Coaching What We’re Looking for in a Strength & Conditioning Coach

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Great fckin thread!

I’m sure whoever the next HC is he’ll bring his guy with him...

The most well known guy is obviously Oregon’s Aaron Feld (the jacked dude with the handlebar stache) & he’s clearly well versed on S&C from his tenures at UGA & Bama.

But Lane has Wilson Love, who was with him at FAU & started out at Bama, he’s a Bama grad & was an assistant Strength coach at Bama from 2012-16, then went with Lane to FAU & Ole Miss.

Both know what it takes to build strong trench players upfront & give’em that Saban special concoction of enhancers to get them up to speed lol.

But all jokes aside, I actually would love for us to get a NFL guy, an assistant strength coach from the NFL would do wonders in helping move up his status if he came to Miami & helped remake our S&C structure.

Guys like Scott Elliott, Mark Naylor, Brian Bell or Marquis Johnson.

How’d you feel about Feely
 
I got a lot of thoughts on this and I feel this is a great post. But since I'm texting from my phone, I'll keep it short. I think Joey G might be one of the best in the very near future.
Proven results and the dude is speed and plyo driven. I think he's the best in the state Feely and Savage included
FAU's S&C coach? Yes. Please. HIRE HIM NOW.
 
I got a lot of thoughts on this and I feel this is a great post. But since I'm texting from my phone, I'll keep it short. I think Joey G might be one of the best in the very near future.
Proven results and the dude is speed and plyo driven. I think he's the best in the state Feely and Savage included
FAU's S&C coach? Yes. Please. HIRE HIM NOW.
https://fausports.com/staff-directory/joey-guarascio/1627

Personal
Education:
Earned an exercise science degree from Sioux Falls; master’s degree in human performance with an emphasis in sports management from Northwestern State
Certifications: CSCCa SCCC, NSCA CSCS, RPR level1, USAW level1, NASM CES, Precision Nutrition level 1

Love it. Not sure what his training philosophy is but the educational background + the experience is great.
 
Several other users on this forum, including myself, are current or former Strength and Conditioning (S&C, or just Strength) Coaches. As we go through the coaching carousel, I wanted to shed some light on what we should be looking for in a Strength Coach, as I assume Feeley will likely be replaced.

It’s important to understand that the Strength Coach has an especially unique role on the coaching staff. Offensive and Defensive Coordinators might have a “system” they run, recruit the right players for that system, and execute their system with various X’s and O’s based on what looks the other team is giving them. As such, they can have a robust history of numbers and averages that other coaches and commentators as well as fans can use to show their effectiveness, i.e.: *** rushing yards per game, passing yards, touchdowns, points allowed, etc.

S&C doesn’t really work this way. The Strength Coach will spend arguably more time with the athletes than any other coach on the team but won’t really have any hard or concrete numbers to show his effectiveness unless you are an insider, like seeing the progression of fat loss or muscle mass gained from player to player. The closest that a fan can get to really seeing the effectiveness of the coach is how “gassed” the players look throughout the game and especially in the 4th quarter. But the Strength Coach is critical to developing the athletes in a way conducive to the coaching staff’s goals.

Credentials

Back in the day, becoming an S&C Coach at the collegiate or professional level typically came from an apprenticeship. Ron McKeeferey (Tennessee) wrote in his book about how he got started by writing letters to dozens if not hundreds of S&C coaches at the collegiate and professional level until someone finally took a chance on him. That supposed knowledge containing all the “secrets” of the best coaches was passed down in this manner.

Another manner in which many coaches “made it” was simply because they themselves also were athletes, and after their career was over they met with their former coach and asked to be brought on as a Strength Coach, regardless of their knowledge; having “been there, done that” was good enough.

The emergence of exercise science/physiology as a major in the 90’s and after has made this method of learning obsolete. Research and development from Universities and allied health organizations such as the National Strength & Conditioning Association (NSCA) has shed light on effective training strategies for athletes and thrown to the wayside old/stupid/outdated ideas like making the football players bodybuilders. You should be proud to know that your University of Miami is considered a leader in this field.

