Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Is Water Better Than Sport Drinks?

In some cases yes. For exercise lasting one hour or less, water is still the best sport drink around. The nutrient you most need to replace during and after a workout is water.

“Sports drinks” do have their place, mostly for exercise lasting more than an hour, and especially for use by endurance and ultra-endurance athletes. These products are a mixture of water, carbohydrate, and electrolytes. Electrolytes are dissolved minerals that form a salty soup in and around cells. Electrolytes carry electrical charges that let them react with other minerals to relay nerve impulses, make muscles contract or relax, and regulate the fluid balance inside and outside cells.

In hard workouts or athletic competitions lasting an hour or longer, electrolytes can be lost through sweat. Sports drinks do two things: replace water and electrolytes lost through sweat, and supply a small amount of carbohydrate to the working muscles. The best time to swill one of these drinks is during an aerobic workout or during any period of exertion, especially if you're exercising or working in hot weather. That's when fluid loss is greater than any other time of the year.

 Where sports drink may have an edge over water is in their flavor. A lot of people just don't drink much water because it doesn't taste good. If you are an avid water drinker and really like water, you will benefit just as much from water as you will from using a sports drink unless you are exercising more than an hour.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Refueling Your Muscles after a Workout

After working out, you want your muscles to recover. Recovery is essentially the process of replenishing muscle glycogen. The better your recovery, the harder you'll be able to train during your next workout. There are three critical periods in which to feed your muscles with carbs. These three periods are explained in the following discussion.

1. Immediately Following Your Workout

Your muscles are most receptive to producing new glycogen within the first few hours following your workout. That's when blood flow to muscles is much greater, a condition that makes muscle cells practically sop up glucose like a sponge. Muscle cells are also more sensitive to the effects of insulin during this time, and insulin promotes glycogen synthesis. You should therefore take in some carbs immediately after you work out.

 The question is: What's the best type of carb for refueling?

 Answer: carbs with a high glycemic index.

The glycemic index is a scale describing how fast a food is converted to glucose in the blood. Foods on the index are rated numerically, with glucose at 100. The higher the number assigned to a food, the faster it converts to glucose. A sport drink containing glucose, sucrose, or a glucose polymer (all high on the glycemic index) is a rapid and efficient restorer of glycogen. Some of these drinks may also contain fructose, which isn't as fast at replenishing muscle glycogen as either glucose or sucrose. That being so, try to avoid fructose, including fruit, as the sole source of carbohydrate in the period immediately following your workout. Stick to high glycemic index choices containing glucose and sucrose.


2. Every Two Hours Following Your Workout

Continue to take in a mixture of low and high-glycemic carbs every two hours following your workout. A word of caution: There is a drawback to high glycemic index foods. They may produce a fast, undesirable surge of blood sugar, and you can feel weak or dizzy.

3. Throughout the Week

To keep carbohydrate replenishment on track, stay on a high-carbohydrate diet from week to week. An excellent study of hockey players, whose sport requires both muscular strength and aerobic endurance, found that during a three-day period between games, a high-carb diet caused a 45 percent higher glycogen refill than a diet lower in carbs. By consistently fueling yourself with carbs, you can keep your muscles well stocked with glycogen.

 Giving careful thought to what you eat and making sure you get plenty of carbohydrates will provide a solid foundation for optimizing both your performance and your health.

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Summer Speed And Agility Training

Athletes must work on their bodies year-round so that they are ready to play at peak efficiency from the start of the season. Thus your best window to improve your speed, agility and quickness lies in the off season. Then when competitions starts, you aren't overloading your body with too many competing demands. Whether your goal is to improve at track, basketball, soccer, volleyball or any other sport, you can make your greatest gains during your open time in the off season.

The purpose of speed, agility, and quickness training is to execute maximal force while performing high-speed movements. SAQ training is an ideal supplement to your summer strength training program.

A common misconception is you have to be born with speed, agility and quickness or coordination. Anyone can train their body to improve their speed and reactions. With proper training, a slow athlete can become faster, a fast athlete can become even faster, and a good athlete can become great.

*******************
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Speed, Agilty, and Quickness training for athletes ages 16 and above. SAQ Elite will help athletes build the 
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WHAT CAN SAQ ELITE PROGRAM DO FOR YOU:·
- Increase acceleration and MAXIMIZE breakaway speed
- Improve your ability to start, stop, change direction, and leave your competition in the dust
- Learn proper sprint mechanics and get faster immediately 
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Eventbrite - SAQ Elite @ Coppin State University

Thursday, May 10, 2012

How Parents And Coaches Can Help Young Athletes Succeed In Sport And Life

People often think professional players show up at seven o’clock for a seven-thirty game, get dressed, and play. They do not realize that the players often arrive three or four hours before game time to work on their skills.
“Many athletes have tremendous God-given gifts, but they don’t focus on the development of those gifts. Who are these individuals? You have never heard of them—and you never will. It is true in sports and it is true everywhere in life. Hard work is the difference— very hard work.” - John Wooden
Good results rarely happen by chance. Hard work, coupled with correct knowledge, is necessary for ultimate success. There is a famous saying that goes “luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity.” Often, people say a player was lucky when they do well or win. In reality, hours and hours of work produced the good results.

