Elitefts Sports Performance Podcast Mark Watts
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- Health & Fitness
The Elitefts™ Sports Performance Podcast is the premier resource for strength & conditioning coaches, sports performance professionals, and athletes of all levels. Bringing you the best information from the scientific foundations to the practical application. Combining the latest cutting edge research, anecdotal evidence, and under the bar experience.
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SPP - The Final Episode
Mark Watts is The Director of Education at elitefts™ and the NSCA Ohio State Director. He also serves as an adjunct professor in the College of Professional and Applied Studies at Urbana University. He has a Masters Degree in Exercise Science & Health Promotion from California University of PA and a Masters Degree in Elementary Education from Clarion University of PA. Watts has worked with athletes in over 20 different sports at the Division I, II & III levels for over 15 years as a strength & conditioning coach at places such as Denison University, The United States Military Academy at West Point, Allegheny College and Clarion University. Watts competes in both powerlifting and strongman competitions. He is originally from Pittsburgh, PA and is a USMC veteran.
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Elitefts SPP: Bob Alejo Interview
Bob Alejo
Assistant AD/ Director of Strength & Conditioning
North Carolina State University
Topics Covered in the Podcast
How Coach Alejo got started in the industry
How the game of baseball has progressed
Communication with Athletic Trainers and Physical Therapists
Abdominal Injuries in Baseball
Baseball Players vs Throwers
Tommy John's Epidemic... A different take
Total body strength is the best way to increase bat speed
More resiliency in younger arms
Innings thrown vs pitches thrown
Monitoring the Bullpen
Baseball is performed from your toes to the ends of your fingers
Assessments
Approach athletes like they're damaged goods
Its not a one day deal
Go to Exercises
There is no exercise you should avoid
Pressing overhead for overhead athletes
Finding the Research
About balance more than movement
Variances between the
In-Season Training
High Intensity during the season
Decrease the slope of the decline by lifting heavy
If you can't gain strength at the rep range how can you maintain it?
Low Volume reduces fatigue and soreness
Conditioning and Speed
Rest,sets, and intervals
Quantify everything
Low intensity tempo work
Tempo to Speed Endurance to Speed
Everything comes down to 1st step speed
Strategies to build rapport with Sport Coaches
Everything data driven!
Start correlating your data
If you are going to be fast, you need to be strong, If you are strong, you can change direction
Best advice for young coaches
Technology has enabled coaches to contact anyone
You don't need to guess anymore
Call your peers
Your group is your group. Get them better first
Elitefts™ Sports Performance Podcast on iTunes
The Bob Alejo File
Assistant AD/Director of Strength and Conditioning Bob Alejo oversees all of the strength and conditioning efforts of the department, and coordinates the day-to-day efforts of the men's basketball team.
Prior to joining the Wolfpack staff in April, Alejo served as the Director of Strength and Conditioning for the Oakland A's, a position he also held from 1993-2001. In that role, he was responsible for all aspects of the organization's year-round physical preparation at both the major league and minor league levels.
Prior to rejoining the A's, Alejo was the Director of Strength and Conditioning at UC Santa Barbara from 2005-2008. During that time he was also a member of the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team as strength and conditioning coach for the Gold medal-winning men's beach volleyball team of Todd Rogers and Phil Dalhausser.
From 1984-1993, Alejo served as strength and conditioning coach at UCLA where he worked with 23 men's and women's teams, including the men's basketball team while current Wolfpack head coach Mark Gottfried was an assistant coach. During his tenure in Westwood, the Bruins racked up 25 national championships and produced more than 100 All-Americans.
Prior to joining the Bruins' staff, Alejo served as strength and conditioning coach for football at his alma mater, Chico State. He earned his B.A. in physical education from Chico State in 1982 and is a member of the Wildcats' Athletic Hall of Fame after a successful baseball career.
An accomplished lecturer and author, Alejo is a Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist (through the National Strength and Conditioning Association's Certification Commission) and holds the advanced NSCA Registered Strength and Conditioning Coach distinction. He has also been elected to three halls of fame: Chico State Athletics, Chico State Baseball (inaugural inductee) and the Chico Professional Baseball "Legends of the Diamond."
