Alucard said:
I will disagree with # 3 and #4, and let me guess...do you prefer HIT or a variant of it?
If so, the proof is in the pudding, and examples of those who effectively use the exercises I listed to improve (even if only by a few degrees) athletic performance, and succeed in doing so, are readily found.
The opposite is rather scarce, and I leave it to you to find examples of it.
I am a professional hockey coach and have coached tier 1 major junior for many years in Canada. I have also been a high level competitive bodybuilder and a very good all round athlete.
Weight training has helped my players speed(somewhat) definately strength and sometimes flexibility but definately NOT skill, coordination, balance etc.
Many of my boys have done Olympic sytle lifting with plenty of cleans and other free weight work but the best players have not done this and in fact have trained in a low volume HIGH EFFORT way using free weights and machines. I call this HARD WORK and smart training. I insist that they all squat and deadlift BTW. They train this way because of time constraints but also because it is very effective and if they trained high volume they would over train since very few have ever used steroids to help with recovery. The natural athlete cannot use high volume and expect to grow in size and strength for long.
***bro...if you are natural you CANNOT do high volume unless you a genetic freak, especially when doing another sports seriously.
If you are talking about the brute power, with minimal skill, of a football lineman then yes power cleans and other types of lifting would be a BIG help but it has been my experience that athletic ability is genetic for the most part especially speed, balance and athletic coordination of power. Power can be greatly improved upon via lifting and endurance can be greatly inproved upon via traing BUT you still have to be gifted in these ares to be noticed.
Each to his own but you are definately wrong big time on #4 as I have never once in 20 years of coaching seen someone with average athletic ability significantly improve his base athletic ability in hockey through weight training of any kind. In fact the average athlete has NO CHANCE of making it big in hockey no matter what he does.
As a side.....the top 5 players that I have coached did little weight training at all...they were born athletes and refined their abilities through hard work on the ice.
I played with wayne Gretsky and as you know he was unreal and guess what HE NEVER TOUCHED WEIGHTS.
And BTW I am 41 years old and 230 pounds and I squat 700 plus in a deep high bar style, deadlift 750 and bench 420 and I have always trained HIT, especially in the squat and deadlift. I have NEVER done more than 4-5 sets for any body part even on steroids. Take a look at the largest bodybuilder that ever walked, Dorian Yates in his prime.....he was very big and VERY strong. Also Casey Viator HIT pro bodybuilder of the 70's and early 80's, who I know quite well, still trains HIT with low volume and intensity and he can out lift me at the age of 51!(and he has not taken steroids for 20 years)
Take enough gear and you can do anything and grow including BS high volume 5 and 6 day per week training...almost nobody will grow doing that without a good deal of steroids. ALSO HIT training done all the time without training in cycles is a death sentence for most unless on a lot of gear.
This is what works for a natural trainee, and especially the athlete....Three days in the gym per week on a three way split using no more than 4 working sets PER BODY PART, using almost NO isolation work. They also need to train in cycles and focus on adding small to tiny bits of weight to the bars weekly.
One can get more done with three hard sets of squats than 15 half assed high volume sets of various leg work.
RG
RG