Originally Posted by
Jeff Illingworth
I've worked with a lot of kids, mostly ballet dancers, in this demographic and it's really hard to give a solid bench mark as most kids are developing at different rates in general. Most of the time, I work only squats, presses, and deadlifts in with these kids and almost never bench presses (more an issue of time and equipment than anything else). I've had several of these girls hit 135 or higher on deadlifts for a set of 5 after a few weeks, but often get stuck around 40-50 pounds on the press. I've seen things "magically" get unstuck very quickly when a growth spurt kicks in.
I would strongly suggest that you bring in power cleans when the deadlifts get hard as I think that'll be very beneficial for a ball player.
The thing to watch when the season starts will be her recovery. I'm sure she'll be doing a lot of running and drill work which, especially in the young, can really stunt the recovery process. In some ways young kids are a lot like older folks when it comes to recovery and adaptation.
When you start seeing a hard stall on any of the lifts, especially the upper body stuff, I'd suggest that you work up to a top set of 1, 2, or 3 and then have several back-off sets. At each subsequent workout, try to add one more rep to the top set at the same weight. When she hits 5, plan on adding a pound the next time and repeat the reverse pyramid back up to 5 at a "heavy" weight using back-off sets to build in some volume.
I'm not sure what your girl is like, but often times kids this age can get discouraged quicker than we think. I've found that finding some way to make it a little fun here and there and always being ready to adjust the day or the program on the fly is important so that they don't get stuck. Getting stuck to often can really take the wind out of a kids sails.