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Thread: Throwing, Injury and Starting Strength

  1. #1
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    Jul 2007
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    Default Throwing, Injury and Starting Strength

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    hi mark
    firstly congrats on Starting Strength - its a great book. i am using it alot as i am coaching a few athletes in track and field. They are either just starting weight training or have been instructed with poor form. Your book has been a God send.

    I also used your training protocol in Starting Strength for 12 weeks to rehab myself back to 70% of pre surgery strength ( I had knee surgery to realign my knee cap in Feb, i returned weight training at start of April). I have since moved on to my specific throwing training i followed before knee surgery. However I am still using your protocols for some exercises.

    A few questions
    1. I have a trainer who simply cant get into a squat position while holding the barbell correctly. It seems his shoulders and hips are very inflexible. Can you suggest any exercises that will help him get more flexible in these areas?

    2. Can I use the clean or snatch high pull instead of the power clean for this individual?

    3. Is it ok to add some single legged exercises to the Starting Strength program? or should i remove a squat session a week and add the single legged splits squats, lunges or bulgarian squats?

    4. Would rotating Deadlifts, Snatch Grip Deadlifts and Trapbar deadlifts every 6 to 8 weeks still work with the Starting Strength Protocols?

    5. My guys are coming up to an important competition at the end of October - would it be wise to deload a few weeks out, that said how to i do deload using the Starting Strength Protocols?

    cheers
    Wayne

  2. #2
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    Thanks for the kind words about the book. Glad it has helped.

    1. The squat itself is the best stretch for the squat. Jam him into the correct position and make him do the squat as correctly as possible to the extent that he is capable, enforcing position like you would if you were having him do a stretch, and making as few accommodations to his lack of flexibility as you can while still getting a squat out of him. He will improve quickly.

    2. You can, but it is a lower quality exercise. No one approaches a hi-pull the same way they approach a clean or snatch, not even an advanced lifter, because you know you're not actually going under the bar and the commitment to completing the pull is not there. The answer to this problem is to get better at teaching the clean, and there is no better way to do that than with a kid that doesn't move well. Hard cases are the best teachers of teachers, so jump right in there.

    3. Single-legged stuff is not part of our program. These are relatively advanced movements that, as far as I am concerned, apply to few athletes. Asymmetric work is best done in the context of sport practice, not strength work, and the attempt to make strength work so specific that it applies very precisely to sport reflects a misunderstanding of why we train for strength and how it applies to overall sports preparation.

    4. Trap bar deadlifts are silly, IMO. Just deadlift and see if the guy will give you your money back for the trap bar.

    5. Novice lifters don't really need to taper for a contest, and intermediate- level trainees just reduce volume and up intensity a couple of weeks out. This is all beaten to death in PPST. See the handy link on this post.

    Rip

  3. #3
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    Mark, in regards to point three, that's very interesting.

    You tend to hear a lot of guys preaching single-leg work as being some sort of cure-all when it comes to leg training, and I'll admit I do use them from time to time in my own lifting, but for the most part I've found myself agreeing with you....that stuff tends to be more of a "corrective" type exercise rather than something I'd use as a "real strength" exercise, focusing on bumping up poundages weekly.

    Are you coming at this from the viewpoint of someone just training guys to get stronger, or in the context of "training somebody to perform"? Or do you even consider there to be a difference?

  4. #4
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    Jul 2007
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mark Rippetoe View Post
    Thanks for the kind words about the book. Glad it has helped.

    1. The squat itself is the best stretch for the squat. Jam him into the correct position and make him do the squat as correctly as possible to the extent that he is capable, enforcing position like you would if you were having him do a stretch, and making as few accommodations to his lack of flexibility as you can while still getting a squat out of him. He will improve quickly.
    thanks i have been having him hold the proper squat position with a bar on his shoulders every day, however he experiences much shoulder pain from this position and can only hold it for a few seconds. I dont know if he is just being a pussy or its real pain. He is a hard worker with most other training.

    Quote Originally Posted by Mark Rippetoe View Post
    2. You can, but it is a lower quality exercise. No one approaches a hi-pull the same way they approach a clean or snatch, not even an advanced lifter, because you know you're not actually going under the bar and the commitment to completing the pull is not there. The answer to this problem is to get better at teaching the clean, and there is no better way to do that than with a kid that doesn't move well. Hard cases are the best teachers of teachers, so jump right in there.
    agree

    Quote Originally Posted by Mark Rippetoe View Post
    3. Single-legged stuff is not part of our program. These are relatively advanced movements that, as far as I am concerned, apply to few athletes. Asymmetric work is best done in the context of sport practice, not strength work, and the attempt to make strength work so specific that it applies very precisely to sport reflects a misunderstanding of why we train for strength and how it applies to overall sports preparation.
    no problems - our training includes alot of single leg hops be forwards and laterally so its probably an extra we dont need.
    Quote Originally Posted by Mark Rippetoe View Post
    5. Novice lifters don't really need to taper for a contest, and intermediate- level trainees just reduce volume and up intensity a couple of weeks out. This is all beaten to death in PPST. See the handy link on this post.
    Rip
    I think i will give it a go and see hwat happens - its as important as a competition early next year.

    Thanks for your helpful reply

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