Oct 152012
 

I was inspired to write this post by a segment that was on TV Saturday morning.  The segment was a behind the scenes look at the University of South Carolina Football program.  As I was flipping through the channels, I happened to see some weightroom footage that forced me to stay on the channel for more than a few minutes.

During the segment, Head Football Coach Steve Spurrier was shown working out.  In the segment, he mentioned that he works out 5-6 times per week.   He also talked about how important it was for him to get his workouts in.  At the age of 67, the fact that Coach Spurrier gets in 5-6 workouts per week is pretty impressive.  They did show him performing exercises such as rear delt flyes and dumbbell curls while also showing him walk on the treadmill and ride a bike.  Who cares?  The fact that he is making that kind of commitment at his age is very impressive.

What I was also really impressed with was how important he thinks exercising is not only for himself, but for every coach in the profession.  Coach Spurrier talked about how when he speaks to other coaches at clinics, he preaches the importance of exercise and how coaches shouldn’t be overweight while coaching their kids.  He encourages overweight coaches to “Get on the treadmill”.

I agree with coach Spurrier not only from a health prospective, but also from a standpoint of being able to coach.  I think a coach needs to be able to demonstrate proper form and execution.  In the case of a football coach, maybe that is demonstrating what a player needs to do on a specific play?

In the case of the Strength and Conditioning Coach, we are professionals on the subject of exercise; specifically strength and conditioning.  So, Strength and Conditioning Coaches need to be able to demonstrate proper form in exercises- not only in the weightroom, but also on the field demonstrating agility, acceleration, and plyometric drills.

I’m not saying that you need to be as strong or as fast as your athletes.  However, you should be lean, strong, and in condition.  Your athletes are going to respect you more if you are able to “Look the part” and be able to do what they do even if it is slower.  Be fit enough to coach.

Oct 122012
 

I hope everyone is doing well.  The weather is actually starting to get a little cooler here in SoCal indicating fall is here (I guess, because it is still in the 70’s-80’s).  I’m doing my best to stay busy between being a dad and husband, reading, writing, and training myself.  It’s been lots of fun watching Will at his practices and games as I know that those are moments that I wouldn’t be able to do usually at this time of year.

It’s been a while since my last update as to what is going on at HockeySC.  As usual, we have had some great contributions:

Articles

Youth Training Program: Olympic Lifting Teaching Exercises by Mike Potenza

My Experience Working with New Players by Darryl Nelson

This is Russia by Eric Renaghan

Communication: The Key to In-Season Training by Rob Mclean

Revisiting the FMS with Teams by me

Videos

Phase 4 Acceleration Drills by me

Side Plank with Hip Abduction by Kevin Neeld

Barbell Split Squat by Darryl Nelson

5-Jump Eval Test by Mike Potenza

Reactive Jumping/Plyometric Exercises by Kevin Neeld

Programs

Final Off-Season Movement Phase by Mike Potenza

5-Day Off-Season Training Program- Phase 4 by Kevin Neeld

Phase 5 Off-Season Strength Training by me

Obviously, that is a lot of content in a 1-month period.  We hope you like it.

In addition to all of the content that we have, we also have a great discussion forum going.  If you aren’t a member yet, you can check it out for $1 day for 7 days.  You won’t be disappointed.

Thanks!

Sean

Oct 102012
 

I recently did an interview with Jeff Angus.  I think he did a really good job with pictures and quotes relative to the discussion.

You can check out the interview here:

Interview with Jeff Angus

Check out his blog at www.AngusCertified.com.  It features some great content including some other interviews with Strength and Conditioning Coaches from professional hockey.

Oct 012012
 

I really like planks. As long as I can remember, I have always used them in my program.  Whether I called them planks or “Forearm Bridges”, planks have been a staple in the program.  I think they are beneficial for all athletes for developing stability or “pillar” strength.

We are now coaching and performing planks differently.  For a long period of time, we would have our athletes just hold the plank position and ask them not to move.  We also asked them to think about squeezing and firing their “core”.  We may have lightly tapped them with our hands and/or feet so that they resisted us moving them.  Now we are using more of an “RKC Plank”.  This is a version of the plank that I learned at the RKC cert in 2011.

I must be honest and say that I didn’t think there could possibly be any different versions of a standard plank. However, I may be guilty of losing some attention to detail when it comes to the Plank.   Previously, we may have asked our athletes to hold the position until the time ends.  We are now asking our athletes to sustain the plank position by producing total body muscular tension for the whole time.  We will tell them to contract their glutes, tighten their core, lift their kneecaps up with their quads, and try to push their elbows and feet into the floor.   Also, we want their feet together, head neutral, and elbows slightly ahead of the shoulders.

The Plank will also help us coach our athletes on some proper positions on other exercises.  Exercises such as standing presses, pull ups, most TRX exercises, and carrying variations are going to include the plank position somehow.

