Category Archives: Performance

If You’re Not Testing You’re Guessing

Today I wanted to touch on a topic that I have been aiming to 1; do a better job of in my own practice and 2; stress its’ importance to clients.  It is the topic of testing and monitoring.  Where this all stems from really can start as far back as a year or so ago when I started at Peak Power.  I was placed in charge of development of a screening process for clients to determine what could be potential issues in movement, or areas of the body that may be tight and weak.  Therefore we could address these areas of concern before they become a problem or we aggravate the issue by improper program design.   I am by no means a biomechanist or an athletic therapist, and nor do I plan to be.  But this was to be designed so that we could be aware of potential issues, fix what we can and refer to other professionals when we know that this is beyond our scope of practice.

Skip ahead to August 2010.  The screen that we developed is almost ready for the fall launch.   The Peak Power crew are off to the Dartfish User Conference in Colorado Springs, Colorado.  Now for those of you who do not know, Dartfish is the analytical software that was used extensively at the Olympics.  You can use it to analyze movement and use it as a teaching tool.  That is the Coles notes version, and don’t feel bad if you do not know what it is.  The border crossing officials must not have known either, as once the term, “analytical software for assessing movement and …” came out the proceeded to lock us in a room and strip apart the vehicle.  It was actually pretty funny.  Now on this trip we discussed how to implement this process into the business model that we currently have.  The test is at a cost of $150.00 and we use the information as a tool for proper program development.  So how do we explain an extra cost to the client or athlete?  And it was very simple.  “If you are not testing you are guessing.”

It is simple to develop a program for an athlete.  I can analyze any event; break it down to the needs assessment of the sport (power, speed, endurance etc.) and the various energy systems that are utilized.  But how do I know that the exercises I program for that athlete are the ones that they need to be doing?  How do I know that the program I am developing is not causing some underlying issue to become worse only to rear its’ ugly head as an injury later on?  I don’t if I do not test before hand.   At Peak Power, for any athlete who is competing in an endurance style event (running, biking etc.) we need to assess maximal oxygen uptake via  testing to understand what speeds or heart rates to program for them.  So why do trainers just randomly prescribe a “canned” program to an athlete because we know what they need to do.

Testing is the base from which we design our programs.  Without it we do not know what we need to do.  Now there is a fine line between testing for the sake of program development and testing for the sake of testing.  Testing for the sake of testing is one thing I see time and time again, and will admit I have been guilty of in the past.  A coach or trainer tests the athlete only to file the information away never to look at it again.   That is why testing gets a bum wrap… due to poor practices by some individuals.  I will say that I have become much more aware of testing and referring to the tests for the aid of program development.   We also have to remember that there is a fine line between testing and monitoring.  Monitoring is done as a “check” periodically through the training to assure that the program is doing what it was designed to do.  As well, monitoring is shorter, sometimes less invasive and the collection of monitoring data may show a trend or event that warrants a testing session.

So where am I getting at?  Testing is an integral part of program design, and must be done before a program is written.  If the trainer or coach is not testing, be cautious.  Question the program.  We have implemented that each athlete must, if in a power or strength sport, have a Movement Pattern Analysis (MPA which is our developed screen) prior to program design.  It is the only way we know what to do properly.  This is what I feel makes my program much different from 90% of the others out there.  Through this I can honestly say that my programs had a direction before, but now they feel that they have a purpose.  Once again my aim is to educate the readers to become informed.  Know that you are paying someone, so make sure that they are doing all that they can and should be doing to get you the results you deserve.

Until next time,

Yours in health and performance.

You Have Two Ears…

This past weekend I had the privilege to travel to the United States Olympic Training Centre (USOTC) f or the Dartfish Users Conference.  For those of you that do not know, Dartfish is the software that was extensively used at the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver.  The mission was to head down to Colorado Springs, Colorado and learn how others are using it in their business models.  However for me, conferences like that are a great place to network.

Now, do not get me wrong, the conference was great, and yes there was a lot of self back patting by the presenters, and yes, Dartfish was made to look like the be all and end all of testing and analysis, but the highlights came outside the walls of the conference room.  On day one as the room filled we began to see quite an array or individuals, from teachers, to coaches to physiotherapists and biomechanists.  But as one gentleman walked in I thought I recognized him, but could not place where.  It was not until I was back at the hotel room and reading my current book “Athletic Development” by Vern Gambetta (http://www.gambetta.com/) that I realized it was him at the conference.  Well, on day two I introduced myself and mentioned that I was reading the book and would very much appreciate an autograph. To which he responded, “I would much rather sit down and discuss training.”

