Robertson Training Systems Newsletter 4.28
In This Issue
- Robertson Training Systems Updates
- Testimonials
- Nutrition Tip
- Exclusive Interview: Bill Hartman
- Upcoming Interviews
- New Articles and Blog Posts
- Schedule
Robertson Training Systems Updates
2008 Indianapolis Performance
Enhancement Seminar DVD's on sale TODAY!
It's taken a few weeks to get the final edits completed, but the 2008
Indianapolis Performance Enhancement Seminar DVD series is on sale now!
In this package, you'll get all the information that Bill and I gave
at our recent seminar series. Here's a brief rundown of the
individual DVD's and their topics:
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DVD #1 – Introduction and 21st
Century Core Training
What is the difference between core
strength and core stability? And why must you absolutely
be training for stability vs. strength? Learn the biomechanics
of the core and lumbar spine, and why ineffective training will
leave you at increased risk of injury.
DVD #2 – Creating a More Effective
Assessment
Identification of deficiencies precedes
optimal program design. An effective assessment then is the key
to a successful program. Formal and informal, general and
specific assessment and clearing tests will be discussed and
guidelines to address the needs of individuals and groups are
provided in this segment.
DVD #3 – Optimizing Upper Extremity
Biomechanics
Upper extremity training is still in the
dark ages. Learn why your old program isn't working, and learn
the three components you must include in your program for
optimal results. Finally, learn the two muscle groups that you
probably aren't even training that are integral to the health
and performance of your upper extremity.
DVD #4 – Building Bulletproof Knees
The knee is one of the most frequently
injured joints in the body. Are you doing everything possible
to keep yours (or your clients') healthy? This session will
examine why so many knees are getting injured, along with
strategies and programming you can utilize to get your knees
back to 100%.
DVD #5 – Selecting the Optimal Method
for Effective Flexibility Training
Flexibility training goes far beyond common
methods of stretching. Sources of movement impairments can be
strength-related, neurological, or tissue-related. Learn to
identify the causes of mobility limitations and which methods to
apply to achieve the desired outcome.
DVD #6 – Program Design and Conclusion
Trainers and coaches who are only selling
the "6-week package" aren't looking at the big picture. What
does this client/athlete need to succeed over the long haul?
Learn how to develop programs that are not only biomechanically
correct for your client, but how to keep them on the path to
success for many years to come. |
We've also taken feedback from previous seminars and DVD's to make
sure this is really top notch. In this case, all the questions
that the attendees had will be transcribed onto the film so that you
know exactly what they're asking. As well, instead of giving you a
manual we've taken the PowerPoint slides and video clips and inserted
them directly into the DVD's! We feel this will greatly enhance
the learning process so that you'll get the most out of each and every
DVD.
For this week only, we're going to sell the DVD's at $30 off
the normal retail price. If you want the DVD's only, the cost will
be $99 plus shipping and handling. If you need NSCA CEU's, this
product has been approved for .7 CEU's and the total cost for both is
$129.
After this week, the DVD's will retail for $129 without CEU's and
$159 with CEU's. So don't delay! Purchase the seminar series
now by following one of the links below.
Purchase the 2008 Indianapolis Performance Enhancement Seminar DVD
Series with .7 NSCA CEU's
Purchase the 2008 Indianapolis Performance Enhancement Seminar DVD
Series
Go to the Indy Performance Seminars home page
New Article up at Elite Fitness
Here's the first installment of a three part article series I wrote
for Elite Fitness. If you've ever thought about competing in a
powerlifting meet, this article should help you get started!
Your First Meet, Part I: Setting a Date and Developing Goals
Testimonials:
Inside-Out
Mike, I do appreciate you for sending an email asking
for feedback regarding the
Inside-Out
DVD.
The Inside-Out training pack is incredible. In the past
few years for some reason I was developing shoulder problems that I
never experienced before. I went to the Dr. and he said it could be
tendonitis. I also injured my back lifting a heavy box in a part-time
warehouse job I had many years ago and ever since I had experienced
upper and lower back pain.
The very first moment I started to watch the video and
read the manual got me excited to try the exercises. The video was well
organized and had great information. I loved the fact that you can go
directly to each individual exercise or listen to each explanation
which I recommend, if the user is a beginner or just wants to know the
technical terms. I started to watch the model performing the
exercises in the video and I performed them with him. I did the
exercises exactly as advised and it gave me instant back and
shoulder pain relief. I couldn't believe it, but it's true.
At my doctor's visit, he told me to do stretching
exercises; he provided some on a sheet of paper for me to do at home.