Sep 242012
 

One might look at programs that I design and notice that maybe 1-2 exercises stick out in comparison to the others.  Compound muscle group exercises are mainly done throughout the whole program primarily with our feet on the ground (with the exception of Pull Ups, Inverted Rows, and 1-Arm Cable rows).  However, during one of our phases during the off-season program, we will do Pullovers.

The Pullover gets a bad rap amongst strength and conditioning coaches because many would view it as a bodybuilding exercise.  Another reason why it wouldn’t be popular is because in the book Super Squats: How to Gain 30 Pounds of Muscle in 6 Weeks, the author, Randall Strossen, refers to the Pullover as an exercise to “expand the ribcage”.   I know many would disregard this and think that expanding the ribcage is impossible.  Bone doesn’t lengthen.  However, Strossen wouldn’t just put the exercise in the program just for fun.  There are benefits of the exercise and if it will help give the appearance of an expanded rib cage- so be it.

In the book Return of the Kettlebell: Explosive Kettlebell Training for Explosive Muscle Gains by Pavel Tsatsouline, the Kettlebell Straight-Arm Pullover is shown and recommended as a way to increase shoulder mobility.  In this example, the exercise is shown to help increase mobility to improve the lockout position for double kettlebell push presses and jerks.

While watching many athletes over the years perform overhead presses, I must admit that not all of them had good technique.  There were many times when the barbell or dumbbells may have been in front of the athletes’ head rather than in line with the ears, especially at the finish position.  Many times they may have looked like high incline presses.  There is a need for the ability to finish any overhead work properly.

When it comes to increasing shoulder mobility; many times we focus just on thoracic rotation.  Many athletes may need thoracic extension as well as thoracic rotation.  Thoracic Kyphosis can be quite common in athletes, especially those who have been performing more bench pressing than pulling exercises and/or may sit all day at work hunched over a computer.  The pullover is a good exercise to help address this by stretching the Lats which are really strong internal rotators of the shoulder.

So, if we can do an exercise that will help us increase shoulder mobility and extensibility in the Lat, while also helping us keep our shoulders in their proper position while locking out weights overhead, I am all for it.

Sep 072012
 

I love this time of year.  Currently, we are transitioning from off-season/summer mode into our pre-season mode.  Most of our players are coming back into town and we are getting some great team based work in.  I think it is a great time to help build the team with good workouts and skates.

Over at HockeySC.com, we’ve had some really good contributions over the last 2 weeks:

Articles

Using Microsoft Excel for Analyzing Training Data by Mike Potenza

The Red Zone: Stress Management 101 by Anthony Donskov

Videos

Reverse Hyper Iso Hold by Mike Potenza

Programs

Off-Season Phase 4 Strength Training by me

Phase 1 Fall Workout by Darryl Nelson

Be sure to also check out the forum.  There have been some interesting discussions including one on breathing masks and one on in-season training for midgets.

Please let us know if there is anything that we can do to help make your experience on the site as positive as possible.

Thanks!

Aug 232012
 

I hope everyone is doing great.  Summer is coming to a close as off-season programs are wrapping up all over North America.

It has been a great summer for me personally as I was able to spend more time with my family, work with some of our players, and learn and speak at several conferences and workshops all over the world.  It is time to get geared up for the pre-season.

As far as what’s going on at HockeySC.com, we’ve been having a run of getting some really good content added to the site.  Here is what we have added recently:

Articles

Understanding (or Misunderstanding) Aerobic Training by Michael Boyle.  This was originally posted at Strengthcoach.com.  Michael was kind enough to let us post this on our site.

Things I Have Taken Away From Watching the Summer Olympics by Darryl Nelson

Programs

Pre-Hab- Re-Hab Exercise Menu by Mike Potenza

5-Day Off-Season Program Phase 3 by Kevin Neeld

Videos

150-Yard Shuttle Run by me

Lateral Lunges with Step Across by Darryl Nelson

Seated Psoas Lift with Contralateral Pressure by Kevin Neeld

That is it for now.  I also want to remind you to check out the forum when you log on.  We have had some great discussions going on including an interesting one on aerobic work.

Aug 032012
 

I can’t believe it is already August.  Training camp and the beginning of hockey season will be here in no time.   Off-season training programs are going in full swing in the USA and Canada with lots of players returning to the ice for on-ice conditioning sessions.

My son Will just completed the spring/summer In-House league at Anaheim Ice.  During this season, he was actually “traded” or added from one team to another.  In fact, they actually played each other in the finals with Will’s new team, the Blazers winning the championship.  Now, he is getting ready for Mite-B travel hockey (while also playing soccer), which will start real soon.  As a parent, it was so neat to watch him continue in his development as a hockey player.

It’s been a few weeks since my last update on the site.  During that time, HockeySC has added lots of content.

