc when I’m at home and on my computer with its links.

As for my knee, I had troubles that dated back to my sophomore year of high school–as a long/triple jumper I wound up doing a number on them, in terms of high-impact stuff and the like…this resulted in what I’m pretty sure was a strain of my achilles, and compensating for that left me with knee issues–dull, aching pain, generally, usually cropping up after workouts but slowly cropping up during runs too–during the cross-country season fall of my junior year (which would be fall of…’03?). Coach figured it was chondromalacia patella, I got a cho-pat strap (it’s the band that goes under your knee, maybe you’re familiar with it?) and persevered. I didn’t have troubles with it swimming that winter, but then when track season rolled around again it gave me a lot of trouble with my jumping on and off. As I recall I had a solid season, didn’t need to use the strap all that much, but had the occasional week or two where I needed it.

Enter college (I graduated from high school a year early). Freshman year it again bugged me on and off–generally speaking, when I was careless and didn’t warm down properly, etc it would catch up to me. Playing troubles were on and off–I got in the habit of playing with the knee strap, though sometimes it didn’t seem to make much of a difference, but almost every post-tournament/practice ride that involved my knee being still for more than 20 minutes or so would result in a dull ache. I had the occasional bout of tendinitis too, with swelling underneath the kneecap…this all continued through my sophomore year as well, though by this time I had started reading up on it and trying to train to prevent it, and, as I recall, got it under control enough that by Regionals time that year I felt great and could play at 100%, no reservations (and had one of my best/most memorable games there).

Junior year I made some real progress. Or rather, sophomore summer I made a lot of progress–I was on-campus for classes, like most of my classmates (a unique perk of the Dartmouth calendar leaves sophomores more or less in charge of the campus during the summer), but had a lax schedule and a lot of motivation, so I was hitting the gym routinely. Crossfit entered the picture, and combined with a LOT of fitness reading before and during (and after) the summer, and some good nutrition, I made some really great athletic prowess. I discovered deadlifting, started getting into squatting properly, and incorporated things like the samson stretch into my routine, as well as some other stuff specifically for my knee (and ankles, both of which I’d rolled that year, I think), including the other stretch I recommended to you and the shoulder bridges.

Junior year (’06-’07) I had a lot less trouble with the knee–I think there were a couple brief instances where I got lazy with stretching and the like and it bugged me, but I was really proactive about icing and resting at those points. I took ibu at every tourney I played in, a habit I still maintain (though I usually don’t when training anymore, as my workouts aren’t so long as to have inflammation crop up and be an issue). As I recall (and I may be mis-recalling) my real litmus test was playing in Vegas that winter, and after three days of ultimate it was doing pretty darn well as I recall (I started wearing the strap on the third day as I was starting to feel something, but it never got so bad as to make me consider not playing)…it wasn’t 100% but it generally gave me a lot less grief. The strap was still a mainstay, though more as a precaution at that point.

Senior year (’07-’08) I don’t think I ever had any trouble with my knee. Nothing leaps to mind, at least–I played a lot, and played well, and without injury. Really just a spectacular year.

So I’d say a few months of dedicated, hard work got me to the point where I was playing competitively without too much worry about relapse, and another year on top of that put me in the clear. Lately though I’ve been really lazy with my fitness, and I’m starting to see some of the old symptoms crop back up–it’s mostly a flexibility issue for me, with my quads being too tight, though I think my hamstrings are also too weak/tight now too. Planning to keep foam rolling / stretching and bring back some lifting to help with all that–really need to get my ass back in gear, both for playing these last months here and hopefully for latching on with a halfway decent club team when I get back to the states in August.

And my follow-up, later:

Sorry for the delay getting back to you.

You might give this blog a look for information on foam rolling. There’s a crapton of information there (and linked from it–the links can give you some good in-depth stuff): The short is to get a foam roller and start using it on your quads, hips, and hamstrings and calves, focusing on kneading out knotted-up issues and, if you’re up to the task, applying extended pressure to the tight spots until the muscles loosen up a bit.

Regular foam rolling will do wonders for your muscle health and flexibility.

