Robertson Training Systems Newsletter 4.24
In This Issue
- Robertson Training Systems Updates
- Testimonials
- Nutrition Tip
- Exclusive Interview: Brijesh Patel
- Upcoming Interviews
- New Articles and Blog Posts
- Schedule
Robertson Training Systems Updates
2nd Annual Ultimate Fitness Challenge & 5k Trail Run for Charity
This was passed on to me by strength coach Jeremy Frisch; all the
proceeds go to a great cause, so be sure and check it out!

http://www.teamworksacton.com/challenge.html
Testimonials: Magnificent Mobility
Last week I bought Mike Robertson and Eric Cressey's
"Magnificent Mobility" DVD. When I was playing competitive
rugby at a fairly high level (a high level for an American that is)
Dynamic Flexibility and warm-ups trickled down from the national team,
but for the most part they were used incorrectly. As such, when I bought
this DVD I was not unfamiliar with the concepts behind dynamic mobility,
however, some of the focal points I was taught were well and truly
wrong.
Magnificent Mobility did a great job of filling in the gaps.
The DVD itself, is pretty well done, the music is horrible, but you
can see, hear, and understand all of the information as it's presented.
Mike and Eric do a good job of explaining the reasons, and uses of the
movements, and an excellent job of actually teaching the movements
themselves.

As an athlete with some fairly significant mobility issues, this DVD
addresses my issues: tight hips, hyper-mobile lumbar spine, tight
hamstrings. I have used movements from M2 before my last 2 rowing
practices, and I have felt longer and more relaxed in the boat. Results
in the long term will have to wait for the long term.
The only criticism I have (music aside) is that it would have been
helpful to have an insert, or section of common ailments, and
progressions to remedy them, but the product itself is not lacking as
much as it would be nice to have this added feature.
In summation, any athlete or coach that doesn't already have a strong
working knowledge of dynamic flexibility (and if you have to think about
that answer, the answer is "you don't") needs this DVD. I know this is a
strong statement, but I firmly believe that after 12 years of rugby and
3 years of rowing, mobility (or problems associated with a lack there
of) has held me back more than anything else. So far this has been money
well spent.
John Brooks
Nutrition Tip
Increase NEPA
By Mike Roussell
NEPA stands for Non –Exercise Physical Activity. Examples of this are: walking to your car, playing with your children, fixing the car.
Studies have shown that people with higher levels of NEPA have less bodyfat when compared to people with lower amounts of NEPA. So park a little further away when you go to the mall, use the bathroom one floor up from your office, and whatever you do DON’T use the traveling sidewalks in the airports.
If you like this tip and want to learn
more about Mike and his products, check out his Naked
Nutrition website.
Exclusive Interview: Brijesh Patel
MR: B, thanks for
being with us here today – you did an interview for us quite some time
ago but it’s always great to catch up. For those who might’ve missed
the first interview, could you please re-introduce yourself?
BP: I’m the Assistant
Strength and Conditioning Coach at the College of the Holy Cross in
Worcester, MA. I work along side Jeff Oliver and we are both
responsible for all 27 of the varsity sports. This may sound like a lot
(which it is), but we seem to do a very good job taking care of all our
athletes and give them a training program that will help their athletic
goals. I’m also a partner and founder of two internet based education
companies. The first is S B Coaches College (www.sbcoachescollege.com)
and the second is My Fit Tube (www.myfittube.com
– not launched yet). Both sites are educational resources for trainers,
sport coaches, strength coaches, athletic trainers, therapists, athletes
and parents in regards to everything about good training. You’ll find
motivational quotes, tips, articles, presentations and video (www.myfittube.com)
that are geared towards increasing your knowledge so you can better
serve your athletes.
MR: What originally
got you into the field? Where you an athlete growing up?
BP:
This is kind of a long story, but I’ll try to keep it short. I
was always a “bigger” kid growing up, and had trouble participating in
many sports because of my disadvantageous size. I went out for football
my freshman year in high school and vowed to lose enough weight so that
I would have the opportunity to play more. At my peak, I weighed 225
lbs (standing in at a whopping 5’4) with probably a body-fat of 30% (and
that’s being generous).