In 2014, the NCAA required that S&C Coaches be certified by an accredited certification. As such, several certifications have arisen to show a baseline aptitude of exercise science for the coach who successfully passes the test. Passing the test simply shows a minimum degree of knowledge that the practitioner understands anatomy and physiology, biomechanics, nutrition, programming and periodization, technique instruction, stretching, injury prevention, rehabilitation, and more.

Any worthwhile S&C Coach will have one or more of the following certifications:

NSCA – CSCS (Certified Strength & Conditioning Specialist)

CSCCa – SCCC (Strength and Conditioning Coach Certified)

NCSF – CSC (Certified Strength Coach)

The CSCS has been widely regarded as the “gold standard” for S&C for many years, but the SCCC is quickly emerging as something coaches and administrators also would like to see. The SCCC involves a lengthy internship process where the practitioner needs to have x number of hours learning from a “Master” S&C Coach (as deemed by the CSCCa) in addition to passing the certification. It’s a little “good ol’ boy-ish” for me but nevertheless it’s worth having. The CSC is also emerging as a good option although it is less known than the other options.

As a quick aside: I know there are many users here and former players who admire Coach Swasey as a S&C Coach – while not an attack on his character as it’s a difficult test, I will simply leave it that while at UM he was unable to obtain a certifying credential as a S&C Coach. Looking at his current bio at FIU now, there is still no mention of one.

So any Strength Coach that we bring on, this is typically the first thing that I look for and want to see. If they don’t have it, they’re a dinosaur and were probably grandfathered in.

Injury Prevention

The #1 priority of a Strength Coach is injury prevention. This isn’t up for debate.

Strength Coaches are now having to work with athletes whom are pulling in literally 9-figure contracts + endorsements (Mahomes, Mike Trout, Lebron). It doesn’t matter how explosive, strong, or conditioned an athlete is: If you hurt them, they don’t play. And if they don’t play, the organization is losing games, fans, and money.

Football is a contact sport. There isn’t much a coach can do when a player gets wrapped up or tackled in an awkward position that tears a ligament – it’s unfortunate but part of the game. However, non-contact injury is a huge deal and something the Strength Coach is directly responsible for. A Strength Coach who doesn’t correctly train athletes in multiple planes of motion, program considerably for calf/hamstring development, knee stability, etc. will have athletes whom have injuries from planting (quickly decelerating à accelerating) and needs to be corrected.

I’m looking to see if the coach’s teams have a history of non-contact ACL tears or other preventative injuries.

Athletes and Confirmation Bias

The largest determining factor for what makes a Strength Coach effective is the caliber of athletes they start with.

I’m going to say that again.

The largest determining factor for what makes a Strength Coach effective is the caliber of athletes they start with.

Working as a S&C Coach at Ohio State or Alabama is the easiest job on planet earth: You’re working with 4 and 5-star athletes whom were specifically recruited for their exact role, meaning they already have the aptitude to succeed. The Strength Coach’s job is to reduce their risk of injury, improve all the factors needed to allow the athlete to be successful (technique, conditioning, trunk stability, mobility/flexibility, etc. etc.), and monitor any signs of overtraining or fatigue, etc.

It is without exaggeration that I tell you that Swasey in the early 2000’s had the easiest job in the sports world, maybe 2nd to Scott Cochran while he was at Alabama. How hard do you think it is to train Sean Taylor or Julio Jones? They’re already freak athletes. All you have to do is make sure you don’t do something stupid and hurt them in the weight room, and even that is apparently too difficult for some people.

Recruiting athletes who are not explosive, not strong, not fast, not quick, not coordinated, and/or not smart, limits what the Strength Coach can do with them. You’ve either got type II muscle fibers or you don’t. I might be able to take an athlete who runs a 4.8 40 (whether you think that’s important or not) and bring it down to a 4.6-4.7, but there are simply limits to this. Additionally, the goal is to be a better football player, not run a faster 40.