For pictures of the Samson stretch, a quick google image search gives you a good idea there (keep in mind you don’t need to go out THAT far, especially when you’re just starting), but a better idea can be had in this PDF. I <3 Crossfit. The other stretch I mentioned to you is a little more intense; it basically involves using SOMETHING to put your foot up on–whether that’s a bench, or back against a wall, etc–to force your leg into flexion: this emphasizes a different part of your quadriceps when you stretch, and it’s one that tends to be chronically tight in most (it was and, now again, is in me). You might find this helpful for assessing the state of your hips–everything is connected. If you’re going to take the stress off the knees, it needs to be taken in somewhere else–the hips are that place.

Lastly, you might be especially interested in this bit on bulletproof knees.

I think that article might describe the stretch I mentioned above–I’d check it right now, but I’m still at work and the site is full of bodybuilder pics. Can’t start a rumor like THAT.

There’s plenty to sift through there; feel free to hit me with impressions and I can try and give my experience in some more detail.

Hope that’s all helpful! There’s a bit on the “mobility” topic in the bulletproof knees article, but I owe you a better resource than that–unfortunately, a lot of what I’ve learned about that has been in-person, or with DVD’s I’ve bought, so your luck is probably as good as mine trying to dig that info up.


Any readers have good recommendations for resources on mobility work? I know there are bits and pieces scattered about the internets, but anybody know some nice compiled (free) resources? I’m talking mobility drills and the like, not foam rolling.

Treating Chronic Knee Issues: An E-Mail Case Study (Part 1)

Posted May 27th, 2009 by Mackey and filed in Fitness, injury treatment, lifting, workout plans
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I thought I’d post up the e-mail transcript of an exchange between myself and a reader–as a former JET, we got talking about ultimate and life in Japan, and eventually about his knee troubles, a topic I’ve a done a lot of reading, experimenting, and self-diagnosis/treatment in. (UPDATE: Part 2, with links to some resources, is here).

Hopefully it proves useful/instructive for those of you out there with knee pain or similar trouble. Without further ado:

It all started on a long jog back in December. Next day there was a little discomfort above the right kneecap. Tried to play through it at a hat tourney in Vietnam–bad idea. Rested for two months, pain/discomfort basically went away just in time for DC in March. Whew.

But the pain returned a month ago at a tourney in Jeju (Korea). Same process: niggle at first, then progressively gets worse. I’ve rested since, and it’s better, but this time the pain is more diffuse: sometimes above the kneecap, sometimes medial, sometimes… everywhere.

X-ray and MRI say no structural damage; two docs say just rest. One mumbled something about jumper’s knee, but I doubt it because the pain is mildest below the kneecap. Symptoms are soreness in the morning, and dull to acute pain when standing from a sitting position, or sometimes going up/down stairs. I also experienced sudden bouts of severe pain when sitting for long periods on a recent flight to Atlanta. Strange, and scary.

I can accept resting for as long as it takes to heal properly. But I’m 31, and can’t help but worry that this is serious and might not just go away. I’m looking for a knee specialist around Tokyo, but no luck so far. Not really knowing is the worse part, know what I mean?

That bites. Ultimate’s a terrible sport for that sort of thing too, with all the high impact combined with the weekend-long duration…I assume you already use it, but ibuprofen is mandatory when you play–from the sound of it, if you don’t have any structural damage you’re likely feeling the pain from inflammation and swelling. The aching when you fly has to do with the pressure differences, as well as just the lack of movement from the tight confines; I’ve gotten that sometimes too, with ankles (rolled both at one point or another) and the knee (a few years ago when it was still an issue)…though not the “sharp pain” you describe. Weird indeed. They’ve definitively ruled out meniscal tears?

It certainly sounds like there’s some tendinitis/tendonosis, even if it’s not jumper’s knee. How are you flexibility/strength wise? I always had knee issues when my legs were so tight that it affected my footstrike and kept my hips from taking the brunt of the impact. I’d wager you’ve got tight hips and (perhaps) quads, tight/weak hamstrings, and perhaps tight calves too (the latter is more of a personal thing for me rather than what I’ve read/seen, but it might apply to you). Especially if you’re sitting all day and don’t do a lot of training with mobility in mind (ie, if you run lots but don’t do much in the way of squatting or lunging or the like).

Are you familiar with the Samson stretch? (I can probably get you a .pdf with more details if you want). Great for loosening up the hips/quads, good for daily stretching and highly recommended for pre- and post-workout/play. If you don’t do squats or lunges or the like I’d definitely recommend getting into them–I can get you LOTS more information to that end. Docs in the states might tell you to avoid squatting but with the right technique (going to the right depth, and engaging the right muscles), it’s far more protective than destructive.

