#1 There is NO coordinated plan of attack for fighters.
Ideally one person needs to be in charge of the athlete’s
camp, so they can create a plan of attack, communicate expectations, create a
schedule, execute and monitor progress along the way.
- Who
is the athlete?
- What
are their strength, weaknesses, etc?
- Who
is the opponent?
- What
are their strengths, weaknesses, etc?
- What
is the game plan for the fight?
- What physical demands are needed for that game plan?
A stand up battle will have different technical and physical
demands than a wrestling or grappling match.
Once the plan is in place, coaches can coordinate on how to
best prepare the athlete for competition.
#2 Athletes work with a variety of coaches that DON’T communicate.
MMA requires a variety of skills, including boxing,
kickboxing, muay thai, wrestling, jiu jitsu, judo, etc…not to mention strength
and conditioning.
These demands usually lead athletes to train with a variety
of different coaches, at a variety of gyms.
Commonly each coach wants to teach skill, but also tends to
blend in their own version of strength or conditioning drills.
Coaches want to help prepare the athlete, but typically do a
poor job communicating with the rest of the team.
Many athletes are sparring, rolling live, wrestling, and
doing conditioning at every practice.
Left un-monitored, the athlete typically ends up exhausted,
stressed, performing like crap and eventually injured.
This goes hand and hand with mistake #1.
In order for an athlete to grow physically and technically,
all coaches must be on board, follow the plan and communicate their experience
with the athlete along the way.
#3 Very few coaches test or monitor the athlete during camp.
Is the athlete getting better or just tired?
Training camp are long, grueling and taxing on the
athlete’s mind and body.
In order to improve their performance, it’s important to get
some benchmark numbers before and during camp.
Still is the #1 priority.
How is the athletes skill set?
How can the skill coaches help the athlete evolve, improve
and best prepare for the upcoming fight?
Next is strength and conditioning.
- Is
the athlete healthy?
- How
is their weight/body fat %?
- How
good is their mobility/flexibility?
- Are
they strong?
- Are
they explosive, fast, and quick?
- Are
they in shape? (Aerobic, anaerobic?)
If the athlete is struggling with pain, strain or injury,
that is priority #1. A good physical therapist, manual therapist or other
needs to assess address and communicate the plan with the rest of the team.
A GOOD strength coach can monitor body composition, resting
heart rate, mobility, symmetry, strength, power, and conditioning at the
beginning and during camp.
Just about everyone that trains for competition screws this
one up…and honestly, I screwed this up a lot in the past.
Competitive people love hard workouts!
If they are laying in a pile of sweat and vomit, it was a
great workout, right?
Wrong!
Remember, the goal of strength and conditioning is to make
the athlete stronger, more athletic and to keep them healthy, so they can
train!
If we always ‘smash’ them during our workouts, they are way
too fatigued to perform and are vulnerable to injury.
A GOOD strength program addresses posture, stability of the
joints, mobility, explosive movement, strength and conditioning, within a
systematic plan of attack that allows the athlete to peak for competition.
Ideally, the intensity level of each practice should be
planned and practices throughout the week should fluctuate between low, medium
and high intensity work.
In South Africa, we idolize ‘tough’.
Epic battles, who can last the longest and endure the most
pain?
We look up to the people that put in the hours, work hard
and tough it out!
When it comes to training, this can be a huge benefit, but
the volume and timing must be controlled.
Wrestling for 2 hours and then doing an hour of high
intensity conditioning will crush the toughest competitor, but it doesn't make
them better.
What many coaches fail to consider is the impact that this
type of training has on the athlete and the rest of their training.
MMA training is already tough, taxing and difficult.
Small doses of high intensity, grind sessions can be useful,
but need to be part of the big picture, executed at the right time and the
impact monitored, so the athlete recovers properly.
MMA is relatively new sport and how we train is evolving
every year. We try new things, learn from others and improve our
programs, so our athletes are able to perform and succeed at the highest
levels. Hopefully some of these ideas will help you improve your program,
so your athletes can become stronger competitors!
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