So on to lunch at the USOTC cafeteria, that I might say is really the only thing I thing the USOTC has over the Canadians.  That cafeteria was amazing.  Anything you want could potentially be there. Anyways, I was invited by Mr. Gambetta and Dr. Bob Ward (http://www.sportsscience.com/SSN/) to sit with them during lunch. Now once again for those that do not know, Dr. Bob Ward is one of the pioneers in Strength and Conditioning.  He was one of the first full time strength and conditioning coaches in the NFL, helping the Dallas Cowboys from 1976 to 1989 to become the dynasty they continue to be.  Not to mention, in the middle of lunch, Dr. Ward receives a call from Bill Kramer, as in Dr. William Kraemer who is the author of almost every major text book on exercise physiology I own.  That I would have to say is a bit bad ass from a phys geek perspective.  I was truly honored to be sitting with two men who helped shape the profession I am in today.

For the full time that I ate with two legends of strength and conditioning, I kept one thing in mind.  You have two ears and one mouth, you need to listen twice as much as you talk.  In an hour and a half I was fortunate enough to receive some of the greatest lesions on this profession that I could.  As a strength consultant, I work with people all the time and I realize that people love to talk about themselves.  And yes I am guilty of that as well.  But since that meeting, I have aimed to keep that quote in mine.  Because of that simple thought, I learnt valuable lessons that I am not going to learn in any classroom.  And I don’t have the 30 years to wait for the experience.  But some of the key highlights of the lunch we as followed…

  1. This is not an industry I work in.  It is a profession.  If it was an industry I would have a union card.  I do this as my career.  I am a professional at what I do.
  2. You cool down, not shut down when working out.   Therefore the use of ice but athletes is sometimes over prescribed and un-necessary.  Properly coached cool downs could reduce the amount of ice that is needed.
  3. There is no, “let’s get them ready for the season and hope they hang on.”  It is what you do in the season and the balance of it all that is what makes the difference between a good coach and a great one.
  4. We as a profession working with team sports waste time trying to compare one athlete with another.  We want to know who is better.  The key in our profession is comparing the athlete against themselves, over time one, time two… etc.  That is the real measure of your worth as a strength coach in the ability to stimulate change and improvement.

I would have to say it was an honor to sit with these two gentlemen, and share in their experiences.  I just wish I would have turned on the recorder on my Blackberry, because this opportunity does not come around often.

Until next time,

Yours in health and performance

The Importance of Sleep

This week I join a brotherhood, a fraternity, an elite group of men given the duty to raise a good, honest human being.  I became a father for the first time.  I have to say, I have acquired three undergraduate degrees and a masters degree, numerous certifications but I would hand them all in for the feeling that I had the day that Anna was born.  It was the most special time I have ever had sitting on a labour room couch bonding with a one hour old newborn in your arms.  But with great power come great responsibility… and a new level of sleep debt.

I wish I had a reference for this fact so I am going to reference personal communication… myself.  For every year you attend post secondary education it requires six months of recovery.  Most of that due to a lack of quality sleep.  When I heard that I would require six years of recovery from my university career.  Now entering fatherhood that sleep debt will once again being to add up.  I have to say Pam (my lovely wife) and I have been rather lucky that Anna has been sleeping 3 hour blocks at night but it is early and I am sure that will change.  Let pray not.

Back on track.  Through our younger year, or drinking years, we figure we are young and we can sleep when we are dead.  We stay up later than we should be, and figure we can make it up by sleeping until the crack of four pm on the weekend.  Now a few hours later here and there is fine and, yes we could make that up on a Saturday or Sunday, possibly in the form of a nap on the couch with Simpsons on.  But we tend to accumulate many hours of sleep debt in a week.  We stay up too late and get up too early.  The typical person need between six and eight hours a sleep a night, but many of us push the lower end of the limit.

The following diagram is from the Holistic Life Coach Course by the CHEK institute.  Now this is the best diagram I have found to truly illustrate the importance of setting a bed time and sticking to it.

The disruption of our sleep patterns consequently disrupts our anabolic/ catabolic processes.   Between the times of 10:00 pm and 2:00 am the body goes through a process of physical repair.  Between roughly 2:00 am and 6:00 am the body will go through a process of psychological repair.  A disrupted sleep pattern will cause the Cortisol (red line) to elevate and affect the regenerative process.  So it is imperative that we get to bed around 10:00 to 11:00 pm and up between 6:00 to 7:00 am.

