Cornerstone Coaching Academy Podcast

Traditional conditioning vs. Baseball weighlifting


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I will begin this post by acknowledging that ANY physical activity that isn’t physically harmful is good and will likely increase an athlete’s performance, and will benefit one’s overall health.  


Many weight rooms contain tons of machines. This might be great for the "weeknight warrior," but is it what your baseball players should be doing?

There are a lot of traditional training methods that can in fact increase performance simply by increasing overall strength, and by the athlete being in better overall shape, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that those methods are the best training methods for baseball players. Players aren’t necessarily getting the best bang for their training buck (time and effort).

 

Let's go through the "traditional" method of working out that you see at a lot of local gyms and workout facilities:

 
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The Warm-Up (Movement prep)
Weeknight and Saturday morning warriors at the gym show up and do a few static stretches, usually starting with hamstrings, then some quads, then some shoulder and arm stretches before they hit the weights. 
The reality is, static stretching, although it may feel good, and feel right, isn’t the best thing an athlete can do to warm up for maximum performance.  Check out the chart below summarizing a number of studies on static stretching’s effect on athletic and explosive (which is HUGE in baseball performance) training.


Table courtesy of http://www.brianmac.co.uk/articles/article027.htm

 

Instead, try a combination of dynamic movements, agility drills, core movements, and semi-explosive movements.  Even better, try drills that improve skill but can be done at less than 100% as a warm-up.

 

 

TRAIN HOW YOU WILL COMPETE.
 
Split routines
A large percentage of the local gym-goers will be doing "split routines."  Basically, this means that the individual will do only upper body exercises on one day, then only lower body exercises on another day, or they will only do pushing exercises one day, then pulling exercises the next, then lower body the next day.

Again, generally any type of conditioning will benefit the athlete, so a split routine is better than nothing.  But, when you compete in baseball (or any sport for that matter), you don't just use your upper body one day, then lower body the next day.

Baseball players utilize their entire body every single day.  For that reason, training should be done the same way with full body routines.  The more multi-joint movements that can be included in a routine, the more closely it will mimic what they will be required to do on the field.

 

Get more information about Cornerstone's full body workouts by checking out our 2015-2016 offseason conditioning programs here:

 
Attend our FREE Web Clinic on creating strong, explosive, powerful, dynamic baseball players
 
Sets and reps
The standard workout for weekend warrior is 3 sets of 10 reps, and very rarely does that change.  Additionally, they keep the same velocity and pace for many of their reps and very rarely switch the exercises for each muscle group.

 

This type of training leads to plateaus in training, boredom, and sub-maximal results.

 

In fact, baseball players ultimate goal in the weight room should be to increase their ability to generate a large amount of force in a short amount of time (power).  Three sets of ten reps on the same exercises isn't likely to improve power greatly.

 

Instead, players need to be on a periodized workout plan with different phases that...
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Cornerstone Coaching Academy PodcastBy Coach Kyle Nelson

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