As a positive example, it’s easy to see that someone like Jaylon Knighton is very, very fast. His Strength Coach in high school wasn’t responsible for that, and neither is his collegiate Strength Coach. What’s important is reducing his risk of injury, putting on some muscle mass to allow him to take a little more abuse and improve his longevity, while maintaining his explosiveness and speed.

Therefore, “the caliber of athletes” a Strength Coach has worked with in the past does not necessarily make them good or bad Strength Coaches. Just because someone comes from a small or irrelevant school doesn’t mean they aren’t good, and just because someone came from an SEC school doesn’t mean they are good.

What we don’t want

Navy SEALs or “World’s Strongest Men” or “Water is for the weak!”-type guys. This is going to come as a news flash to some of you, but believe it or not, someone who went through BUD/S has a lot of mental toughness but doesn’t mean they necessarily know jack **** about training football players. 13-mile rucksack marches and making guys lift giant logs in unison makes for a good movie scene, maybe, but is stupid and increases the risk of injury when training football players.

Just because someone bench presses a lot, loves to snort cocaine, screams at people, smashes Monsters on their forehead, was once a Green Beret, or has a handlebar mustache doesn’t – necessarily - mean they’re a good Strength Coach.

We don’t want a Strength Coach who is overly concerned with metrics. Impressive metrics like how much someone Benches or Power Cleans should be dependent variables from the caliber of the athlete as well as a byproduct of the training methodology. That is to say: Someone who goes through a proper S&C program will see their squat 1RM improve, but that wasn’t necessarily the goal of the program. The goal of the program is to make better athletes; the metrics associated should improve because of the effectiveness of the program.

Another good example of a Strength Coach we don’t want is Coach Oderinde, who followed Willie Taggart to Oregon and FSU. While at Oregon, he nearly killed a couple of players by giving them all rhabdomyolysis. Rhabdomyolysis or “rhabdo” is a condition where the muscle fibers are broken down beyond normal/healthy to such an extent that myoglobin leaks out from the muscle into the blood stream. From there, it’s too large of a protein to be filtered by the kidneys so someone who is experiencing rhabdo will have brown urine and can potentially succumb to renal failure, which is fatal. The guy is literally the Director of Strength and Conditioning at USF and he has no ******* idea what he’s doing lol. You’ll notice he also has no mention of being a CSCS or SCCC on his bio, which in my opinion is no coincidence as those certifications typically teach you how to not kill people.

Another example of a coach we don’t necessarily want is someone who’s known for being “innovative.” I hear this one a lot. “Oh, he’s so innovative, he’s doing all kinds of crazy stuff with his athletes!” We don’t want crazy stuff. We want an evidence-based plan of action that concurs with established science. Just because a guy is doing “crazy” or “innovative” stuff like making guys wear weighted vests while they hurl empty beer kegs at each other doesn’t mean what they’re doing is effective.

The best S&C Coach is most likely someone you’ve never heard of with a mix of impressive academic credentials and practical experience. They’ll have a fundamental, no-nonsense approach to their programming, expect discipline and the completion of every rep prescribed, and use data to ensure that their athletes are progressing at an expected, consistent rate so as not to risk under/overtraining.

I personally believe that Feeley did quite well in his role here, but I’m sure he won’t be retained and I’ll be disappointed to see him go, yet optimistic we’ll move forward with another qualified coach in the future. My favorite S&C Coach is Jim Radcliffe over at Oregon, who is a well-known plyometric guy, but he is probably nearing retirement now and/or taking a more research-oriented/academic approach to training.

I disagree with all of this.

Injury prevention is good and all but what we need is size, strength and explosiveness. And toughness.

There’s a reason the USA hasn’t won a medal in weightlifting in decades. Because the academic credentials are crap. What they’re teaching is crap.
 
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I disagree with all of this.

Injury prevention is good and all but what we need is size, strength and explosiveness. And toughness.

There’s a reason the USA hasn’t won a medal in weightlifting in decades. Because the academic credentials are crap. What they’re teaching is crap.
No, it's because we test for drugs and the countries that win have state run programs in place.
 