Here’s the rehab menu from the last doc:

1. Sit with legs dangling, massage quad vigorously (like meading).

2. Sit with legs stretched out in front and knee slightly bent, massage calf.

3. Sit with legs stretched out in front and small pillow directly under knee, engage quad by pushing down on pillow. Hold quad, especially inner quad muscles tight for 3 secs, slowly release.

4. Sit with legs stretched out in front and gently massage kneecap forward (towards toes). He says my kneecap is likely being pulled up (towards head) by tight quad and calf muscles, and this off-centering is causing irritation.

5. A new exercise is lying down face-up and with knees bent, and lifting butt off the ground until the body is straight (knees still bent). Focusing on core, butt and hamstring muscles.

I’ve been following this regimen pretty consistently over the last month, and there is improvement. But something is def still off. The last few days, for example, I’ve been feeling pain in the inner knee area. But other times its medial, or above. Strange, and frustrating.

Not sure if I’m ready for the Samson stretch — seems like a fairly intense exercise, want to make sure I don’t aggravate the knee. But will give it a try. Any other advice for low-impact strengthening exercises for the quads and hammies?

How bad is the pain?  Is it debilitating?

I’d imagine you could step up the vigor a bit if this stuff isn’t pushing you too hard. For instance, on that last one you do (I know them as “shoulder bridges”), you could try doing them on a single leg with the other extended straight–I’d also recommend keeping your hands on your butt cheeks while you do it, and really focus on contracting those muscles (the extra tactile sense from the touch can help you body figure out what muscles to activate). 

Based on the other stuff, it sounds like you’ve probably got chronic tightness and weakness in the quads…the Samson stretch might sound intense, but you can definitely ease into it and I think it’d do you a lot of good. A similar stretch that’d probably hit the areas you need to stretch really well is pretty similar–the same lunge position, but you put the foot of your back leg up on a bench or other raised surface such that the back leg is bent–this will focus the stretch on a deeper part of the quad, that I think tends to contribute a bit more to the knee pain.  I can dig up pictures or the like if you need a better explanation than that.

In terms of strengthening, my knee troubles coincided with an inner quad strength/mobility deficit–specifically, my right Vastus Medialis (VMO–the “teardrop” shape) was a lot smaller and activated (contracted) a lot less easily than my left, and I had right knee troubles.  Again, doing some stuff single-leg can likely help with this (holding the top position on single-leg shoulder bridges, for instance).  If you’re able to find a trainer and able to bear some weight/range of motion, getting somebody knowledgeable to coach you in doing lunges or Bulgarian squats or other single-leg types of exercises can help a lot.

The one issue I’d raise with all the rehab stuff you’re doing–all of which makes sense and is reasonable to prescribe–is that, while it addresses the muscular deficits (strength and flexibility), it’s not doing much to reinforce good movement habits–in other words, it might fix the symptom, but your body is at this point probably so used to, for instance, running whilst compensating for the deficiencies that without some kind of re-programming you’re probably going to continually struggle.

That’s why I think it’d be a good idea to incorporate good lunges and perhaps some squatting or even deadlifting into the mix eventually.  Doing those exercises with decent form and the right sort of flexibility/strength will help reinforce good habits, and if, for instance, you do mobility drills (again, something I can send you more info on) as part of your warm-ups, it’ll help continue to reinforce good habits.

One last thing–are you familiar with foam rolling at all?  This email is long enough, but it’d probably go a LONG way towards helping you improve your mobility if you haven’t been doing it yet.

Yeah.  So, let me know if you want me to dig up some resources for that stuff.  I’m not surprised if your rehab specialists haven’t been aware of this sort of stuff, as thinking in terms of mobility, foam rolling, and the like is still more…hm, cutting-edge, and has only recently started getting enough data and support that it’s becoming popular, accepted, and therefore, taught to aspiring therapy professionals.

More to come in a later post, including some resource references.  Anyone out there have advice or insight to offer that I’m missing?  Especially if you think I’m talking out of my ass at any point I’d love to be corrected–I’m basing this largely off my own history, along with some advising of teammates, so I’m hardly a professional.

Strategizing For Better Results

Posted May 15th, 2009 by Mackey and filed in Fitness, diet
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I don’t follow Alwyn Cosgrove’s stuff with any regularity these days, but this post speaks to a simple concept that’s worth applying: strategy trumps will.