Disrupted sleep patterns affect many of the body’s processes.  The act of having a bowel movement is a Parasympathetic act.  But if our cortisol is elevated and we are in Sympathetic drive our bowl movement are disrupted.  We should be having movements on a regular consistent schedule.  If that schedule is off… how is your sleep?  We also know that an increase in cortisol affect short term memory.  So we stay up late and wonder why we are so forgetful in the morning.   The increased cortisol will also drive our adrenal system deeper in to exhaustion and corresponding HPA axis deregulation.

How do you combat this?

  • Listen to your father and mother… go to bed at your bed time.  No seriously, set a bed time and stick to it.  Head hits the pillow no later than 11:00 pm
  • No stimulating foods in the evening.
  • This one I really stress to my athletes.  No electrical devices by their beds (cell phones, televisions, alarm clocks, lap tops, etc).  Move them across the room.  And try to have your bed orientated North/  South.  I could try to explain electromagnetic fields and sleep disruption but that would take more research and that is a post for another day.

I want to stress, this are just suggestions.  This is your Journey, and I am here to foster education and learning.  Don’t go and try and change things all in one night.  Start off slow and see how you feel.  I can say from all the clients and athletes I have made these suggestions to, I have not heard of anyone not sleeping better.  Now, go have a good night’s rest.

Driven and Inspired

So I have fallen off the chats that last week and I apologize.  The week at work was rather busy as we are in full swing of summer training.  So it was imperative that I was in bed at 9:30 each evening… 5:00 am on an alarm clock comes very fast.  Combine that with studying for my Certified Exercises Physiologist exam with is in two weeks and then arrival any day now of our first child, I have had a lot on my plate.  But enough with the excuses.

Last time I talked about my thoughts on Crossfit, told you my beliefs about the interference model and referenced two great groups here in Calgary that I would only recommend.  So each year, Corssfit puts together a Crossfit Games, a mini Olympics if you must, crowning the “fittest Athlete Alive”.  I know you are going to put in your vote for Lance Armstrong, who is an animal in his own right, or one of the tri-athletes.   And the Crossfitters will acknowledge that yes, tri-athletes, professional athletes are fit, but they sacrifice specific areas of fitness in order to excel at others.

So let’s review.  Physical fitness in the capacity to meet successfully the present and potential physical challenges of life, or the level of adaptation to the stressors of one’s life.   Therefore to meet these stressors we, as physiologist aim to manipulate the components of physical fitness… muscular strength, muscular endurance, cardiovascular endurance, muscular power and flexibility.  You can also include speed, agility and coordination in this group if you like.  But Crossfit stance is, if we were to put 60 athletic events into a hat, pit two athletes; a “crossfitter” and a tri-athlete against one another; an randomly draw an event, how would these two individuals compare.  Well, I am going to tell you the tri-athlete will crush any run, bike, or swim (or nay combination of the three) and leave the crossfitter in the dust.  However it is not the ability to do well on one or two of the events, but to have the best average score in ALL the events.  That is the person who possesses the combination of the above components.

And why the rant?  Well this weekend, I was able to judge the Canadian Qualifier.  The top six males and to six females would qualify to head to California to compete in the Crossfit Games.  The interesting part of the event is that the actual workouts are not posted until 4 day prior to the event date.  So what do they train for. EVERYTHING AND ANYTHING. It was absolutely inspiring to watch so many fit individuals compete.  The ability to push themselves was amazing.  I have never been in a room with so many sets of six pack abs in my life.  Now I can only imagine the amount of adrenal fatigue these individuals accumulate, but I admit I would love to be that fit.  I watched one girl tear off the skin of her hand doing pull-ups, and come to me later and as I inquired about her hand she proceeded to show me that she “Crazy Glued” the skin back.  I didn’t attempt to argue with her about the number of toxins in that glue now entering her blood stream.  It was inspiring.

So the lesson for today.  Unless you are a professional athlete, don’t train to be good at one area of your fitness.  Aim to be good at all of them.  Vary your training, while still being smart about it.  It makes your workout so much more fun and interesting.  Be ready to do anything and everything.  I will admit, I am going to train for the game next year.  Am I going to compete… Hell no.  My ego cannot take then embarrassment of being out lifted by a girl from British Columbia who tossed around a 290 lb tractor tire like it was kids float device.

