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The Ten Most Common Strength
Training Mistakes
Made by Martial Artists
http://www.staleytraining.com/articles/charles-staley/2009/10-strength-mistakes-made-by-martial-artists.htm
By Charles Staley, B.Sc, MSS
Director, Staley Training Systems
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Noted sports scientist Dr. Paul
Ward uses the following formula to predict success in athletic
competition:
Productivity
= Potential — Losses Due to Faulty Process
While your potential was determined
at birth, there’s still much that can be done to minimize
the mistakes you make along the way.
After years of training and
consulting to competitive martial artists, I’ve compiled
a list of the ten most common errors (all of which I’ve
made myself at one time or another) that martial artists make
when embarking upon strength training programs:
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1) Not training for strength:
Many martial artists feel that strength
training is counter-productive, causing one to become too large
and slow, despite the fact that in every other sport known to man,
it makes athletes faster. Training like a bodybuilder (see mistake
number 3) can certainly produce these undesirable effects, but properly
designed strength training programs improve strength, speed, agility,
endurance, and technical performance. Strength training should be
viewed as a tool, the utility of which depends upon the context
it’s used in.
2) Training for the wrong kind of strength:
Strength as a bio-motor ability has
many expressions. All human movement requires strength, and for
this reason, all athletes must concern themselves with developing
their strength levels to the utmost. What many don’t know,
however, is that there more types of strength than there are bogus
ab-training gadgets on late-night info-mercials!
Here’s a partial list:
Maximal Strength: The amount
of musculoskeletal force you can generate for one all-out effort.
Maximal strength is your athletic “foundation,” but it
can only be expressed in the weight room during the performance
of a maximal lift. While only powerlifters demonstrate this type
of strength in competition, martial artists need to develop high
levels of maximal strength in every muscle group.
Relative Strength: This term
is used to denote an athlete's strength per unit of bodyweight.
Thus if two athletes of different bodyweights can squat 275 pounds,
they have equal maximal strength for that lift, but the lighter
athlete has greater relative strength.
Competitive events which have weight
classes depend heavily on relative strength,
as do sports where the athlete must overcome his or her bodyweight
to accomplish a motor task (such as a jump kick). Further, events
which have aesthetic requirements (kata competition, for example)
rely heavily upon the development of strength without a commensurate
gain in bodyweight.
Strength can be developed through
two very different means— by applying stress to the muscle
cells themselves, or by targeting the nervous system. The former
method is accomplished through the use of bodybuilding methods (repetitions
between 6 and 12), and results in strength gains through an increase
in muscle cross-section. The latter is accomplished through higher
intensity loads (repetitions between 1 and 4), and increases in
strength are the result of the body's improved ability to recruit
more of its existing motor unit pool.
For martial artists and other athletes
who depend upon relative strength, bodybuilding methods should be
used sparingly, unless a higher weight class is desired. Most strength
training sessions should consist of high intensity, low repetition
sets, which improve strength through neural adaptations rather than
increases in muscle cross section.
3) Training like a bodybuilder:
My consultations with competitive
martial artists reveal that bodybuilding is the predominant paradigm
in today’s strength training world, at least in this country.
But bodybuilding methods are designed to produce muscle mass, not
strength. And while bodybuilders are strong, their relative strength
is poor compared to other explosive strength athletes. These methods
have some degree of utility for beginning martial artists as a means
of attaining basic fitness, but after a year or so, they should
be used sparingly, if at all.
4) Using insufficient intensity:
Most martial artists can relate to
doing hundreds of pushups, sit-ups, and leg lifts in class, but
as soon as you go beyond approximately 12 repetitions, the stimulus
is too weak to favorably improve strength values. Think about it:
as a martial artist, would you rather have the ability to perform
weak techniques for hours on end, or the ability to deliver explosive,
powerful techniques when it really counts? In training, you reap
what you sow.
5) Lack of variation:
While many people realize that the
training load must be progressively increased, few understand that
the training stimulus must also be periodically be varied in order
to prevent stagnation. Elite sprint coach Charlie Francis recommends
changing the training program whenever there is a one week plateau
in strength gains. Internationally acclaimed strength coach Charles
Poliquin utilizes alternating phases of high volume with phases
of high intensity in order to keep his athletes progressing.
6) Lack of periodization:
Periodization refers to planning
the training process. For most, the idea of planning is intuitively
obvious with regards to business, family, and finances, but when
it comes to training, most people don’t make the connection.
While many people attribute the success of Eastern-bloc athletes
to illegal steroid use, periodization deserves the real credit.
The martial arts seem to be the last sport on earth to take advantage
of this important tool!