I did a complete overhaul on my diet, began to
exercise every day, and read anything I could get my hands on regarding
training, and nutrition. I ended up going a little over board and lost
90 lbs in six months. I was then introduced to the weight-room and fell
in love with it. As a high school senior, I knew I wanted to be
involved in athletics in some way and what better way than athletic
preparation?
MR: I know you’re a
huge student of the game, and always learning new techniques to improve
your athletes. Is there anything new that you’ve been throwing into
your programming to make it more effective?
BP: Honestly, the
biggest change that I’ve made in programming over the last year or so
has been placing a bigger emphasis on mobility. You know as well as
anybody how a lack of adequate mobility can be to proper health and
movement patterns. I spend more time “warming-up” and have created a
number of different warm-up routines to help address commonly “tight”
areas, such as the ankles, hips and thoracic spine. I’ll also include
more mobility exercises in between sets of plyometric exercises, to make
my athletes’ rest more productive.
The other thing that I’ve recently changed is the way I cue different
exercises to make athletes understand their bodies and how the exercises
enhance their movement. I don’t know about your readers, but my athletes
often have a difficult time understanding the various exercises that we
perform and how their bodies work to perform the movements. I truly
believe that we must encourage our athletes to understand their bodies
more and how they position themselves to move efficiently. If they can
understand the way their bodies work, I think it’ll give them a much
greater awareness to understand if they make a great play or make a bad
play and how their movement affected their success or not
This may sound vague, but
what I try to do is to communicate how exercises are similar and that
the cueing is essentially the same. For example, I try to get my
athletes to understand that whenever we do an upper body push or pull,
we must engage the scapulae for optimal movement. When we perform
push-ups, I teach my athletes to engage their scapulae during the
eccentric portion and then pull themselves down to the floor, this not
only puts their shoulders in a safe position, but also allows their
pectorals to receive greater neural stimulation, because they will be
maximally put on stretch at the bottom. When we perform inverted row,
we teach the same thing, which is to engage the scapulae first and then
pull the chest to the bar. The emphasis is always on pulling. I also
cue this when we perform dumbbell variations of bench press or an
incline press. We want to make sure that we are moving at the right
joints and in the right sequence. I’ve found my athletes technique to
be much better, while minimizing injuries and giving them a greater
sense of awareness to their bodies. We use the same cueing for lower
body movements as well.
MR: I’ve learned a
ton of speed and change-of-direction techniques from you. What are some
of the common movement errors you see in the athletes that you work
with?
BP: Much like what I said
above, I try to get my athletes to understand their bodies so they can
better position themselves to make a play during their sport. I try to
teach them about shin angles and how to position their feet, knees and
hips to move and stop efficiently. How you land or stop dictates how
you jump or start. If you can decelerate under control and proper
position, then you can re-accelerate yourself that much quicker. And
this is exactly what I try to teach my athletes. So, the common errors
I see are when they stop, or land in a bad position to move. They
aren’t setting themselves up to succeed and I try to relate how their
set-up will affect everything. If you watch the best athletes move,
they are the most efficient at putting their bodies in a position to
accelerate and decelerate. They are using whatever strength they
possess to the best of their ability…which is the essence of
efficiency. That is why athletes, who do not look very strong or do not
have history strength training, move so well and are so explosive. They
have great genetics, but also know how to position their bodies in the
most efficient way to move.
MR: What kind of
response do you guys get in the summer programs up at Holy Cross? Could
you discuss what your weight room off-season schedule looks like?
BP: Our situation at Holy
Cross is different than most colleges. Holy Cross does not offer any
summer courses at all, so if an athlete wants to stay up to train with
us, they have to find their own job, find their own place to live and
basically make all of their arrangements on their own. The dorms are
not open during the summer time and scholarships do not cover any of
these expenses. Despite these drawbacks, we have had more and more
athletes stay for at least one month during the season to train with us
and with their teammates. This summer we have our entire basketball
team, and close to 70 football players staying up to train. We also
have a variety of other athletes staying up with us.