My Simple Outlook on Crossfit.

I am going to caution those who do happen to read this.  This is by no means an attack on Crossfit, a bashing of anyone who does it.  It is a simple scientific look at the phenomenon that as exploded onto the fitness scene in the past five years or so.

I will admit I do Crossfit.  I do two or three “Workouts of the Day”… WODs a week.  I like it.  When I first exposed to it 5 years ago I was religious to it.  I can truthfully tell you I was fit from a physical standpoint.  30 pull ups in a row was a breeze.  I could run a mile in nearly 6 minutes… and with the VO₂ max I have, I could be considered working on one lung or a cardiac rehab patient.  I felt great, or so I though.  My focus changed to other aspects of fitness, but I always did a WOD of two a week.  I just enjoy the movements, the challenge and the culture (or cult as it may seem to an outsider).

Last year I was certified as a level one Crossfit Coach.  Really, I was there to learn their method to their madness.  What was their thought process, their pattern?  The course was great.  Besides the CHEK course I have taken, one of the best presented courses I have taken to date… and I have eleven years of post secondary school.  So that says something for the presenters.  However,  a few things really stood out and to this day are unsettling to me.

First, during the course one of the instructors explained to us that the body is a black box.  A stimulus is placed on the body (weights, cardio, etc).  The body responds, and this instructor when on to say,” we don’t know what happens in the body, but you get an adaptation.”  Well, bloody hell, I just about crawled out of my skin.  For once in my life, I kept my mouth shut.  Later in the day that instructor asked if I was enjoying the class, what I thought of the information.  So I simple stated, “The body is not a black box.  It is a marvelous piece of intelligent design.  In my position, the body is not a black box.  Crossfit for some is simply, let’s throw as much stimulus at the body, and see what comes out.  I can give the body one stimulus, and I will tell you what is happening in the body.  And not only will I tell you what stimulus will come out, but when that stimulus is expected.”  At that time, I finally revealed that I was in a Masters Degree in Exercise Physiology.   The rest of the weekend for some reason was void of further questions on my thought.  Don’t get me wrong.  The information was great, I loved the course and I puked in a parking lot of a Minute Lube, but it leads to my second point.

Crossfit is a high intensity workout.  It places a great stress on the body.  High intensity exercise is not like vegetables.  You cannot indulge in it all the time.  It is like a poison.  You can take small doses that may not harm you, but you need the necessary recovery after the dose.  So, to see someone get the shit kicked out of them and see them go, “hell yeah, I had a good workout.” pisses me off.  I can tell you, and this is happening in a lot of  training (this happens a lot in any training), it is not hard to create a workout that kicks the hell out of someone.  Anyone can do that, but to do it based on scientific principles… that is talent.  So with you here I share a diagram.  It is the diagram of the Zones of Interference.

Unfortunately, many of the workouts I hear of designed by those who do not know, are in the Zones of Interference.  They are doing high reps and high intensity cardiovascular.  From a physiological perspective, the two training schemes do not complement each other.  And yeah I know this could lead to a bunch of hate mail and everyone asking what my Fran time is.  I am not here to get into a pissing contest because I don’t give a shit about Fran.  If you’re fit and your Fran is 2:32… good on you.  I will be the first to say congratulations, and that is awesome.  But I am here to educate.   To continue training without considering the physiology leads to a deep hole of under recovery, period.  High Intensity Training (HIT) is hard on the Central Nervous System (CNS).  And unfortunately when it comes to weights there are very few ways to measure the physiological stress on the CNS from a bout of resistance training.  If you know how, then you care going to be very rich.

Now, it would be unfair to not leave you with resources.  There are two Crossfit groups I always recommend to those looking to get into Crossfit.  These guys know what they are doing and their groups are using the science.  And no, I do not do Crossfit programming full time, when I do it I go to these guys and their resources.  I believe they do that good of work when it comes to Crossfit.  In all reality, when I do Crossfit it is from these guys.  Check out the following links to Crossfit Calgary (CFC) http://www.optimumperformancetraining.blogspot.com/

and Natural High Crossfit http://www.www.naturalhighcrossfit.blogspot.com/.  Both James (OPT to you Crossfitters) of CFC along with Brett Marshall and Andrew, Dan and Marc of Natural High are some of the best groups I know doing Crossfit.  I think tomorrow I may do Linda (inside Crossfit joke, but it always sounds dirty.)