Training: Overtraining, or "What I See in High Schools Every Day"
Stop me if you've heard this before: Conditioning month is meant to bring out the best in the high school athlete. It's a punishing routine, often run twice per day at obscene hours (5 AM morning session, 6 PM evening session) where the men are separated from the boys. The morning session involves running 2 miles to "warm up," followed by intense 100 meter sprints and other plyometric work. Puking is common and is taken as a sign that the workout is hard enough and the coach is doing his job.
In the evening, the players convene for skill work - the soccer players run hours of foot skill drills, exhausted from the morning session, while the football players practice hitting and tackling if they're not in the weight room performing quarter-squats with 600 pounds on their back. Basketball players are running ladders, suicides, testing their vertical leap, and jumping over plyometric hurdles - all the while feeling a burning sensation in their shins but unwilling to speak up to the coach about it. Because after all, no one wants to think that you're not tough enough, right?
Wrong.
High school coaches are singlehandedly responsible for dogging their athletes and pushing them well past their physical, mental, and psychological limitations. The ones who succeed on these absurd five-day-a-week programs with four or more hours of intense work are the genetic freaks, the ones who are truly the outliers. The ones who fail and suffer injuries are deemed "weak" and not worthy of making the team. The rest plod through it, nursing their "soreness" (in actuality, these are injuries), icing their bodies, and sleeping for hours on end, hoping the pain will go away in time for the season to start. Athletes lose 30 pounds in a month, slash their 40 yard dash time, and increase the weights on their squats that closely resemble a bad leg press rather than a true full squat. Progress was made - the ends justify the means.
Wrong.
High school athletes are often rank novices - they are thoroughly unadapted to stress and can be pushed to their limit every time they train because they have no previous experience! Novices do not get stronger when they train, they get stronger when they recover. Overtraining is when you push an individual past his limitations and do not respect the time it takes to recovery from a workout that disrupts homeostasis. Overloading is when you design a program that disrupts homeostasis - good programs overload, but do not overtrain.
An example of an excellent novice program is that of Mark Rippetoe's Starting Strength - the novice lifter works every other day, increasing the weight on all of his lifts (Back Squat, Press, Bench Press, Deadlift, Power Clean) every session. This is the linear progression model. The athlete gets one day off between workouts and two on the weekends, though adding a "metabolic conditioning" workout on one of those days is not a terrible idea (as long as there is one day of recovery before the next heavy lifting day).
Training for Novices (aka High School Athletes)
The ideal novice training cycle looks something like this:
- Load phase. This leads to exhaustion and a disruption in homeostasis.
- Recovery phase. This allows the body to recover and rest.
- Supercompensation phase. This is where the body gets stronger and adapts to the stresses placed on it in the Load phase.
The first step is then repeated. However, if the load phase is started too late after supercompensation, then the effects are mitigated and the athlete may return to the base level of fitness. Confused? This excellent graph from Footballdrills.com should help:
More after the jump...
An ideal training cycle can be graphically represented like so:
The straight line is the linear progression of the resistance used while the curves are simply the same graphic from the supercompensation image above. There is a load which must be recovered from, supercompensation occurs, then the athlete trains harder and repeats the cycle until he can no longer do so. When recovery becomes an issue, the athlete should reset the load and attempt to progress in a linear fashion again, and when the athlete hits the wall once more, he should consider intermediate programming.
Intermediate programming is a subject of another post, but to briefly explain it, it is planning your workouts a week in advance rather than simply increasing the load every workout. Intermediate trainees can not recover quickly enough from the load required to disrupt homeostasis to simply add weight over and over again, and so they need to plan a bit further in advance. Most athletes will never progress past intermediate programming and can see gains from this type of programming for years.
Dangers of Overtraining
A sample training / conditioning program from your average high school coach looks something like this:
This is constant training without regard or respect for a recovery cycle, and it leads to a decreased capability level. While strict novices may still see gains overall, they will progress at a much slower rate due to overtraining and stress.
Personal Stories of High School Athletes
One high school student that I previously coached is an excellent athlete, though he could stand to gain 30 or 40 pounds (this is true for nearly every high school athlete). He was an outstanding center fielder, leadoff hitter, and from what I hear, a great shooting guard. He's in the conditioning program for basketball now, and he recently told me:
Everyday this week I've had weightlifting and sprint workouts with less than 16 hrs rest on Friday. Today I did a 20 min recovery jog and then elevated legs for 10 mins and then iced for 3 hrs and when that didn't work I put on some icyhot and foam rolling... I'm still as sore as I started!
To put it bluntly, this is absolutely unacceptable. This athlete is not "sore." He is injured. When range of motion is compromised and pain levels do not go away, that's not normal soreness. That is an injury due to a stupidly designed program by a coach who has no training or education in exercise science who is simply repeating the programs that he suffered through in high school, college, or possibly the professional ranks of sport.
My advice to him was:
You need to not do so much hard shit. I realize this may not be an option since your coaches don't know how to make a realistic training program, but that's the truth.