I’m not talking about a smart zone D shutting down a squad of fired-up athletes–I’m talking about your day-to-day life.

It’s great to SAY that you want to work hard this summer and get in shape for the club series/next year’s college season, and to some extent that desire can go a long way towards motivating your training; however, willpower is given to waxing and waning. We respect those singular athletes with seemingly endless willpower because they are so rare.

However, if you currently have the willpower to want to work hard, you should have the willpower to sit down and THINK and PLAN what you want to do. AC gives a nice diet-related example:

…I believe it is more important to build in good strategies. For example, if you eat ice cream every night, rather than trying to “be good” and resist it, simply remove it from the house. If you consistently visit the vending machine because you don’t have time to go to lunch, your strategy would be to pack your lunch the night before and bring it with you.

Recognize the limitations of your situation. Is the trip to the gym too far for you to always make it after class/work, when your energy is low? Get a training buddy who will pick you up (and remove your choice in the matter), or find/create a situation where it becomes more convenient (if you have access to multiple gyms, plan on going to one that’s on the way home, near the campus dining hall, etc). Consider going before work/class, when you (might) have more energy. Can’t stop from eating crap at home? Stop bringing crap home and cut it off at the source. Have trouble figuring out what to do while you’re in the gym? Start keeping a training diary, and pencil in your workouts in advance–or get a coach/trainer or somebody you trust and respect to do the planning for you.

Good strategizing means getting to the source of your issues and taking a good look at yourself–if you’re just going through the motions, take a look at why the motions go the way they do, give your body (and mindset) some different inputs, or place it in a different framework, and see if you can’t get better results.

I’ve harped on this plenty before, but to some extent this is all part of good goal setting and planning, especially when we’re talking about fitness.

Must-read for all ultimate athletes.

Posted May 6th, 2009 by Mackey and filed in Fitness
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Brilliant.

You can, of course, argue that in college/high school (particularly in the “slower” women’s game) that these intervals are likely longer, but the same general tenets and ideas apply.

You might note the Crossfit affiliation of the writer; this is a good thing in my mind, but I’m heavily biased.

This is the sort of stuff I’ve got (and had) on tap mentally over the past several days, as I start thinking more and more about the How of Coaching next year, rather than the If or What. Lots to look forward to.

Update: Holy crap, that’s a lot of comments. Looks like the Huddle really struck a nerve.

Training the lunge for better throwing

Posted April 25th, 2009 by Mackey and filed in Fitness, lifting, throwing
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I’m not talking the standard step-forward, push back up type, I’m talking stepping at angles and especially stepping sideways. You’ll see a noticeable improvement in your pivoting speed, which will in turn allow you to develop more effective fakes and generally become more capable with the disc in your hands.

Frank (of RSD fame) talks about people being off-balance with their throwing positions because they step out too wide; if you can develop enough strength, these positions are far from off-balance (though you can still over-extend in the context of a given situation/against a given mark). Work to extend your absolute pivot range through better flexibility and strength (lunging can help with both–heavier weight obviously means more of a strength emphasis, but you can work on your mobility with adequate work in these positions too), and practice your pivots and fakes to extend your practical pivot range.

As for specific recommendations, simple standing side-to-side lunges, or 45 degree lunges (stepping across your center or away from it), are what I have in mind here.

Weight/rep ranges really don’t need to be that intense–pivoting is plyometric in nature, so relatively light loading (if you’re in 12-20 rep range you’ll probably still see an effect) should still be enough to stimulate a positive adaptation, especially if you’ve never trained it before. You probably don’t need to get much heavier than 8 or 6 reps, especially if it’s light enough that you can really explode up out of each lunge.

Other lunge variations include standing lunges (stepping both forwards and backwards), walking lunges, and (a personal favorite) bulgarian squats. These, however, are all in the sagittal plane, and won’t carry over to action in the frontal plane (pivoting).

The lunge position itself is pretty important to throwing well and consistently–more on that in a later post, but regardless you can only stand to improve as a player if you improve in your lunging.

UPDATE: Some good addendums with other exercise can be had in the comments–definitely worth a look.

Spring Training

Posted April 3rd, 2009 by Mackey and filed in Fitness, lifting, workout plans
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It’s been a good long while since I’ve written about training, but here’s a peek at the sort of stuff I’m doing for training this month and have been doing, albeit more sparsely, over the previous couple months. I have a tourney to look forward to again (end of the month)!, and the prospect of playing competitively! at a few more thereafter too, so it’s high time I got my ass back in gear!