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Elitefts SPP: Joe Hashey Interview
Joe Hashey
Synergy Athletics
Fitness Business Empire
Topics Covered in the Podcast
How Joe got started
4 Knee Surgeries.... and a lot of questions
The Start of Synergy Athletics
Transitioning from only athletes to the adult population
Psychology of completion
What do need to know to start the training process
What the athlete wants and what the parents think they need
The responsibility of college preparation
Using communication with coaches as a learning experience
A general look at the training philosophy
Concurrent Periodization with High School and College Athletes
Repetition method to prepare for Max effort and dynamic effort
Training Athletes vs training lifters
Athletes need to know, like, and trust you
Understanding bar speed
Relationship Building
Three phases: Individual, family, community
Referrals vs giving back
What athletes really need
Appropriate recovery
Sleep cycle
Travel Teams
Nutrition
Not a work-ethic issue.... at all
Teaching skills related to the business word
Understanding learning styles
Match the mental to the physical goals
Uncomfortable equals opportunity for growth
How professional development has evolved
Mature as a business person as much as a training
Trainers approach to business vs business owners approach to business
The point of diminishing returns
Social Media Impact
Find people to network with
Training Football Players
Linear periodization for conditioning
One good lift in per session, then address weaknesses
Training In-season during the off-season
Make better at the sport not the work-out
The Best advice for Trainers and Gym Owners
You must be a life-long learner
There are people that have done what you want to do
The Joe Hashey File
Certified Strength And Conditioning Specialist, NSCA (2007 – present)
CPR and AED Certified (2006 – present)
Masters in the Arts Of Teaching – Colgate University (2006)
Achievements:
Youtube Partner – 8.2 Million Views on Fitness Videos.
Men’s Fitness, Contributing Author (2012)
Men’s Health, Contributing Author (2012)
Speaker NSCA National Conference, Las Vegas (2011 and 2012)
Speaker Central Ohio Strength Clinic (2011)
Author “Powerful Muscle Recovery Manual” (2011)
Speaker NSCA Vermont (2011)
Author “Bull Strength Conditioning Manual” (2010)
Speaker at Strength Coach 101 (2009)
Contributing Author – EliteFts, Straight to the bar, Critical Bench(2008- present)
Author “Bull Strength Training Manual” (2008)
Secrets of Strength Development Seminar Attendee (2009)
Head Modified Baseball Coach (2008 – 2009)
High School Assistant Football Coach (2006 – 2009)
Strength and Conditioning Coach – Hamilton High School (2005-2006)
Semi Professional Football All-Star (2004-2005)
Colgate University Football Player (2000-2002)
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Elitefts SPP: Fred Eaves Interview
Fred Eaves
Director of Wellness and Athletic Performance
Battle Ground Academy
Topics in this Podcast
Topics Covered in this Podcast
How Coach Eaves got started in the profession
Taking over a New Program
Assessing the situation
Identifying roadblocks
Exceed expectations
Under-promise over-deliver
The Multi-Sport Athlete
Over-specialized and under-generalized
The correlation between the number of sports played and injury rates
The throwback kid: physicality, mentality, and resiliency
The benefits of competing in other sports year round
Assessments
Block Zero (Wildcat) assessments
The Dynamic Movement Screen
Relative strength
Movement quality
Scheduling
8-period rotating schedule
Tier System for everyone
Regressing non-athletes in class
Wildcat, white, grey, gold, blue programs
Technique then Velocity then Load
Counter-culture what the world tells us
Do more of what they are not getting
In-Season Adjustments with the Tier System
Manipulating sessions, volume, and intensity
In-season: keep high intensity and control the volume
Empowering older athletes
RPE scales and HS athletes
Programming
Rotating schedules for athletes
30 minute sessions during school hours
MWF = Strength training, TH = Movement and Restoration
Complex for the strength coach = simple for the kids and coaches
Mixed gender versus boys and girls only
Go to Exercises/ Drills
Trap Bar DL
OlympicLifts
Every situation is unique
Overhead Squat
Swiss Bar Presses
Exercise selection for stress management
Baseline with 3 regressions and 3 progressions
Monitoring/ feedback
Why monitor if we can't do the basics
Be the best you that you can be
APRE numbers for tracking
Can't be numbers driven
If you are only looking at the end number, you are not getting the whole picture
Fighting against the Culture
Mentoring/ Character Development
The most important aspect of the job
Model the behavior
Be accessible
Transactional versus transformational
All you leave behind is how you effect, Trickle down, cyclical
Set the legacy
Perception is reality
Put accountability back on the player
Advice for young coaches
Differentiate yourself
Humility
It is a unique field.. Sacrifice
Bringing others down to build your up
Stay in the Eye of the Storm
How to contact you/ social media
The Fred Eaves File
Fred Eaves is currently the Director of Wellness and Athletic Performance at Battle Ground Academy in Franklin, TN. He has 16 years of experience in the field that includes stops at UT-Chattanooga, the University of Tennessee, and Louisiana State University as well as multiple high schools in the state of Tennessee. Eaves was voted the 2013 Samson Equipment and American Football Monthly Central Region High School Strength and Conditioning Coach of the Year. Battle Ground Academy’s Athletic Program has had tremendous success in the last year with state championships in men’s basketball, men’s soccer, Final Four appearances from baseball, women’s soccer, and a State Quarterfinal appearance from the football team. Eaves holds degrees from UT-Chattanooga, Tennessee Tech University, Lincoln Memorial University, and the University of Missouri. He currently serves as the Tennessee State Director for the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA).