Since basketball is my primary sport, I’ll tell you what our current
program looks like. We are training 5 days a week, Monday-Friday;
Strength training is performed on a 4 day lower/upper split. Mondays
and Thursdays are our lower body days, while Tuesdays and Fridays our
upper body days. On Wednesdays we’ll do some on-court movement specific
work that helps to facilitate some recovery and acts as a team building
session. Here is an outline of what our program looks like:
This is our model for our off-season warm-up:
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|
Lower Body - Power |
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Upper Body – Strength |
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Lower Body - Strength |
|
Upper Body – Hypertrophy |
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Roll/Static
Stretch
Ankle Mobility
Dynamic Warm-Up
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Shoulder Mobility
Dynamic
Warm-Up |
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Ankle
Mobility
Dynamic
Warm-Up |
|
Shoulder
Mobility
Dynamic
Warm-Up |
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|
Core
Stability/Activation |
|
Core
Stability/Activation |
|
Core
Stability/Activation |
|
Core
Stability/Activation |
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
A1 |
2 Leg Linear
Jump |
|
OH Throw |
|
Lateral
Bound |
|
OH Throw |
|
A2 |
Hip Mobility |
|
Thoracic
Mobility |
|
Hip Mobility |
|
Thoracic
Mobility |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
B1 |
1 Leg Linear
Hop |
|
Rotational
Throw |
|
1 Leg
Lateral Hop |
|
Rotational
Throw |
|
B2 |
Glute Medius |
|
T-Spine/Shoulder Mobility |
|
Anterior
Tibilas |
|
T-Spine/Shoulder Mobility |
|
C1
C2
|
Reactive
Balance
|
|
Chest Throw
Scap
Activation |
|
Reactive
Balance |
|
Explosive
Pushup
Scap
Activation |
On upper body days we’ll move onto either linear or lateral speed
development and on the lower body days we’ll condition after our
strength training session.
Our strength development outline is as follows:
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|
Lower Body - Power |
|
Upper Body - Strength |
|
Lower Body - Strength |
|
Upper Body - Hypertrophy |
|
A1 |
Fast/Explosive Lower Body |
|
Heavy Push (Horz
or Vert) |
|
Heavy
Dynamic Single Leg Supported |
|
Moderate
Push (opposite of day 2) |
|
A2 |
Light
External Rotation |
|
Core |
|
Heavy
Horizontal Pull |
|
Moderate
Pullup/Chinup |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
B1 |
Heavy
Bend/Hip Extension |
|
Moderate
Push (opp of first push) |
|
Moderate
Bend/Hip Extension |
|
Light Push (opp
of first push) |
|
B2 |
Heavy Pullup/Chinup |
|
Moderate
Horizontal Pull |
|
Moderate
Scap |
|
Light
Horizontal Pull |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
C1 |
Moderate
Static Single Leg Supported |
|
Moderate
Tricep |
|
Single Leg
Unsupported |
|
Moderate
Bicep |
|
C2 |
Light Scap |
|
Moderate
Deltoid |
|
Core |
|
Light Pushup
Variation |
|
C3 |
Core |
|
Light
Horizontal Pull |
|
Forearm |
|
Light
Deltoid |
Here is what I consider heavy, moderate and
light:
Heavy 1-5 reps (> 85% load)
Moderate 6-10 reps
(84%-75% load)
Light >10 reps (<74%
load)
Fast 1-5 reps (50-100%)
or bodyweight plyos/speed work
MR: What are some of
the major issues you run into with collegiate level athletes? Is their
diet an issue? Recovery?
BP: The biggest issues
that I run into are that you really have to trust collegiate athletes to
do what you tell them to do. You have to teach them how to eat in the
cafeteria, how to recover, how to manage their time, how to minimize
stress, how to take control of their life and how all of it affects
their performance. I actually enjoy this process as I love to educate
my athletes about training and how everything is inter-related. But the
problem is that you have to trust them to do it on their own. I tell
them that I can’t hold your hand and help you do things. I can give you
all the advice and information in the world but it’s up to you to make
it happen. Sometimes this doesn’t click until they are sophomores,
juniors, seniors and or even until they graduate. You have to keep up
on them and can not give up, because they’ll realize one day that they
are the only ones that can make the changes in their lives.
MR: Brijesh, this
next question if from one of our readers:
“What are your favorite outside of
the weight room exercises for your athletes to use in their off-season
training? Any tire flipping, sled pulling, med ball work, etc.?”