Here is what we have added:

Articles

Y-Balance and Ice Hockey by Jeff Cubos

Presentation from the 25th Roge Neilson Hockey Clinic in Windsor,Ontario: Considerations for a Developmental Hockey Program by Mike Potenza

Friesen Physio Fitness Summitt by Pete Friesen

Looking Deeper Into the Visual System by Kevin Neeld

Videos

Med Ball Off-Season Throws by Mike Potenza

1-Arm Cleans by Darryl Nelson

Programs

4 Day Off-Season by Darryl Nelson

Off-Season Phase 3 Strength Training by Me

That’s it for now.  Please remember to check out the forum the next time that you log on.  We have some good discussions going on such as aerobic training, Y-Balance test, and psoas specific work.

Thanks!

Sean

Jul 302012
 

I was actually hesitant to post this but ended up thinking “what the heck”. The reality is that I am sometimes guilty of caring what people may think.  Some may think “who is this guy who is writing about mentors and stuff”, or “who gives a s#%t who his mentors are?”  Anyways, if you are at least reading the blog, I know that some of you are friends or maybe you are at least a little interested.

Most of the people that I am going to talk about are coaches who are or have been coaching or teaching in the trenches.  That really means a lot to me.  Although some of them do have an internet presence, some of them don’t.  That doesn’t mean that they aren’t phenomenal at what they do.

I was recently inspired to write this by 2 recent blog posts/articles that are currently on the internet.   The first is What it Means to be a Boyle Guy by Kevin Neeld.  Obviously if you know me, given by the title of my post, you know there is a really good chance that I will talk about Mike.  However for another look at Mike’s impact on another coach, check out Kevin’s article.  The second article that helped inspire me to write this is Your Life and Lifting Goals by Dan John.  This is just another Dan John article.  I say that seriously because all of Dan’s articles are gold.  It is an outstanding piece.  In the article, Dan talks about a mentor of his by the name of Dick Notmeyer who impacted Dan early on in his lifting career.

This post is about some of the people who have made an impact on me professionally in a positive manner.  Of course, I would like to mention my parents, my wife Hillary, or even my uncle Bill who bought me my first weight set- you know the plastic grey ones that were filled with sand. Or, I could easily mention all of the coaches (primarily hockey coaches over the past 11 year) who have influenced me. However, this is about strength and conditioning professionals for now.

Avery Faigenbaum Dr. Faigenbaum is currently a Health and Exercise Science Professor at the College of New Jersey.  He was one of my exercise science professors at the University of Massachusetts at Boston back in 2006.  Back then, the exercise science curriculum at UMB was only geared towards the ACSM health fitness instructor track.  There was also an Athletic Training/Sports Medicine track in which I was a part of for a semester or so.  That is when Avery came in as a professor at UMB.  What he brought to the Exercise Science department was a new concentration called “Strength and Conditioning”.  As a result, I eventually switched to the Exercise Science track.  Since I was currently playing football at UMB, it would have been extremely difficult for me to accumulate all of the clinical hours that were required for the athletic training track.  I figured that since I liked to lift weights and train for football, it would be pretty awesome if I could make a career out of it.  It was Avery that really made learning about this stuff fun.  He is really passionate about the field and he actually got me pretty fired up to do well in his classes.

When it was time to apply for my senior year internship, there were 4 schools that strength and conditioning majors could apply to for internships.  I applied at Boston University.  Although I was intrigued by the thought of interning at Boston College, which is the only Division 1-A football program in Boston, I still applied at Boston University because of the next person that I am going to talk about.

Mike Boyle

I applied at BU because I recognized the name of the contact person on the list of available schools.  In my mind, Mike was the guy who worked with Cam Neely to help him get back on the ice after he suffered a career threatening injury.  I can remember reading about Neely’s rehab in the Boston Herald or seeing some stuff on the TV when he was working out with Mike and thinking that what Mike was doing would be a cool job.  Cam Neely’s knee and hip were big news in the Boston sporting news back then.  I really didn’t know what Mike’s role was in the actual process, but I knew that he was doing something that I wanted to do.

(Side note- I consider myself very fortunate because I actually do get to do that now.)

I actually never interned for Mike at BU.  I interned for Glenn Harris who is the Director of Strength and Conditioning and is also someone who taught me a lot about coaching.  I did get to intern for Mike at Sports Acceleration North during the summer of 1998 right after I graduated from UMass Boston.  I don’t think the present system at MBSC is much different from what it was back then.  We coached day and night for 4 days per week.  It was non-stop coaching and it was a blast.  I can’t tell you how valuable that experience was for me.   You learn very quickly in that environment.  We had different types of athletes who came in on a daily basis ranging from the NHL players in the am to the hundreds of high school kids who played all different kinds of sports all throughout the day.