7) Excessive use of machines:
“Machines” according to
exercise specialist Paul Chek, “are like sleeping pills for
the muscles.” Chek is referring to the fact that machines tend
to rob the stabilizer muscles of adaptive stress. Stabilizers are
muscles which anchor or immobilize one part of the body, allowing
another part (usually the limbs) to exert force. The most important
stabilizers are those of the trunk— the abdominals and trunk
extensors. If the motor cortex detects that it can't stabilize the
force provided by the prime movers, it simply won't allow the prime
mover to contract with full force.
8) Ignoring the principle of specificity:
The body's adaptation to training
is very specific to the type of training that has been endured.
This is sometimes referred to as the "S.A.I.D." principle—
Specific Adaptation to Imposed Demand. So, as an obvious example,
if you want to develop strength in your legs, you have to do strength
training exercises for the legs.
Less obvious than the previous example
is the fact that exercises must be done at specific volume and intensity
ranges in order to elicit the desired result. For example, if you're
trying to grow muscle, you must perform exercises in sets of five
to ten repetitions— roughly corresponding to 70 to 85% of your
maximum capability for a single repetition. It's not enough to simply
make sure you're training the right muscles!
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Commonly, instructors make the
mistake of thinking that if an exercise "mimics"
the desired skill, it is specific. A common practice involves
trying to improve punching speed by rapidly "punching"
with light dumbbells as fast as possible.
But this method is flawed, because
the angle of resistance is incorrect, assuming that this exercise
is done while standing erect. A better approach would to be
to perform dumbbell bench presses, which correctly align the
muscle fibers against the resistance being used.
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The specificity principle is abused
in other aspects of martial arts training, as well. Most instructors
train their students aerobically, despite the fact that nearly all
forms of martial art, including self-defense scenarios, are predominately
anaerobic. Another common example is the practice of slowly extending
a kick, and then holding the leg in mid-air until the instructor
gives the signal to return it to the floor. While this method may
work if you intend to find employment as a human mannequin, for
the purpose of improving kickingpower, it borders on useless.
9) Ignoring rate of force development:
Being strong won’t help you if
you don’t have enough time to display it! In the martial arts
(as in most athletic endeavors), the problem is that the amount
of time to develop maximum muscular force is extremely limited—
usually only a fraction of a second. While high levels of maximal
strength are a necessary prerequisite for the development of speed
strength (power), too much time in the weight room grinding out
heavy weights at slow speeds, without switching to speed strength
methods later in the training cycle, results in slow athletes.
The ability to apply muscular force
rapidly is called rate of force development, or RFD. While bodybuilding
methods slightly improve maximal strength, it has a negligible effect
on RFD. Training with heavy weights significantly improves maximal
strength, but again, the RFD remains largely unchanged. Only when
speed strength methods (plyometrics, ballistic training, etc.) are
used, is the RFD significantly improved.
10) Ignoring the antagonists:
Muscles work in pairs— for every
muscle in the body, there is another muscle that is capable of opposing
its force. This "pairing" mechanism is how we are able
to move with precision of movement and speed. However, when one
part of this pair becomes too strong in relation to the other, force
output capability suffers.
Unfortunately, many athletes unknowingly
reinforce this imbalance every time they train, thinking they are
respecting the principle of specificity by training only the prime
movers (or "agonists"). An example would be a martial
artist who reasons that since the quadriceps muscle extends the
leg during kicking, the quadriceps should receive the brunt of the
training focus.
Before long, the hamstrings (which
are the antagonists in kicking movements) are weak in proportion
to the quads, and power output declines. At this point, the martial
artist may conclude that weight training "slows you down,"
because for him, it did.
Here's the problem in the above example:
the weaker the antagonists are, the sooner they will contract and
oppose the prime movers (to prevent joint hyperextension), resulting
in a slower movement. But stronger antagonists are less sensitive
to this protective response— the body "knows" that
they are strong enough to decelerate the limb at the last possible
moment. The next time you watch elite boxers on TV, notice the development
of the lats and biceps. Great punchers always have well developed
antagonists.
(Bonus Mistake!)
Mistaking strength training as the
ends rather than the means: While it might seem ironic, the objective
of strength training is NOT increased strength per se, but improved
athletic performance. I would suggest that sports conditioning coaches
keep this in mind as they design conditioning programs for their
athletes.
About
The Author
His colleagues call him
an iconoclast, a visionary, a rule-breaker. His clients
call him “The Secret Weapon” for his ability
to see what other coaches miss. Charles calls himself
a “geek” who struggled in Phys Ed throughout
school. Whatever you call him, Charles’ methods are
ahead of their time and quickly produce serious results.
His counter-intuitive approach and self-effacing demeanor
have lead to appearances on NBC’s The TODAY Show
and The CBS Early Show.
Currently, Charles competes
in Olympic-style weightlifting on the master’s circuit,
with a 3-year goal of qualifying for the 2009 Master’s
World Championships.
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