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🎧 Episode Overview
In Part 2 of this episode of WET – Waterpolo Expert Talk, the focus shifts to training structure, recovery, sprint physiology, and performance monitoring. Brian Xicotencatl explains why most water polo training plans unintentionally overload athletes and how better weekly structure can dramatically improve both performance and health.
A central theme of this part is heart rate variability (HRV) as an objective tool for managing training stress. Brian explains how coaches can use HRV data to classify athletes into green, yellow, and red readiness zones, allowing smarter daily decisions instead of relying on subjective impressions.
We also explore youth development vs. adult performance, why children cannot access true sprint physiology before puberty, and why technical skills and game understanding must come long before metabolic conditioning.
The episode closes with Brian’s insights into 6-8 Sports, performance diagnostics, and why fixing weaknesses — not reinforcing strengths — is the fastest way to raise an athlete’s performance ceiling.
🔍 Topics Covered
👤 About the Guest – Brian Xicotencatl (Part 2)
Brian Xicotencatl is the founder of WaterPolo Strong, a performance platform dedicated exclusively to the physical development of water polo athletes. He works internationally as a strength & conditioning coach, sports science researcher, and performance consultant, specializing in:
Brian also collaborates with 6-8 Sports, where movement quality, power output, and game performance are measured together to create a complete athlete performance profile.
đź”— Contact & Resources
By Andreas Schulze-Kopp5
11 ratings
🎧 Episode Overview
In Part 2 of this episode of WET – Waterpolo Expert Talk, the focus shifts to training structure, recovery, sprint physiology, and performance monitoring. Brian Xicotencatl explains why most water polo training plans unintentionally overload athletes and how better weekly structure can dramatically improve both performance and health.
A central theme of this part is heart rate variability (HRV) as an objective tool for managing training stress. Brian explains how coaches can use HRV data to classify athletes into green, yellow, and red readiness zones, allowing smarter daily decisions instead of relying on subjective impressions.
We also explore youth development vs. adult performance, why children cannot access true sprint physiology before puberty, and why technical skills and game understanding must come long before metabolic conditioning.
The episode closes with Brian’s insights into 6-8 Sports, performance diagnostics, and why fixing weaknesses — not reinforcing strengths — is the fastest way to raise an athlete’s performance ceiling.
🔍 Topics Covered
👤 About the Guest – Brian Xicotencatl (Part 2)
Brian Xicotencatl is the founder of WaterPolo Strong, a performance platform dedicated exclusively to the physical development of water polo athletes. He works internationally as a strength & conditioning coach, sports science researcher, and performance consultant, specializing in:
Brian also collaborates with 6-8 Sports, where movement quality, power output, and game performance are measured together to create a complete athlete performance profile.
đź”— Contact & Resources

229,220 Listeners