What’s interesting about the whole Sports Acceleration experience (now MBSC) was that there were other interns who were starting out there as well.  Mike Potenza, who is currently the San Jose Sharks Strength and Conditioning Coach, was also an intern, as well as Darryl Nelson, who is the Strength and Conditioning Coach for the USA Hockey National Development Program.

I owe Mike a lot when I look at my strength and conditioning career so far.  With Mike it is usually “Do this, not that” when it comes to advice from him.  I can still remember a story about Mike vividly.  During the summer of my internship, I also played on a staff basketball team that was in a league after work hours at the same facility.  When I first started coaching that summer, I was a really quiet and shy person when it came to being a coach. Maybe I was a little overwhelmed or even intimidated by some of the athletes.   However, I was a pretty aggressive basketball player who always competed even though I probably wasn’t very good.  Mike said to me one day “I want you to coach like you play basketball”.  I must say that it kind of clicked after that.   I got what he meant and as a result, I was a more confident coach.

Al Vermeil- To me, Al Vermeil is the ultimate Strength and Conditioning Coach.  Al was the strength and Conditioning Coach for the Chicago Bulls during the Jordan era and he was also the Strength and Conditioning Coach for the San Francisco 49ers in the early 1980’s.  He has several NBA championship rings and 1 Superbowl championship ring I believe.

When I was an assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach at Boston College, our staff brought in Al for a 1-day seminar on strength and conditioning principles.   Through his speaking, his passion for teaching and the field was contagious.  I remember during that day, I had a hockey player come in and do a lift that he missed the previous day.  I asked Al if he wanted to coach him up.  Al was more than willing.  Before you know it Al had his sleeves rolled up and was on the platform coaching the player in the hang clean.  His coaching and energy was inspiring.

After our seminar, Al was someone who I always stayed in touch with.  It wasn’t uncommon for me to be on the phone with him for at least 45 minute or so asking questions.  I can also remember him sending me his 300+ page training manual which I still look at today.

I think what I will always remember about Al  though is that on the night that the Anaheim Ducks won the Stanley Cup in 2007, there was a message on my office phone voicemail from Al .  In the message, Al sang “We are the Champions” by Queen.  You really can’t make that up.

 

Pete Friesen For those that don’t know, Pete is the Athletic Trainer/Strength and Conditioning Coach for the Carolina Hurricanes.  Like those above, he is also a great person.  When I made it a goal of mine to work as a Strength and Conditioning Coach in the NHL, I would always some people in those positions.  Pete was always one of the guys to get back to me.  In fact, I still have those emails saved in a folder on my Hotmail account.  He was one of the first people to introduce me to the FMS and foam rollers.

Pete is a lifelong learner and he is also an outstanding presenter who brings energy in everything that he does.  I was absolutely honored and humbled to be able to introduce him to the attendants at the BSMPG seminar this year.

What Pete does really well is that he gets his guys to buy in.  In fact, I heard him take the Hurricanes through a core/warm up routine before practice one day.  I say hear because our weightroom is immediately next door to the visiting team’s locker room.  You could feel Pete’s’ enthusiasm for what he does coming through the wall.  What I also respect about Pete is that he has been doing this for a long time as he worked with the Hartford Whalers before the franchise moved to Raleigh NC.

Dan John Lots of people are Dan John fans these days and rightfully so.  For me, not only as a coach but as a person who is trying my best at not being skinny-fat, Dan John has been instrumental.  I’ve been reading Dan’s stuff for a few years now on T-Nation and at DanJohn.net.  There is something about his writing that makes it seem like he is sitting right next to you.  For me though, it was at the RKC where I really got to get more of Dan.  Dan was my team leader who made the entire 3-day weekend an unbelievable experience.

 

When I look at the above list, what is most common is that they are all great people.  They get it.  I’m not sure if I know exactly what “it” is yet, but I am certain that they have it.

One thing about me is that I am not a big fan of big-timers.  You know who they are, the guys or girls who act like they haven’t met you before or they have no time for you.  You will never get big-timed by any of these guys.  They get to know your name and get to know you as a person.  To me, that is worth so much more than how a person’s success is perceived to be.

What is also common about all of them is their passion for what they do.  Each person’s energy and enthusiasm is visible when you around them.  They inspire you to be a better person and strength and conditioning coach.

Another reason why I think this article came to me was that there are actually young people looking to intern for me or work at our annual prospect camps.  Maybe I am at a stage in the career of a Strength and Conditioning Coach or something.  All I know is that I hope to be the best person that I can be and not big-time anyone ever (If you think I have in the past, I apologize).

I must say that there are several others that deserve honorable mention.  Glenn Harris, Paul Chapman, Mike Poidomani, Chris Doyle, Todd Wright, Cal Dietz, Robert Dos Remedios, Charlie Weingroff, and Pavel Tsatsouline are all coaches that I truly respect and I am very thankful to them for taking the time to teach me.