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In this episode of Research 2 Reps, we had the opportunity to sit down with Dr. Paul Comfort, whose work has influenced how so many of us think about Olympic lifting, power development, and applied sports science. Paul walks us through how his early research on pull variations reshaped real-world training for athletes who may not be ready for or suited to full catches. We talk about what happens when you shorten the pull, how power and rate of force development can actually improve, and why removing the catch is not the step backward some believe it to be. What stands out is how curiosity in the classroom turned into research that now guides programming across professional sport, collegiate athletics, and beyond.
Our conversation expands into force plate testing, biological variability, and what data is actually worth acting on. Paul challenges the idea of collecting information for the sake of collecting it and pushes us to ask what meaningful change really looks like. We explore the difference between influencing performance and trying to control it, especially in complex team environments where psychology, leadership, nutrition, recovery, and belief play massive roles. This episode is a reminder that great performance systems are built through cohesion, clarity, and humility. We do not control outcomes, but we can shape environments that give athletes their best chance to succeed.
Big thanks to podcast sponsors, Sorinex and EliteForm, for making these episodes possible.
By Sorinex Exercise Equipment4.9
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In this episode of Research 2 Reps, we had the opportunity to sit down with Dr. Paul Comfort, whose work has influenced how so many of us think about Olympic lifting, power development, and applied sports science. Paul walks us through how his early research on pull variations reshaped real-world training for athletes who may not be ready for or suited to full catches. We talk about what happens when you shorten the pull, how power and rate of force development can actually improve, and why removing the catch is not the step backward some believe it to be. What stands out is how curiosity in the classroom turned into research that now guides programming across professional sport, collegiate athletics, and beyond.
Our conversation expands into force plate testing, biological variability, and what data is actually worth acting on. Paul challenges the idea of collecting information for the sake of collecting it and pushes us to ask what meaningful change really looks like. We explore the difference between influencing performance and trying to control it, especially in complex team environments where psychology, leadership, nutrition, recovery, and belief play massive roles. This episode is a reminder that great performance systems are built through cohesion, clarity, and humility. We do not control outcomes, but we can shape environments that give athletes their best chance to succeed.
Big thanks to podcast sponsors, Sorinex and EliteForm, for making these episodes possible.

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