Conditioning: Tabata hill sprints. Started off with more generous intervals (10 seconds on/20 seconds off) earlier in the winter, finally got to the actual 20/10 interval today for only 4 reps, which was a struggle (it was–brace for it–an uphill battle). Lots of room for progress to be made there still; I might downgrade to flat running to shoot for a full set, but I like the extra intensity the hill offers.

General Physical Preparedness (conditioning pt. 2): Burpees. Simple and damn effective, bang ‘em out and then bang ‘em out some more.

Strength: Circuits, using my weight set at home (no convenient gym in rural Japan). Don’t have a ton of weight to load, so this usually means deadlift to bent-over rows to hang power clean to front squat to push press/OH press (to back squat) circuits until I get a burn (usually 8-10 reps, depending on how much weight I’m using), and usually a bit more focus on the squats/deadlifts to work the legs a bit more. I’m in poor shape strength-wise so it doesn’t take much right now.

Power: One-arm DB snatches and/or swings (when I want to work a bit more conditioning). My de facto workout of choice, as I keep the DBs in my bedroom–easy to grab and bang out a set or two in the mornings or evenings before/after work.

Speed: Hill sprints–both going up (there’s a less-steep stretch on the nearby mountain–I go for about 8-10 seconds hard, rest for a couple minutes, repeat) and down (occasionally overspeed work going downhill on the same stretch, with similar rest interval).

Flexibility: Goblet squats, Samson stretch, and recently more dedicated stretching and yoga (just your typical sun salutation, plus a warrior pose or two).

Game-readiness: Don’t get much in terms of disc practice (occasional tossing with a buddy in town and occasional pickup in nearby prefectures for something like two days a month), but I do visualization with the disc in my hand and fakes to go with, play around with flat objects in my idle time/in front of students while I tell them to “repeat after me.” Generally, I’ve practiced enough in my college crucible that my disc skills (outside of flick hucks) haven’t gotten too rusty to jump back in and handle (at least, not at the level of ultimate I’ve seen around me so far). Having spent a lot of time debugging my throws and developing a checklist to sort them out helps a lot too.

I’ve also been practicing what I preach–been paying a lot of attention to my footwork going down stairs at school, and especially running down the mountain (not as hardcore as it sounds–it’s a paved road); lots of hard turns that I accelerate, chop-step into and explode out of. (A thought on footwork: Always aim for 2 steps to turn [facing and moving in your new direction] on <90 degree turns, and 3 steps for >90 degrees–you might need to chop step more to slow down, but one step to stop your momentum [or at least control it] and one inside step to redirect for short turns or one inside turn with an outside plant for big turns is ideal. Focus on limiting the step number and your body will likely sort out the rest).

Lacking: Pullups (you might recall, one of my favorite exercises). Not doing a whole lot for my back lately, but I’m not doing too much pushing (I’m not, for instance, benching) so it’s an acceptable imbalance for now.

Plyos. I’m a pretty explosive guy already; my ups will be fine with sufficient strength/power work and all the hill running. I’m not at a level of fitness currently where I can or need to do dedicated plyos. Injury risk and all that.

Also, foam rolling (Self-Myofascial Release)–don’t have a roller here. I think I might order one though, amazon.co.jp is ludicrously quick (case in point: ordered two books night before last–they came in this morning. That’s standard shipping in something like 36 hours; I love this country!). The utility of foam rolling increases as your training frequency and volume does–recovery becomes even more important.

Schedule: I don’t have a regimented one right now–things like running hinge on the weather. Generally speaking, I’m of the opinion for now that as long as I’m getting a good, hard workout in at least 1-2 times a week, I’m at the very least maintaining my fitness. I’ll be ramping up my workout intensity and frequency over the coming months, but I value recovery a ton and am happy to back off when my body requests such from me.

Note that after a few years of more or less planning and regimenting my own training (including lots of reading), I’m pretty comfortable doing my programming on the fly, including scheduling (granted, if I had more serious training goals, I’d have a more serious approach to programming). If you don’t have a ton of experience with the matter and are interested in going into it with more gusto, check out the guide to program creation I wrote a while back.

So much for “peek.” Hopefully this gives a nice snapshot of where I’m at in terms of my own understanding of fitness and training–I went through and linked some stuff I’ve already written and stuff others have written (along with some videos for exercises).

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