Old Miami Practice

Growing up and playing ball in Miami, we were never allowed to have water during practices. Never. None of us died. As a matter of fact, I never saw anyone cramp up either. Not saying it was right or wrong, but that's the way it was in high school back then. Now we preach hydration to players and they're cramping all the time. Can't really explain why. Perhaps we were outside more on a regular basis and were more used to the heat. I don't know. We tell our players now to drink a minimum of 1 gallon of water per day during school hours. Then also drink at practice and following practice yet kids still cramp in August and September. 🤔

Only people who not from here have no clue, i know you remember, just playing football in the park, we didnt drink nothing until after the game. What these ****'s dont understand, when you grow up under the Sun basically your whole Life, you are a Cactus, dont need but a lil liquid and we still standing tall. Start giving a cactus alot of water and watch what happens. The problem now is you got to many wanna be geniuses now who think they no everything about hydration and this and that. We should only use the indoor practice facility if its lightning, other than that, keep them boys outside. I will say this, and thats why im glad coach diaz ended up being the headcoach, cause you normally have a tougher team when you have a former d-co as the headcoach, although under coach richt our teams played tough, but we'll be even tougher now! We never heard of somebody checking out from the heat. Than what was even more real, we'd be playing football or basketball with no shade on concrete for hours and than go and drink .25 orange or grape soda's, (***** gaytorade)and than come back and ball for a few more hours and nobody passed out, and corner stores wasnt selling bottled water, maybe the gallon ones every now and than!
 
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Literally just google it, every result says that water is absolutely critical for building muscle and a lack of water causes muscles to break down. And on top of it, it’s also dangerous to their health. That’s why it’s retarded you’re literally making your players physically weaker while also threatening their lives.

Ever wonder how combine records are continuously broken? Today’s players are bigger, faster, and stronger - they would wipe the field athletically with those 80s teams.

Yeah, I think people are ignoring the comparison of 40 times, and bench weights then and now. You may see faster stronger guys cramp up occasionally, but wouldn't you prefer your man beat the other guy on a regular basis?
 
Growing up and playing ball in Miami, we were never allowed to have water during practices. Never. None of us died. As a matter of fact, I never saw anyone cramp up either. Not saying it was right or wrong, but that's the way it was in high school back then. Now we preach hydration to players and they're cramping all the time. Can't really explain why. Perhaps we were outside more on a regular basis and were more used to the heat. I don't know. We tell our players now to drink a minimum of 1 gallon of water per day during school hours. Then also drink at practice and following practice yet kids still cramp in August and September. 🤔
That is such bull**** man lol, players would literally get helped off the field sometimes because of cramps. Stop the “we were tougher in my day” stuff. Players need to hydrate. Period.
 
Literally just google it, every result says that water is absolutely critical for building muscle and a lack of water causes muscles to break down. And on top of it, it’s also dangerous to their health. That’s why it’s retarded you’re literally making your players physically weaker while also threatening their lives.

Ever wonder how combine records are continuously broken? Today’s players are bigger, faster, and stronger - they would wipe the field athletically with those 80s teams.

This is what's wrong with the world, here's a guy trying to use google against actual reality. How many teams pushed any of the UM teams around in the 80's and 90's, for what you are trying to google as a "lack of water". How bout you google that 58 game home winning streak along with how much water we drank during that streak, or the 4 national titles and the others we played in, come on man, wake TF up!
 
In tennis, cramps are a common occurrence, even full body cramps...

 
In tennis, cramps are a common occurrence, even full body cramps...



wtf....

man I grew up hoopin in 100 degree weather, don't even any of you sit there and act like tennis is tougher than the violence of hood level basketball

I wonder if this guy is from the arctic or something, this just bizarre to me
 
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Only people who not from here have no clue, i know you remember, just playing football in the park, we didnt drink nothing until after the game. What these ****'s dont understand, when you grow up under the Sun basically your whole Life, you are a Cactus, dont need but a lil liquid and we still standing tall. Start giving a cactus alot of water and watch what happens. The problem now is you got to many wanna be geniuses now who think they no everything about hydration and this and that. We should only use the indoor practice facility if its lightning, other than that, keep them boys outside. I will say this, and thats why im glad coach diaz ended up being the headcoach, cause you normally have a tougher team when you have a former d-co as the headcoach, although under coach richt our teams played tough, but we'll be even tougher now! We never heard of somebody checking out from the heat. Than what was even more real, we'd be playing football or basketball with no shade on concrete for hours and than go and drink .25 orange or grape soda's, (***** gaytorade)and than come back and ball for a few more hours and nobody passed out, and corner stores wasnt selling bottled water, maybe the gallon ones every now and than!