Assuming that you aren't going to change your coaches' minds (and you shouldn't try to, anyway), you should sleep, foam roll, contrast baths (take an ice bath - yes, a FULL ice bath - then drain and immediately take a hot shower; yes this is painful as hell), and eat, eat, EAT.
The last point cannot be overstated. You need to eat 6000 calories per day. No, that number is not a joke. Start eating pizza every day. A lot of it. And McDonalds.
I am serious.
Overtraining Has to Stop
Unfortunately, the solution for overtraining athletes involves using a search engine for more than 10 minutes and maybe taking a class or two on proper exercise science - and we all know that people simply aren't interested in learning things that are contrary to their rock-solid beliefs.
Train your athletes hard - design a program that makes them sweat, curse, and struggle. But understand that recovery is a necessary part of training, and without it, you are wasting your time and potentially opening up your athletes to injury to salve your ego.
Do you have any stories of athletes that you've coached, or perhaps injuries you've suffered as a result of poorly trained high school coaches? Sound off in the comments.
2 recs |
21 comments
|
Comments
Sharing...
I just posted this on my site: Kyle Boddy on overtraining
Mainly a plug for your article here, but I share some minor details of a college strength program that came from a professional baseball organization through a retired player acting as our pitching coach. (Was that the record for number of prepositions in a single sentence?)
by NoNameOnCard on Oct 20, 2009 3:35 PM PDT reply actions 0 recs
I would show this to my baseball condition coach
But I know I’ll run because of it…
by TheFunkle on Oct 20, 2009 6:17 PM PDT reply actions 0 recs
Funny, but true.
Attempting to change your coach’s mindset isn’t going to be very fruitful. It’s much like me attempting to convince your average gym goer that curls are a waste of time. It’s not going to work and it will only earn you scorn.
Webmaster of Driveline Mechanics
http://www.drivelinemechanics.com - An Unconventional Look at Scouting
by Kyle Boddy on Oct 20, 2009 8:54 PM PDT up reply actions 0 recs
Thanks for posting this, Kyle.
I’ve marked it for inclusion in tomorrow’s Frosty Mug, because I think the more eyes that see stuff like this, the better.
I also think you missed an important point, though: While these high schoolers are being trained by people who may treat the results of their 2009-2010 season as if it’s the end of the world, an extreme majority of these athletes will not play sports professionally or even be offered a scholarship to do so in college. They’re going to need to get decent grades and learn something if they’re going to get into college.
Certainly, high school sports are a great experience and can be an excellent building block for a student’s development, but when they’re handled this way, they’re practically a net loss academically for the students involved. In fact, some of the athletes puking on a practice field before 6 am, swimming laps until they need help climbing out of a pool or going weeks on limited food while they try to cut weight to make a wrestling team might be better off if they quit the team, got some rest and worked on becoming more than that guy we all know who still talks about his high school football career on his breaks at Wal Mart.
That's all I've got for you today, unless you're interested in some Chris Capuano/Tom Haudricourt Fan Fiction.
by KLSnow on Oct 20, 2009 6:30 PM PDT reply actions 0 recs
An excellent point.
I think the fact that Kyle has to post this article highlights the borderline anti-intellectualism in some circles of amateur and professional sports. The fact that these practices hurt students’ ability to perform at their academic peaks as well is a crime to all of us.
by jwiscarson on Oct 20, 2009 8:15 PM PDT up reply actions 0 recs
Thanks.
Wrestling is another sport entirely that makes me uncomfortable. It is downright dangerous.
Webmaster of Driveline Mechanics
http://www.drivelinemechanics.com - An Unconventional Look at Scouting
by Kyle Boddy on Oct 20, 2009 8:55 PM PDT up reply actions 0 recs
Huh?
You mean the guy in my class who went from 175 during football season to 140 during wrestling then up to 180 for spring football training wasn’t treating his body in the best possible way?
(All over a less than 6 month period.)
Aaron King is still my homeboy... iffy mechanics and all
McFAQ for all you newcomers out there.
GET THAT VORP AND WHIP SH!T OUTTA HERE!!!
by baetown415 on Oct 20, 2009 11:03 PM PDT up reply actions 0 recs
Yeah.
It’s pretty sickening, only aided by the media’s perception of what is “in shape.”
We have come to believe that aerobic training = exercise and that ripped six-pack abs = strong and in shape. There’s a lot wrong with both of those assumptions.
Webmaster of Driveline Mechanics
http://www.drivelinemechanics.com - An Unconventional Look at Scouting
by Kyle Boddy on Oct 20, 2009 11:10 PM PDT up reply actions 0 recs
Oh geez
I just remembered that football and wrestling were coached by the same guy… so I don’t know what he was thinking in letting the guy in my class go through all that.
Aaron King is still my homeboy... iffy mechanics and all
McFAQ for all you newcomers out there.
GET THAT VORP AND WHIP SH!T OUTTA HERE!!!
by baetown415 on Oct 21, 2009 12:50 AM PDT up reply actions 0 recs
My high school gym was
full of drugs. It was in the late 90’s and everyone seemed to be on something. I knew quite a few guys taking steroids and even HGH scored from AID’s patients. Looking back it seems so crazy.
by FlimtotheFlam on Oct 20, 2009 8:26 PM PDT reply actions 0 recs
that's disturbing
I'm not a sabermetrician, but I do play one at Driveline Mechanics.
