Absolute Edge: Performance & Rehab

Episode 87: "The Specificity Trap" — Why Sport-Specific Training Is Overrated


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You've heard the pitch: Train like you play. Mimic the movements of your sport. Make everything specific.

It sounds logical. It sounds scientific. And it's largely wrong.

In this episode, Dr. Nick Kuiper explains why the obsession with sport-specific training is actually holding athletes back—and what the research says you should be doing instead.

The Specificity Myth

The fitness industry has run with sport-specific training. Hockey players on slide boards with sticks. Golfers doing cable rotations. Basketball players doing ladder drills while dribbling.

It looks sport-specific. It feels sport-specific. But here's the problem:

  • It's not specific enough to transfer to the sport
  • It's not general enough to build physical qualities that improve performance
  • It's stuck in a no-man's land where you get the worst of both worlds

What True Specificity Requires

For an exercise to transfer to sport performance, it needs to match:

  1. Movement pattern
  2. Velocity/Speed
  3. Force production
  4. Timing
  5. Environmental context
  6. Decision-making demands

Can any gym exercise replicate all of these? No. Not even close.

The only thing truly specific to your sport is your sport. Playing hockey is specific to hockey. Playing golf is specific to golf. Nothing else comes close.

The Real Purpose of Training

Here's the paradigm shift: The gym is for building general physical qualities. The field, court, or ice is for applying them specifically.

General physical qualities include:

  • Strength
  • Power
  • Speed
  • Mobility
  • Work capacity
  • Resilience

These transfer to every sport because they improve the human system itself—not just one narrow movement pattern.

The Interference Effect

When you practice movements that are similar but not identical to your sport skill, you can actually degrade your sport performance. Your nervous system gets confused. Your timing gets disrupted. Your movement quality suffers.

That cable golf swing? It creates a new motor pattern that competes with your actual golf swing for neural real estate in your brain.

The Two-Bucket Approach

Bucket 1: General Physical Preparation (Gym)

Squats, deadlifts, presses, pulls, carries, jumps, throws. Build strength, power, and resilience. The movements don't need to look like your sport.

Bucket 2: Sport Practice (Field/Court/Ice)

Practice actual sport skills in the actual sport environment. This is where specificity lives. This is where transfer happens.

The gym builds the engine. The field tunes the engine for the race.

What This Means For You

Hockey players: Squat heavy, deadlift heavy, build powerful hips. Then go skate, stick-handle, scrimmage. Let the ice be your specificity.

Golfers: Build rotational power with med ball throws and hip mobility work. Then hit golf balls—lots of them. Let the club be your specificity.

Soccer players: Develop single-leg strength with split squats and lateral bounds. Then play small-sided games. Let the pitch be your specificity.

The Exception: Rehabilitation

When coming back from injury, bridging exercises have value—movements that gradually reintroduce sport-like demands in a controlled environment. But even then, the end goal is always the same: get back to playing.

Weekly Takeaway

"Sport-specific training is overemphasized. The most specific training for your sport is playing your sport. Train general in the gym. Play specific on the field. That's the formula that actually works."

About Absolute Rehabilitation & Wellness:

Located in Burlington, Ontario, we help athletes of all levels build the physical foundation for better performance—and get back to playing when injuries happen.

📞 Call our Burlington clinic: 905.332.7000

🌐 absoluterw.com]]>

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Absolute Edge: Performance & RehabBy Dr. Nicolas Kuiper