Your exercises blew my doctor's advise out of the water and they are the
best I've ever tried. I printed a copy of some exercises from the
e-manual to a co-worker and he couldn't believe the instant pain relief
he felt from his shoulders and back. I recommended your Inside-Out
training pack to my co-worker and it's up to him to take advantage of
all the exercises. My personal opinion is, if I invested in my health
so should he.
I feel like I have my own personal therapist and
trainer at home that, I can have access at anytime or anyplace at my own
leisured time. I'm very happy an excited that I bought your
Inside-Out
package and I look forward to buying more products from you.
Be Strong!
Dan from Chicago
Nutrition Tip
Omega-3 Snacks
By John Berardi
Once you’re splitting up your fats
correctly (about 1/3 of your fat intake
coming from each of the three types of
fat), your next goal should be to
balance out your omega 6: omega 3
ratio. Do this and you’re arteries will
be jumping for joy and they’ll have less
body fat around them to impede their
jump height.
While most of you probably already know
that the omega 6: omega 3 balance is
critical, I’m sure many of you are
wondering in you can balance out the 6:3
ratio without having to pour another
tablespoon of flaxseed oil down the
gullet?
How about
trying some pumpkin seeds or flaxseeds?
Pumpkin seeds provide a 2:1 ratio of
omega 6 fatty acids to omega 3 fatty
acids, increasing the EFA content of
your diet while putting your fat intake
back in balance. Also, adding flaxseeds
to your diet is a good idea. Grind
these seeds up in a coffee grinder and
add to your meals. Flaxseeds provide
fiber, protein, and a 3:1 ratio of omega
3: omega 6 fatty acids. Your arteries
will thank you.
If you like this tip and want to learn more about JB and his products,
check out his
Precision
Nutrition website.
Exclusive Interview: Bill Hartman
MR: Bill, we’ve
worked on several projects together over the past couple of years, but
some people still don’t know much about you. If you don’t mind,
please introduce yourself.
BH: My primary
background is as a physical therapist, but I come from an extensive
athletic background as well. There was a point in time when I was
preparing myself for football and track in college that I became
fascinated with the training process more so than the actual
competition. Since then I’ve been searching for answers and
studying anything I can get my hands on that may provide some small
piece of how we can better prepare athletes and improve our clients’
health and fitness. This includes getting your typical
certifications from USA Weightlifting, NSCA, and a few others.

I currently manage two PT
clinics as well as run my own fitness business and now add on to that
our new gym
Indianapolis Fitness and Sports Training (IFAST). IFAST will
soon be THE place to train in Indy. I also write regularly for
Men’s Health Magazine.
Because of my background
I do a lot of corrective exercise programming with my clients and have
worked extensively with competitive golfers over the last 8 years.
My work with golfers lead to my website
www.yourgolffitnesscoach.com and Your Golf Fitness Coaches Video
Library, Volume 1. Of course, we both developed the top selling,
Inside-Out:
The Ultimate Upper Body Warm-up.

MR: A little
over a month ago, we had our first annual
Indianapolis Performance
Enhancement seminar. Could you give the readers a little insight
as to what you discussed? (And please speak in the past tense,
even though you’re doing this interview the week before!)
BH: My topics were
centered around assessment methods and flexibility, but I what I really
tried to hammer home was the concept of specificity. I think
there’s been a lot of “dumming down” in regard to many concepts in the
fitness and sports training industry and the concept of specificity gets
ignored.
For instance, when we
assess an athlete, we have to consider the environment in which he
performs. If our tests take the athlete so far out of his
performance environment, they may not be valid tests and provide us with
misleading information. Muscles and connective tissues behave
differently under different circumstances. Athletes function in
environments of variable forces and speeds which demands the use of feed
forward processing and results in different physical responses than if
they’re tested in slow, static activities that allow the use of
feedback.
It’s not uncommon for an
effective athlete to show some form of weakness, poor technique, or poor
motor control during a test in a controlled environment because the test
requires a skill that is unfamiliar to the athlete. Does that mean
we need to make some sort of correction? Not necessarily. In
the athletic environment we may not see the same weakness, lack of
technique, or poor motor control. We need to use a battery of
testing to address not only how an athlete looks or moves in one
situation but in many. The first rule of assessment is that
EVERYTHING is an assessment.
Ever correct someone’s
squat in the gym? Make an adjustment in their bench press
technique? Show an athlete how to land from a jump? Of
course. You observed something that wasn’t optimal and you made a
correction. Essentially, you assessed in the specific environment.
Flexibility training also
demands that we address range of motion issues specifically. Which
is better? 30 second static stretches? PNF stretching?
Dynamic stretching?
In most cases, it’s not
that one method is better in all cases, but rather, one method will tend
to have an optimal effect. For instance, most commonly applied
static stretching and PNF methods increase range of joint motion by
merely increasing stretch tolerance. In other words, you get used
to the pain associated with the stretch and range of motion improves.
