By Rob Van Valkenburgh | Mon, Jan 30 | Strength Training, Strength and Conditioning, High School Strength and Conditioning, Programming
This three part series addresses the specific goals of each phase and how an effective high school level coach should program in order to provide their athletes with a comprehensive and effective off-season regimen.
In the first article, we discussed the first three months of your off-season program, from December to February. During this time your emphasis should be to recover from the season, lay the foundation for your off-season program, build strength, and develop the lifts and abilities you will shape your training around.
Click here to read part 3.
During the first training phase your goals should be the following…
Recover from the season and go through a 2-3 week GPP Phase
Begin to build strength with a focus on the ‘Big Lifts’
Maintain a base level of conditioning
Perform some form of speed development
Narrow Your Focus to Speed and Power
Now, moving forward into the spring your training focus needs to narrow. As discussed, your program should progress through the off-season from general to specific. The first three months were very general in nature as you laid the foundation for the rest of the off-season and did most of your technical teaching.
This second phase, from March to May, is critical and can be especially tricky with multi-sport athletes. That said, it is important to keep your athletes progressing through the program, getting them ready to hit the ground during the summer.
As we transition into this phase of training, our program will evolve in two ways:
We will increase the volume and specificity of our speed and agility training.
We will transition Phase 1’s strength gains into power and explosiveness.
Let’s dig into these with some detail…
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Increase the Volume and Specificity of Speed and Agility Training
During Phase 1 we focused on general speed and agility training with basic movement mechanics and our speed work built around combine testing drills. While we never remove movement mechanics work from our program, we will progress our sprint work and change of direction work into more advanced methods.
We will begin the implementation of resisted sprint movements with the use of sleds and partner resisted bands. As the athletes gain competency with the external resistance, we will mix in contrast speed work, which follows up a resisted sprint with an unresisted sprint.
This form of training produces a post activation potentiation effect and allows for the greatest amount of transfer from training to competition.
It is important to remember that speed development and strength conditioning are quite different demands on the body, and these should not be combined. If your athletes are fatigued during your technical speed training, they will not produce the results you want. I program my conditioning to directly follow my speed work, with an exception given to days that we do lower body training after our speed sessions — I do not want my athletes to be too run down going into the weight room.
During Phase 2 we will increase our movement work from two to three days per week.
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Sample Off-Season Daily Training Template for Speed and Agility
The daily split will be as follows…
Day 1: Linear Speed
Linear Movement Mechanics
Technical Sprint Mechanics and Start Technique
Resisted or Contrast Speed
Tempo Sprints
Day 2: Lateral Speed
Lateral Movement Mechanics
Shuffle and Cross-Over Run Technique
Resisted or Contrast Speed
60yd or 300yd Shuttle
Day 3: Change of Direction, Reaction, and Competition
Lateral and COD Mechanics
Deceleration, COD Fundamentals, and Body Control
COD Drills (Box Drill, T-Test, etc.)
Competition or Reaction Based Games/Drills (Mirror Drill, Trigger Man, etc.)
The most important aspect, in my opinion, is the COD and Reaction day. Make sure that the athletes are bought in and having fun with this. These days can be extremely beneficial, if all the athletes are paired up with someone who challenges them. Also, don’t be afraid to encourage a little trash talk. Remember, this is football not cross country.
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Transition Strength Gains to Power and Explosiveness
In the first instalment of this series, we spoke in depth about teaching the ‘Big Lifts’. By now, if done right, the team should be proficient in the 3-4 lifts you are building your strength program around. If so, it is time to begin dropping the reps and increasing the weight being lifted.
Disclaimer: Don’t increase the load just to increase the weight. Make sure the athlete is ready before you jack up the weight.
You will want to perform some form of max testing to establish 1RM’s. I personally prefer to test for the first time in the end of February rather than December. This gives you the chance to teach the lifts and allows the athletes a lower chance of injury because their training maturity is higher. Once you get 1RM’s on your big lifts you can begin to build your strength progressions from percentages.
By knowing the percentages the athletes have to lift each day, it takes the guess work out of training and allows for progressive overload and a true training adaptation.
Remember: Percentages are nothing more than a guide. Don’t be afraid to adjust on the fly, mid-session, or change their max numbers to a more suitable weight.
I won’t go too far into set/reps, just know that each week your reps should drop and your percentages should go up. As this progresses pay close attention to the technique of each individual. If you see a breakdown in form or lack of stability make sure to assess the athlete and determine if they need a change in weight, increased stability/mobility work, or some corrective exercises.
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In order to develop power, the athletes need to be moving weight close to their one rep max for a low number of reps — and at a high rate of speed. Remember you are developing football players, not weight lifters, and they need the strength to cross over to the field. In order to do this they do not need slow ‘grind it out’ reps.
So, what does a weekly split look like in Phase 2?
I, personally, like to use a four day model with an off day on Wednesdays. This allows for two tough days followed by a recovery day and another two training days to finish out the week.
Here is my ideal weekly split…
Monday: Linear Speed + Tempo Sprints, Upper Body Lift
Tuesday: Lower Body Lift
Thursday: Lateral Speed + Conditioning, Upper Body Lift
Friday: COD Reaction + Competition, Lower Body Lift
Now, remember this is an ‘ideal world’ situation. You will have athletes in season (as they should be), but it is vital to keep them as involved as possible, so when you enter the summer you’ll hit the ground running.
Click here to read part 3.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Rob Van Valkenburgh joins the TrainHeroic blog with 10 years experience in the strength game. Having coached elite athletes in both the private sector and the Division 1 collegiate setting, Rob believes that strength has to be the foundation of all athletic movement and that athletes of all levels deserve a comprehensive strength program. Rob writes regularly on his own website FootballStrengthCoach.com where here shares short form articles, training tips & programs, and other items related to strength and performance for football.
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