Coach Fred Eaves is entering his second season as the Defensive Line Coach for the Wildcats. This is also Coach Eaves 16th year coaching overall. Coach Eaves coached three State Championship football teams and 1 state championship weightlifting team before coming to BGA. In addition to coaching, Coach Eaves is the Wellness and Athletic Performance Coordinator for all BGA students and athletic teams. Coach Eaves has trained 32 NFL Draft picks as well as 10 NCAA All-Americans. Among these players are Jerod Mayo, Arian Foster, and Randall Cobb. Coach Eaves has also been a featured author for American Football Monthly and Gridiron Strategies. He is also a featured speaker at the Hammer Strength -
Elitefts SPP Mark McLaughlin Interview
Mark McLaughlin
Physical Preperation Coach
Owner of Performance Training Center
Topics Covered in this Podcast
Mark's Journey
Catastrophic injuries in youth athletics
3 cases that got Mark's attention to research training
Individual Training to Volunteer to Facility Owner
Assessments
Extensive medical questionnaire
Subjective information form athlete: What are your goals
Omegawave assessments
Warm-up and performance testing
Sports Specific Conditioning
Strength Assessments
How much time are they willing to train?
Balancing the athletes schedule with training
Number of games, fitness level, particular team or coach
Communication with Sport Coaches
Educating parents and the athletes to avoid
The Training is only one part of it
Recovering is a crucial aspect
Recovery need s to be individualized and personalized
Recovery becoming natural
Avoid glycolytic and lactic environments
Allowing athletes to recover naturally
HRV Fight or Flight vs. Rest and Relax
Training Youth Athletes
Ban AAU Basketball and youth club sport games
Educate coaches and parents
A Platform for the education process
Can science give us the data we need
Governing bodies
Long Term Athletic Development Model
The coaches don't have the tools to manage the process
Education for when is the right and wrong time
Differences between males and females
The Formula 1 Analogy
HRV and other technology
Charlie Francis observation of Ben Johnson
Jay Schroeder Auto-regulation
Coaches becoming great listeners
Technology to embody the mission statement
Buddy Morris, Tom Myslinski and the Omega Wave
Observation plus training methodologies
Learn from other coaches and how they implement their programs
Athlete Buy-In
Quality trumps quantity
Reducing Injuries in Athletes
Educating parents and athletes on playing sport year-round
Reducing games = reducing injuries
Consistency of being active
Helmets on before 9th grade?
Concussions reducing exposures
Best practices in terms of techniques
What Athletes Need to Work on
Running technique can fix itself depending on age
Jumping, landing, bounding, etc
Strength training: single leg bodyweight movement first
Squat, Deadlift, Depth Jumps, etc. when the athlete is ready
Its not the exercises but how they are integrated
The best advice for young coaches
Be extremely open on everything
Best practices of the most successful companies
Develop a deep passion for learning
Communication by embodies your values and must connect with a multitude of work
The Mark McLaughlin File
Founder of Performance Training Center. Mark attended college at the College of Sante’Fe in New Mexico. He is a native Oregonian currently living in Portland. His passion of all athletics flourished throughout his teen years. He participated and competed on various teams and in a variety of sports. Through his years of participation in sports and later in his education, Mark developed a deep commitment not just to sport but also to the complete well being of the athlete. This passion and commitment leads to continual self-education in the field of athletic performance enhancement. Mark has been active in the field of athletic performance enhancement since 1997. Mark has trained over 700 athletes on every competitive level ranging from Olympic, professional (NFL, MLB, CFL), college, high school and grade school athletes. As well as working with individual athletes, Mark works and consults with professional organizations (NFL, MLB, NBA), NCAA universities, high school, club, and youth sport organizations. In addition to Mark’s training and consulting services, he conducts speaking engagements with various organizations locally, nationally as well as internationally.
