EP. 09 KASSEM HANSON - UNDERSTANDING BIOMECHANICS: APPLYING FUNCTIONAL ANATOMY
Hawk Fit Presents: Anabolic Radio05/25/20 • 78 min
When many coaches or PT’s talk about "sticking to the basics," they've usually got a list of certain exercises they're referring to and they'll often judge whether a training program is ‘good’ or ‘bad’ based on what they deem as the basics. They're basically "exercise memorizers" who put methods before principles because they got results from utilizing a certain approach, or have a dogmatic view about certain movements.
When we embrace the reality that a good training program isn't determined by the exercises it incorporates, but how training principles are used and applied, we see (unless you're competing in powerlifting or a weightlifting-oriented sport) there's no particular exercise that any athlete or gym-goer must do in order to improve. There are only training principles that must be followed, and there's a wide variety of applications and variations they can use to achieve their goals- It’s a spectrum. Not black or white, but multiple shades of gray.
There are no basic exercises, just basic principles. How I go about using and programming exercises comes down to how I apply basic principles of training – specificity, individuality, progressive overload and variation.
Tune into my full discussion with @coach_kassem to understand how to train a bit more intelligently and methodically- unless you want to spontaneously combust and earn yourself a one way ticket to snap city, otherwise, keep doing you boo boo.
Support the show (http://www.hawkfitcoaching.com)
05/25/20 • 78 min
Generate a badge
Get a badge for your website that links back to this episode
<a href="https://goodpods.com/podcasts/hawk-fit-presents-anabolic-radio-160022/ep-09-kassem-hanson-understanding-biomechanics-applying-functional-ana-8785732"> <img src="https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/badges/generic-badge-1.svg" alt="listen to ep. 09 kassem hanson - understanding biomechanics: applying functional anatomy on goodpods" style="width: 225px" /> </a>
Copy