The old theories that depend on autogenic inhibition and reciprocal
inhibition just don’t hold up with direct research. These methods
only result in temporary gains in range of motion by reducing tissue
stiffness in the elastic region of tissue elongation, so they don’t
actually make muscles and connective tissues longer.
If you want to make
tissues longer, you have to use time dependent methods that will
physically change the tissues to either add sarcomeres to the muscles or
causes micro damage to the connective tissues so they remodel at a new
length. So again, it’s not that one method is better. It’s
just that one method is better in specific circumstances.
MR: We’re also
in the process of opening a gym together – needless to say, I’m quite
excited about it! Why do you feel this gym will be different from
what many currently see in the Indianapolis market
BH: You mean other
than the fact that while many gyms promise results, we actually deliver?
J
I think there’s probably
3 primary things that will put
Indianapolis Fitness and Sports Training at the forefront of fitness
in Indianapolis:
1) Our backgrounds are
very complementary. I don’t think there are any holes in any of
our procedures or programming. We each have our own strengths
within our knowledge bases but there’s also enough crossover in our
personal experiences, whether it be in training or rehab, that there’s
no confusion or loss of information during communication. This
creates a powerful and effective application of training method.
2) We’ve created a real
team atmosphere among the members. While we assess and program
every single member of the gym individually, the training environment is
unique in that each member supports the other and pushes them toward
their goals. This is not your typical situation in a personal
training facility where there might be a trainer socializing with client
while they exercise or a gym where you sign a contract and you’re on
your own. This is a training facility. Anyone who’s ever
trained with a group of motivated individuals knows how you may be
having a bad day but as soon as you get the vibe from the rest of the
group, you kick it into high gear and the intensity goes through the
roof. If you’re not serious about making progress and achieving
goals, you better join another gym.
3) The thing that’s going
to have the greatest impact of all is our try before you buy concept.
I can’t see anyone turning this down. We won’t need to do much in
the way of sales because we’re going to treat people like full members
from day one by letting them try us for free. I think this
achieves two very important outcomes. First, just like any other
major purchase in life, you’re going to get to “take us for a test
drive”. We won’t need to sell because the services and the results
will do it for us. People will experience the difference in
attitude and productivity from day one and they’ll never want to train
anywhere else. Second, it provides a method of natural selection
for our clientele. We’re literally creating a community of top of
the line service and success to allow our clients to truly reach their
potential.
MR: Damn, that
sums it up pretty well - and like I said before I can't wait to open!
Changing topics
completely, you recently competed in your first powerlifting meet.
How did it go overall? Did you learn anything from it?
BH: Overall, I’d
have to say that I was pleased since I exceeded my goal on two of the
three lifts and my total. I was a little disappointed because I
really underestimated weight selections. I’d never used a squat
suit nor have I lifted with wraps or a belt in many years. I
probably left a good 100 to 125 pounds on the platform.
Having used the suit,
wraps, and belt, I’m not sure I get it. The contribution from the
equipment is rather significant. I didn’t use a bench shirt, but
I’m certain I would have been surprised as to how much it impacted the
result. It’s kind of an ego stroke to say, that I squatted or
deadlifted whatever weight, but in the back of my mind the impact of the
equipment takes away a bit of the credit. I think that if I do it
again, I’ll hop on the raw lifting bandwagon and give it a go without
the extra help.
MR: A few months
ago you shed a significant amount of weight following Mike Roussell’s
and Alwyn Cosgrove’s “Warp
Speed Fat Loss” protocol. Can you explain the program to
everyone? I know there’s been a lot of questions about it.
BH: Yeah, this is
very cool concept, but it’s not for the rank beginner in most cases.
That’s not to say that the foundational principles don’t apply. I
just don’t think they can tolerate the programming.

Most fat loss programs
ramp up the volume and intensity and the dietary discipline to allow for
someone to accommodate to the progression. In most cases, anyone
can achieve their desired result. AC’s Afterburn is a great
example of such a program.
The Warp Speed Fat Loss
protocol takes into consideration that you’ve got some training under
your belt and then takes all the concepts that impact fat loss to the
greatest extent and applies them simultaneously over a much shorter
period of time. It’s pretty intensive but the results were nothing
short of phenomenal. 17 pounds of fat lost in about 4 weeks.
I took a couple weeks off and then hit it again for another 11 pounds of
fat. I haven’t been this light in about 20 years which allowed me
to hit the powerlifting meet and lift respectfully.
MR: Every time
we get together, it’s hard staying “on course” because we always want to
talk training. Have you had any new or insightful thoughts about
training lately? Things we’re doing right, wrong, or a topic you
just want to rant about?
