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(1,752 found)

The Gray Area of Programming Weightlifting Exercises

January 9, 2021by Timothy Suchomel, PhD, CSCS,*D, RSCC

Article Members Only

The purpose of this article is to discuss the gray area that should be considered when it comes to implementing weightlifting exercises.

Coaches Exercise Technique Program design

Working with Elite Athletic Women’s Menstrual Cycle

July 28, 2023by Delaney Stone-Kerr, CSCS

Article Members Only

The purpose of this article is to share the importance of the menstrual cycle’s effects on elite athlete performance, and how these effects should influence the training and recovery of high-performing athletic women.

Coaches Program design Basic Pathophysiology and Science of Health Status or Condition, Disorder, or Disease

Measurement and Evaluation in a Microdosed Training Program

February 9, 2023by Ian Bonder, CSCS, Andrew Shim, EdD, CSCS,*D, and Dr Michael Waller, PhD, CSCS, NSCA-CPT, FNSCA

Article Members Only

This article seeks to provide insight on a training method based around prescribing small amounts of training to achieve a large amount of physical improvements.

Coaches Program design Testing and Evaluation

Purpose and Methods of the Hip Hinge and Squat in High School Strength and Conditioning—with Personal Perspective and Sample Program

April 20, 2018by Jarrius Spearman, MS, MPH, FMS, CSCS

Article Members Only

The hip hinge and squat exercises, and their variations, are used in many strength and conditioning programs to develop athletes of many sports. The listed progressions are examples of practical implications used to develop athletes, but there may be additional practical and effective methods used by strength and conditioning coaches for similar purposes.

Coaches Exercise Technique Program design

Making Olympic-Style Lifting Simple: Basic Progressions and Regressions for the Snatch and Clean

December 10, 2018 - July 9, 2019by John Mackersie, MS, CSCS, USAW

Video

John Mackersie speaks at the 2018 NSCA TSAC Annual Training about how to apply variations of Olympic-style lifts into programming. As well as prescribing regressions, progressions, and modifications to individuals with injury or who are new to Olympic-style lifts.

Personal trainers TSAC Facilitators Coaches Exercise Technique Program design

Muscle Activation and Strength Training

June 11, 2018by Strength Training, Second Edition

Article

Periodization of training is based on the principle that different loads (e.g., light, moderate, or heavy) or power requirements recruit different types and numbers of motor units. Recruitment order is important from a practical standpoint for several reasons.

Coaches Exercise Science

Muscle Activation and Strength Training

June 15, 2018

Article

Periodization of training is based on the principle that different loads (e.g., light, moderate, or heavy) or power requirements recruit different types and numbers of motor units. Recruitment order is important from a practical standpoint for several reasons.

Coaches Exercise Science

Using LTAD to Program for a Middle School Athlete and a High School Athlete: Part 1—Generating an Athletic Profile

October 29, 2018by Rick Howard, MEd, CSCS,*D

Article

This article applies LTAD principles to guide the process of generating an athletic profile (part 1) and sample program design (part 2) for a middle school athlete and a high school athlete.

Coaches Program design

Military Fitness Research, 2017

June 25, 2018by Guy Leahy, MEd, CSCS,*D

Article Members Only

The American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) 64th Annual Meeting was held in Denver, CO May 30 – June 3, 2017. Overall, there were more than 50 presentations with a military focus, an indication of the importance of this research. The following is a review of some of the presented research.

TSAC Facilitators Exercise Science

Multi-Joint Training versus Isolated Training for Core Development

June 8, 2018by Developing the Core

Article

Ground-based free weight lifts, especially the explosive Olympic-style lifts, are highly recommended for athletic conditioning for the core muscles. They can provide a moderately unstable stimulus to augment activation of the core and limb muscles, while still providing maximal or near maximal strength, velocity, and power output.

Coaches Exercise Science Exercise Technique

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