ohh alright, as for plyometrics, don't you have to squat at least 1.5x your weight and bench your bodyweight? seeing that i can't do that yet, for safety should i achieve that first?
ohh alright, as for plyometrics, don't you have to squat at least 1.5x your weight and bench your bodyweight? seeing that i can't do that yet, for safety should i achieve that first?
Don't quote my on this but I'm pretty sure that it's 60% or lighter than your one rep max for that particular exercise.
Plyometrics, we were doing 40 years ago, and the shock to the body for the Athletes well being left a lot to be desired. Theres a line if crossed can cause Problems, in safety. Im talking Injury and the memory you get with the cause. The problem is timing, rushing to get fit before the mechanisam is in place to acqiure fitness before injury stops progress. If you are injured you cant get fit thats a truth. What that does gives a mental block to the Athlete which is hard to recover from and Ive seen many good Sports People have problems thereafter with form Ability and Posture when that goes Gravity wins they loose![]()
Pain lasts a only a minute, but the memory will last forever....
boxingbournemouth - Cornelius Carrs private boxing tuition and personal fitness training
I'll buy that... When I injured my wrist last year it did eventually heal... what took me longer was being able to throw my hooks and crosses like I was able too... the technique hadn't gone because I was doing a lot of work on the double end bag... but it took me a good 2-3 months after the injury had healed to be able to throw them on the bag like I used to be able too.
It was weird... despite the injured wrist I'd trained myself in other ways and was undoubtedly fitter... but there was like a block in my mind... I just couldn't throw my right hook properly any more.
hmm, does someone have some science to back this up? I'm sure I've read that you can't change the ratio you were born with BUT you can train to enhance one or the other. Perhaps that is what you meant.
Nut how do you perform low intensity plyometrics? Afterall even skipping is plyometric
Its the reflex you have is the one thats very hard to alter other than that most things can be altered. As silly as it sounds reflex isnt a big thing its so minute. Its having the concept of motion to the reflex signals where the problem lies, understanding feel your fastest response unit.
Pain lasts a only a minute, but the memory will last forever....
boxingbournemouth - Cornelius Carrs private boxing tuition and personal fitness training
you want to run that by me again?
"Its having the concept of motion to the reflex signals where the problem lies, understanding feel your fastest response unit."
yeah... if we're talking low intensity plyos then we're basically talking calisthenics, right?
To my knowledge, you can't change the amount of muscle cells that you have... you can simply make those cells grow bigger/have better neurological responses etc... different exercises may target certain muscle types and develop those more than others.
That's why I think it's mostly untrue when people say that an increase in muscle mass automatically means a decrease in speed... if done wrong then definitely... but I think that's getting more into the realms of physics - on a cellular level training your slow twitch fibres isn't going to magically slow down your fast twitch fibres... I can't think of any biological reason why it would.
It's neglecting to train the fast twitch fibres to improve that is the problem... and adding dead mass which doesn't do anything... again this is to do with physics rather than the make up of the muscles.
Everything I used to do was fast twitch... plyos and sprint training etc. Fast twitch muscles contract to their maximum output faster than slow twitch but if you don't increase your max strength with that you're going to plateau.
If you can propel 50kg X mph during a plyo exercise but you can only lift up to 6okg properly doing the same exercise then your fast twitch training will not progress as quickly as it could in my opinion because no matter how much one exercise targets certain muscle types they are all required and support each other... the same goes for energy systems.
Good post Adam
Pain lasts a only a minute, but the memory will last forever....
boxingbournemouth - Cornelius Carrs private boxing tuition and personal fitness training
Yeah I think if you read up on it a bit the literature generally agrees more with using lighter weight than your max as Adam says. Using at least 1.5 X your body weight sounds a bit extreme to the point where injuries like the ones Scrap is talking about are pretty likely!
To be honest when I do plyometrics like for example burpies I feel fine not adding any extra weight at all! I think you might get better info in this if you can say specifically which plyometric exercises you were thinking of?
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