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Elitefts SPP: Chris Doyle Interview
Chris Doyle
Head Strength & Conditioning Coach for Football
University of Iowa
Topics Covered in This Podcast
How Coach Doyle got started
Strength & Conditioning and Football
Same characteristics lead to success for any coach
Sport Coach - Strength Coach Relationship
Biggest area of concern with 1st year players
Be on Time, Listen-learn-apply, and work hard
Teach athletes how to think
Counter the recruiting process
Adopt the team mindset
We create habits and our habit creates us
Teaching the program
Assessments
Hybrid to FMS, back to a hybrid assessment
Commonalities of Corrections
The stack joint approach
Basic Off-Season Template
The mistake of peaking everything at once
3 phases of the off-season
Speed Training set-up
Higher exposure, shorter volume
Competitive Speed work. Measure it, rank it, post it
Exercise Selection
Exercises must be: ground based, multi-joint, and three-dimensional
Five different levels in the program
Block Periodization with older athletes
In-Season concerns
Two different groups are either playing or not
It's important to know who we are
Iowa Football
We don't find talent we build it
How little can we train and still gain in-season
Technology to Modifying behavior vs modifying training
Uncommon discipline, uncommon maturity
Developing rapport with athletes
Everybody wants someone to believe in. Our job is to get people to believe in themselves - Dan Gable
Flexibility with athletes
Never allow your athletes to set the standards they don't know what they're capable of - Joe Moore
Get in the rack and not hiding in your office
Staff Development
Coach has learned more from his staff than they learned from him
Read together, program together, think together
Loyalty through the intern program
Advice for young coaches
Maintain a beginners mindset
How thirsty are you for knowledge?
Read on a variety of subjects
Go and visit good people
Watch the best work in your field
We don't coach weights we coach people - Johnny Parker
Want to get paid well, offer something money cant buy
Successful people aren't innovators they are early adapters - Mike Boyle
The Chris Doyle File
Chris Doyle is in his 16th year as strength and conditioning coach for the University of Iowa football program.
As the head of Iowa's strength and conditioning program, Doyle has helped the Hawkeye program participate in 11 bowl games since 2001, including the 2014 Outback Bowl. The Hawkeyes posted an 8-5 overall record in 2013, including a 5-3 Big Ten record to tie for second in the Legends Division. The Hawkeyes won bowl games following the 2008, 2009 and 2010 seasons, defeating ranked opponents in both 2009 and 2010. The Hawkeyes have ranked in the final top 10 of both major polls four times in the past 12 seasons.
Iowa has appeared in seven January bowl games since 2001. The Hawkeyes have won 6-of-11 bowl games under Kirk Ferentz and his staff, including four January bowl victories. The January Bowl wins have come over Florida (2004 Outback), LSU (2005 Capital One), South Carolina (2009 Outback) and Georgia Tech (2010 Orange).
Iowa has won 97 games over the past 12 seasons, including 57 Big Ten games. The Hawkeyes earned a share of the Big Ten title in both 2002 and 2004 and tied for second in 2009. Iowa has finished in the Big Ten's first division in 11 of the past 13 years.
Doyle is a certified strength and conditioning specialist with the Collegiate Strength and Conditioning Association (CSCCa). He was presented with the certification of Master Strength and Conditioning Coach in May, 2013. The certification is considered the highest honor that can be achieved in the coaching profession of Strength and Conditioning, and represents professionalism, knowledge, experience, expertise and longevity in the field.
The NSCA named Doyle the Big Ten Strength Coach of the Year in 1999. He was one of 20 nominees for the Professional of the Year Award, given annually and selec