BH: Let me free
flow a bit here…
* We need a better
system of mentorship in the industry. The educational system in
the fitness field is inherently weak because of the lack of foundational
education required to enter the industry. Trainers take people’s
health in their hands without any experience in some cases after just
taking a certification test. A mentorship program provides the
trainer with essential experience in safer atmosphere under the direct
guidance of a qualified fitness professional.
* Functionality
requires context. What their really talking about is specificity
so what is functional in one situation may not be functional in another
situation. You can’t just decide that something is specific unless
you take the forces of the activity into consideration. For
instance, a single leg exercise like a single leg squat would appear to
be specific for sports which require single leg activities such as
change of direction or cutting. Actually a double leg squat is
more specific based on the forces involved. That doesn’t negate
the value of single leg training, but it may have a different purpose
depending on your reasoning for using it.
* Fatigue may be
one of the most important factors in understanding injury mechanisms.
Fatigue slows reaction time, alters balance, reduces stability, and
alters proprioception. Think you can predict injury potential from
a few simple static tests? Dream on. When was the last time
you analyzed an athlete’s performance in a fatigued state? Pay
attention during training, practice, and game situations for undesired
changes in posture, technique, compensations, and a general decline in
performance. Rest is a training modality.
* Train your
athletes to improve their performance and the injury prevention
component of training takes care of itself…they’re the same thing.
MR: Any new
projects or things in the works we should know about?
BH: I did a seminar
called “The Shoulder from the Inside Out” last year that was recorded.
This will be released as a DVD with a manual that should be of interest
to a lot of people. I also have another shoulder related project
in the preliminary stages that’ll be much bigger, but I can’t really go
into details at this point. I’ll be sure you let you know when
it’s available.
I’ve also teamed up with
Mike Roussell of
Your Naked Nutrition Guide and Jon Fass from
AcceleratedStrength.com to put together a top notch internet
community at
www.fasterfatlosszone.com. Membership is limited right now,
but we should be opening that up very soon as well. This is a
website that we initially started for our private clients, but it’s
taken on a life of its own. We’ve already got so much information
on there in the form of articles, audio interviews, and videos, it’d
take weeks to get through it all.
I guess the biggest
project right now is getting the gym filled to capacity which won’t be
long. Anyone in Indy or just coming through town that wants to
train in the best atmosphere in the city needs to stop by.
MR: Ok Bill,
time for the final question, and you know I ask everyone this!
You’ve been in this
field for quite some time now – what mistakes have you made in the past,
and what have you since done to correct that mistake?
BH: I’ve recently
taken on a PT student, and I haven’t been a clinical instructor in about
10 years. One of the things you have to do as a CI is to provide a
logical reason for everything that you do as a clinician. If you
don’t have a reason to do something, you better not be doing it.
Otherwise, you’re ineffective in preparing the student to become an
independent clinician.
Years ago when I was
starting out in the rehab and fitness fields, I sort of went with the
flow and followed the “flavor of the month” and did a lot of things just
because it was popular or a big name in the field said it was the way to
go. I didn’t ask enough questions and I didn’t ask “Why?” nearly
enough. I certainly didn’t take it upon myself to answer many
questions. Looking back I don’t think I was a true professional.
I think that if you’re a
true professional, you have a responsibility to constantly investigate,
research, and experiment with the methods that you apply. This
allows you to develop an effective filtering system for new information.
To separate the good information from the BS. It also keeps you in
what the martial arts would consider the beginner’s mindset.
Eighteen years into my
career, I study more, learn more, and I know I’m more effective as a PT
and fitness professional. I also know that there’s no way I can
learn everything, so it’s important to have a core group of
professionals that you communicate with frequently to fill in the gaps
and keep challenging yourself to be a better professional.
MR: Thanks a ton
for your time – where can my readers find more about you?
BH: The best place
would be
www.billhartman.net/blog. Thanks Mike.
Upcoming Interviews
July 14th - Julia Ladewski, assistant strength
coach at Buffalo University, powerlifter, and member of Elite Fitness
training staff
July 21st - Shawn Windle, Indiana Pacers
head strength and conditioning coach
July 28th - Robb Rogers, Director of St. Vincent
Sports Performance in Indianapolis, Indiana
August 4th - Pavel
Tsatsouline, author of several books and kettlebell instructor (www.dragondoor.com)
If you would like to submit a question for
one of our upcoming interviewees:
1) Please send an e-mail to
info@robertsontrainingsystems.com
2) In the subject heading, please list the person your question is directed
towards (i.e. Mike Boyle)
3) In the body of the text, list one or two questions you'd like to have
answered.
We can't promise that our interviewees can
answer all questions, but we'll do our best to get a nice mix of questions.
Thanks for your support!
Stay Strong
MR
www.RobertsonTrainingSystems.com
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