Very few young players work as hard as they could, but that is probably a good thing. Too much hard work at a young age often leads to burnout. Parents and coaches should promote the idea that hard work leads to success and rarely will success come without the hard work, but they should not push their player to the point of overexertion or disaffection.

It is frustrating for parents when their kids do not want to practice. Often, parents cannot understand this, especially when the parents feel they have been nothing but encouraging with the child’s participation in the sport. It is important that parents and coaches understand that they should try to inspire young players, but motivation comes from within the players themselves. All athletes are different. Some are self-motivated at a young age. Others become motivated at a later age, and some never seem to attain the motivation for sports.

Letting a young athlete know that they can develop this talent with desire and practice is good. These words may create the love of the sport and the motivation at some point in a young player’s career. It all starts with love of the game, followed by hard work, which produces success. Those three, love, hard work, and success build upon and feed off each other. No one can make a player a major-leaguer; only the player can do that. Nevertheless, parents and coaches can help players develop a love of sport, a good work ethic, and success.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Complex Training For Speed, Power, And Explosiveness

Many athletes include plyometric exercises in their training programs and are well aware of the benefits. However, it is slightly less well known that the combination of traditional strength and plyometric exercises together (complex training) results in greater improvements in power and rate of force development.


Complex training, one of the most advanced forms of sports training, integrates strength training, plyometrics, and sport-specific movement. It consists of an intense strength exercise followed by a plyometric exercise.

Complex training activates and works the nervous system and fast twitch muscle fibers simultaneously. The strength exercise activates the fast twitch muscle fibers (responsible for explosive power). The plyometric movement stresses those muscle fibers that have been activated by the strength training movement. During this activated state, the muscles have a tremendous ability to adapt. This form of intense training can teach slow twitch muscle fibers to perform like fast twitch fibers.

To maintain a high level of intensity throughout the workout, use low repetitions (two to five), high recovery intervals between sets (three to five minutes) and at least 48 hours of rest between complex workouts.

Lower Body Complex

Upper Body Complex

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Double Kettlebell Exercises For Strength And Endurance

Kettlebell training is fantastic for losing fat, building lean muscle, and helping you get into great physical condition. For some kettlebell athletes, double kettlebell exercises may not be an option, but if you do have two kettlebells of the same weight then double kettlebell training will fit nicely into your training program and really improve you strength and endurance.






The versatility of kettlebells is part of their appeal; all you need is a couple of kettlebells and an open space to train. Focus on exercises that provide the most bang for you buck. Pick one pressing exercise, one pulling exercise, one exercise for the quads, one for the hamstrings, and one core exercise.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Questions From Parents of Skinny Kids





If you are the parent of a skinny kid, you undoubtedly want to help your child add weight healthfully—without eating tons of ice cream, supersized fast-food meals, and expensive (as well as questionable) nutrition supplements. The following are some answers to the questions parents commonly ask about how to support appropriate weight gain in growing children.

Q: My 16-year-old son insists that I buy him protein powders and weight-gain drinks so he can bulk up. Are these necessary?

A: No. The single most important thing your son needs is extra calories to perform resistance exercise, which builds muscle. Most of these extra calories should come from carbohydrate (not protein supplements) because carbohydrate will fuel his muscles and give him the energy he needs for exercise. I recommend replacing water (apart from during exercise) with extra juice and low-fat milk as a simple way to boost calories. Note that even with no exercise, just eating extra calories stimulates a little muscle growth. Sedentary people gain about 1 pound of muscle with every 3 pounds of total weight that creeps on.

Q: My 12-year-old son is shorter than many of the girls his age. He feels embarrassed and asked me about protein supplements. Would they help him grow faster?

A: No amount of extra protein will speed the growth process. Boys generally grow fastest between the ages of 13 and 14. After this growth spurt, he will have enough male hormones to add muscle mass and start to grow a beard (“peach fuzz”). This growth spurt lasts longer in boys than in girls. After the growth spurt, boys continue to grow slowly until about age 20.




Q: My 13-year-old son wants to start lifting weights to bulk up for football. Should he?

A: A well-supervised weightlifting program (to prevent stress on immature bones and ligaments) with light weights can help your son grow stronger and help prevent injuries. But it will not contribute to bulkier muscles until he has enough male hormones to support muscular development. (This corresponds with the growth of adult-like pubic hair.) Boys generally bulk up after they have finished their growth spurts. Remind him that patience is a virtue!