What do you charge for customized meal plans? I want to be ready for the 2020 Olympia.
 
wtf....

man I grew up hoopin in 100 degree weather, don't even any of you sit there and act like tennis is tougher than the violence of hood level basketball

I wonder if this guy is from the arctic or something, this just bizarre to me
His name is Jack Sock
 
The concern is a player’s core body temperature raising to the point of no return.

This condition is deadly and has nothing to do with mental toughness.
 
Because hydration does not mean chugging water. It means staying hydrated. Those two things are not the same.

True. And if you’re chugging water it’s too late. Players need come to practice properly hydrated.

What’s next? Wannabe tough guys telling us players don’t need to eat?
 
That is such bull**** man lol, players would literally get helped off the field sometimes because of cramps. Stop the “we were tougher in my day” stuff. Players need to hydrate. Period.
Zero bull**** brother and never said or implyed we were tougher. Only question I asked in this thread is if it is possible we survived because we were outdoors all the time. Grew up with 1 rotary dial phone in my house and 3 channels on the tube. Not once did I play the we were tougher card.
 
Only people who not from here have no clue, i know you remember, just playing football in the park, we didnt drink nothing until after the game. What these ****'s dont understand, when you grow up under the Sun basically your whole Life, you are a Cactus, dont need but a lil liquid and we still standing tall. Start giving a cactus alot of water and watch what happens. The problem now is you got to many wanna be geniuses now who think they no everything about hydration and this and that. We should only use the indoor practice facility if its lightning, other than that, keep them boys outside. I will say this, and thats why im glad coach diaz ended up being the headcoach, cause you normally have a tougher team when you have a former d-co as the headcoach, although under coach richt our teams played tough, but we'll be even tougher now! We never heard of somebody checking out from the heat. Than what was even more real, we'd be playing football or basketball with no shade on concrete for hours and than go and drink .25 orange or grape soda's, (***** gaytorade)and than come back and ball for a few more hours and nobody passed out, and corner stores wasnt selling bottled water, maybe the gallon ones every now and than!
I feel you. Lived it, but for the record, we hydrate the crap out of our players today.
 
I remember a video of Ray Lewis talking about his training regimen. How there were days he didn’t want to get out of bed, let alone train. How he hated drinking 2 gallons of water a day. Ray seemed in great shape to me, and mentally tough. Played his last game, a Super Bowl, with a torn tricep.
 
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I feel you. Lived it, but for the record, we hydrate the crap out of our players today.

Athletes can overhydrate. Excess water can lead to lower sodium levels in the body, which may further lead to nausea, vomiting, cramps, fatigue, et al. ... When you drink too much water, your electrolyte levels drop and the balance is compromised. Low electrolyte levels can cause symptoms like muscle spasms and cramping.
 
If you played high school football in the Miami area during the 60's and 70's you will never forget the no-water rule, salt pills before practices, and the mental toughness that was required to survive due to all of the obstacles you faced.

If you are familiar with the movie, 'Junction Boys' then you have a good idea as to what those practices were like.

The August no water, two week-two-a-days, where each practice ran approximately two hours (many times longer), it was 90 plus degrees in the shade with a heavy dose of one hundred percent humidity.

After non-stop kicking the **** out of one another, those sessions would conclude with hitting and rolling the 5 to 7 man sled until you thought you may die, and then at least 10-100 yard sprints where you knew you were going to die.

Also, your shoes were soaking wet and your pads were waterlogged with sweat. which added X amount of pounds you were lugging around.

Again, if you participated in those practices it is something you will never forget. That experience instilled a life long belief that if you survived those torture get-togethers, you could survive anything.

And once the season began, daily practices were just as brutal and typically bordered on 3-hour endurance wars.

The games were a war in which you fought against like-minded foes who also knew what it was like to practice football in **** or on the surface of the sun under the watchful eyes of coaches who did not give one rats **** as to how you were feeling. No safe rooms! No puppies!

During one practice a kid suffered a catastrophic injury and was screaming at the top of his lungs and crying. As we stood by waiting for the ambulance to arrive and cart the kid away one of the coaches was overheard saying; "Aw ****! Put a band-aid on the boy and let's get back to work." Afterward, practice resumed with the coaches teaching you to get over it, '**** happens', but with no smiley face.

In many ways, the no water was not at the top of the list as to the suffering you endured, yet you learned about how life really is/was.
 
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