Can't get enough of me? Check out my Twitter feed.
by devil_fingers on Oct 20, 2009 8:42 PM PDT up reply actions 0 recs
But not surprising.
His history is not so different than what I have seen. I frequently have to tell kids the truth about steroids and other illegal PEDs because they get these wild beliefs from watching Sportscenter and hearing third-hand from a guy who maybe knew a steroid dealer a few years ago.
The truth is not what parents want me to tell to their kids. But I won’t lie to them: Steroids, if used judiciously and effectively, can increase strength and endurance safely to levels beyond a person’s genetic ceiling. They can also get them to that ceiling quicker by speeding up recovery cycles and allowing the person to train maximally more often.
However, I have only run across one client who was willing to work hard enough that steroids would be worth looking into. And he is very strong-willed and anti-drugs, which usually goes hand in hand with someone with a strong work ethic.
Webmaster of Driveline Mechanics
http://www.drivelinemechanics.com - An Unconventional Look at Scouting
by Kyle Boddy on Oct 20, 2009 8:58 PM PDT up reply actions 0 recs
So pretty much rotate different muscle excercises.
Our weight training instructor makes sure everyone doesn’t stick with bench the entire week because “even though the muscle grows under stress it needs time to recover etc.”
He also makes sure your form is correct so those kids using purely their arms during the Cleans get yelled at a lot.
Encouraging HS athletes to break their limits is good, breaking them is not though.
You got slurved!
by Slurvey on Oct 20, 2009 8:43 PM PDT reply actions 0 recs
Yes.
Exceeding their limits is a must – it is the very foundation of overloading. Novice trainees have a low ceiling to begin with, so it’s not hard to train to and over the limit frequently.
But repeated plyometric training and heavy weightlifting on a daily basis is not only downright irresponsible, but idiotic.
Sounds like your weight training instructor already knows all this.
Webmaster of Driveline Mechanics
http://www.drivelinemechanics.com - An Unconventional Look at Scouting
by Kyle Boddy on Oct 20, 2009 9:00 PM PDT up reply actions 0 recs
This is awesome. More more more!
Beyond the Boxscore Not a member? Sign up.
by Sky Kalkman on Oct 21, 2009 7:45 AM PDT reply actions 0 recs
Once again very quality info
Proper recover is vital to proper strength gains and athletic improvement. Of course nutrition is a huge part of proper recovery. I think it is very important for coaches to realize that most young athletes are not professionals and therefore need more recovery time and instruction. I know that the motto if you are not puking you are not working hard enough. This type of training and thinking only leads to less able athletes and breaks down moral.
All Truth Goes Through Three Stages 1.It is ridiculed 2.It is violently opposed 3.Finally, it is accepted as self-evident. kinesiologist
Baseball’s biggest busts Andy Marte.
by E5 on Oct 21, 2009 5:30 PM PDT reply actions 0 recs
What are the best ways to shorten the recovery and compensation periods?
You talked about this a bit, but perhaps it merits its own post.
"Of course Kolby Rasmus was going deep! That’s what Kolby Rasmus does! You don’t give Kolby Rasmus second chances!" -Kolby Rasmus
by hazel on Oct 22, 2009 7:47 AM PDT reply actions 0 recs
Legal? There aren't many.
Proper nutrition is important, but that begs the question: What is proper nutrition? The answer is: It doesn’t matter, as long as you eat a lot. If you’re an average-sized male and you’re eating 6000 calories a day, you’re eating enough for recovery and growth. Supplementation of BCAAs and other products can help slightly, but not all that much.
Recovery cycles can be slashed significantly with the use of steroids and prohormones. The reason that athletes often take these drugs is not because of their anabolic effects (which they do have), but because you can train harder and more frequently with them and avoid regression and injury.
Now, who does that sound like it benefits the most in the baseball world? Makes you wonder why all the power hitters are getting the blame, eh?
Webmaster of Driveline Mechanics
http://www.drivelinemechanics.com - An Unconventional Look at Scouting
by Kyle Boddy on Oct 22, 2009 4:47 PM PDT up reply actions 0 recs
I've heard things like tons of water, stretching, creatine and such.
"Of course Kolby Rasmus was going deep! That’s what Kolby Rasmus does! You don’t give Kolby Rasmus second chances!" -Kolby Rasmus
by hazel on Oct 22, 2009 7:47 PM PDT up reply actions 0 recs
All that stuff is fine...
…but it just keeps you from recovering worse than you normally would. Except creatine, which shows strength increases in athletes.
So I guess if your hydration levels are poor and you don’t use a foam roller or do mobility exercises, then yes, they can help you recover better. But that’s correcting for a deficiency.
Webmaster of Driveline Mechanics
http://www.drivelinemechanics.com - An Unconventional Look at Scouting
by Kyle Boddy on Oct 22, 2009 8:01 PM PDT up reply actions 0 recs

by 