BP: I actually love sled
dragging, sled pushing, medicine ball work and old fashioned bodyweight
work. I use these three modalities as forms of non-impact
conditioning. I like to start my off-season conditioning with different
medicine ball and bodyweight circuits to form a general conditioning
base before I start to introduce running into our program. I’ve found
that by performing different low to non-impact conditioning we can still
spend time getting stronger and developing some conditioning without
inducing so much fatigue that will inhibit their strength gains. I’m a
believer that you must condition year round but you don’t have to run
year round to stay in shape. My athletes love and hate sled training.
They all remark on how much better their conditioning levels are when we
perform it continuously.
MR: All right B,
we’re close to the finish but I have to wrap up with my ever-famous
“Final Question.”
What is one mistake
that you’ve made in your coaching career? And what have you done to
correct it later on?
BP:
One mistake that I’ve definitely made early in my career is being
close-minded and not seeking enough knowledge. I thought I knew enough
and didn’t believe in what other coaches did. Because it didn’t make
sense to me, I closed them out and thought they were bad coaches. I
didn’t seek to understand their perspectives or what they were looking
to accomplish. I also stopped seeking out new information for a while
and became content and comfortable. I soon realized that this was not a
quick ticket to become a better coach or a better person. I know now
that to become better, I have to try and learn from everybody that I
meet. The only way to do that is to ask questions and seek to
understand their perspective. The following 5 things have really helped
me to become better and are things that I try to convey to my interns
who want to be strength and conditioning coaches.
1. Seek Knowledge - To become the best
athlete/coach/trainer/person you have to go out and seek to learn from
the best. This knowledge can come from self-help books, business books,
college classes, seminars, videos, the internet, you name it. Just go
out and learn.
2. Listen to People - This is a huge problem for all people. We
all judge people and shut them and their ideas out based on what we
think we know about them. When we actually take the time to listen to
what somebody has to say, then and only then should we really judge. If
it works for somebody else and not for you find out why it works for
them…don’t be quick to judge.
3. Train - There is nothing more frustrating
to see than coaches who don’t do the programs that they write. How do
you know if it works? How do you know what it feels like? How do you
know if it’s too heavy, too light, too much or not enough?
The only way to find out is to do it. The program
may look great on paper, but if it’s too much and you can’t recover from
it, what’s the point?
4. Balance - Balance is a general word that
refers to how we should do everything in life. If we do too much of any
one thing, something else is going to suffer. For example, if we spend
too much time at work our family and social life are going to suffer.
If we train our internal rotators too much with excessive volume our
external rotators are going to suffer and leave us more susceptible to
shoulder injuries. If we eat too many carbohydrates, our insulin
sensitivity is going to decrease and increase our chances of having type
2 diabetes. We need to have balance in everything we do in our lives:
work, family, social life, training, and nutrition.
5. Coach People,
not Athletes - The more experienced I get in this field, the more I
realize that I not only coach athletes, but coach people. As coaches
and trainers, we can have a profound influence on the people with whom
we work. We need to realize that we are not only helping an athlete
achieve their goals, but also helping them to become better people. We
are teaching them what they can do mentally and physically, how to focus
their mind, how to stay positive, how to make changes in their
lifestyle, how to reduce stress, and how to lead a healthier lifestyle.
We run a summer program for high school kids and the biggest changes we
see in them are their confidence levels. Parents always remark on how
our coaches have been a positive influence on their children.
“People will forget what
you said. People will forget what you did, but people will never forget
how you made them feel.”
MR: Thanks a ton for
being here with us today Brijesh. Where can my readers find out more
about you?

BP: As I mentioned
earlier, you can find more info by visiting
www.sbcoachescollege.com and sign up for our newsletter for updates
and information about when
www.myfittube.com will be launching. We anticipate myfittube to be
the premier video based educational resource for everything fitness
related. We’ve got some really great people involved who are willing to
teach their concept and move the field forward. You can also stop by
Holy Cross to visit, watch our athletes train and talk some shop with
Jeff Oliver and myself. Feel free to email me at
bpatel@holycross.edu to let me know when you’re going to stop by.
Upcoming Interviews
June 23rd - Chad Waterbury, author and strength
coach (www.chadwaterbury.com)
June 30th - Paul Kelso, author of "Kelso's Shrug
Book"
July 7th - Dan John, author, speaker, Olympic
lifter and living strength legend (www.danjohn.org)
July 14th - Julia Ladewski, assistant strength
coach at Buffalo University, powerlifter, and member of Elite Fitness
training staff
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
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