I disagree with all of this.

Injury prevention is good and all but what we need is size, strength and explosiveness. And toughness.

There’s a reason the USA hasn’t won a medal in weightlifting in decades. Because the academic credentials are crap. What they’re teaching is crap.
lol, this response is so bad I actually can't tell if the Yale-educated is trolling me or not, well done!

That's not even close to why the USA doesn't medal in weightlifting and is completely irrelevant anyway.
 
No, it's because we test for drugs and the countries that win have state run programs in place.

It’s because any time you turn something over to “academic credentials” what you get is pussified crap.

The OP says the #1 most important thing is “injury prevention.” That’s typical academic crap. No, the most important thing is performance. And winning.

I don’t want our guys spending valuable gym time doing cable face pulls on yoga balls.

Lifting isn’t rocket science. Pick up as heavy weight as possible as explosively as possible as often as possible. Get plenty of sleep and eat a **** load of protein and good carbs.
 
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whoever we hire must develop explosive strength which we have lacked since B.Davis S&C Moffet left
 
It’s because any time you turn something over to “academic credentials” what you get is pussified crap.

The OP says the #1 most important thing is “injury prevention.” That’s typical academic crap. No, the most important thing is performance. And winning.

I don’t want our guys spending valuable gym time doing cable face pulls on yoga balls.

Lifting isn’t rocket science. Pick up as heavy weight as possible as explosively as possible as often as possible. Get plenty of sleep and eat a **** load of protein and good carbs.
None of what you said is what sports science says to so.
 
lol, this response is so bad I actually can't tell if the Yale-educated is trolling me or not, well done!

That's not even close to why the USA doesn't medal in weightlifting and is completely irrelevant anyway.

Not trolling at all. What we need is toughness.

From what I understand Eastern European lifters do a lot more volume. The whole “lift 3 times a week so you don’t overtrain” is American garbage and it doesn’t work.

There is no substitute for grit and hard work. So when you slam the “no water” coaches what you’re doing is perpetuating that soft mindset.

The Navy Seal type is exactly what I want for Miami.
 
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Great fckin thread!

I’m sure whoever the next HC is he’ll bring his guy with him...

The most well known guy is obviously Oregon’s Aaron Feld (the jacked dude with the handlebar stache) & he’s clearly well versed on S&C from his tenures at UGA & Bama.

But Lane has Wilson Love, who was with him at FAU & started out at Bama, he’s a Bama grad & was an assistant Strength coach at Bama from 2012-16, then went with Lane to FAU & Ole Miss.

Both know what it takes to build strong trench players upfront & give’em that Saban special concoction of enhancers to get them up to speed lol.

But all jokes aside, I actually would love for us to get a NFL guy, an assistant strength coach from the NFL would do wonders in helping move up his status if he came to Miami & helped remake our S&C structure.

Guys like Scott Elliott, Mark Naylor, Brian Bell or Marquis Johnson.
Just need someone that knows how to make those Bama shakes..
 
It’s because any time you turn something over to “academic credentials” what you get is pussified crap.

The OP says the #1 most important thing is “injury prevention.” That’s typical academic crap. No, the most important thing is performance. And winning.
This is established scientific consensus. Saying, "I disagree with this" is like disagreeing with astrophysicists on how neutron stars are formed. That's nice, but your opinion doesn't really have any weight since you don't know what you're talking about.

Your glass cannon approach was phased out over 2 decades ago because only focusing on performance leads to incredible athletes who only sit on the sidelines because they're too hurt to play. Then you blame "bad luck" on why everyone is hurt. It's ineffective at best and at worst detrimental to the athletes and the program.

I don’t want our guys spending valuable gym time doing cable face pulls on yoga balls.
This is a strawman argument. I never once implied that proper training protocols are easy spa days for the athletes.

Lifting isn’t rocket science. Pick up as heavy weight as possible as explosively as possible as often as possible. Get plenty of sleep and eat a **** load of protein and good carbs.
It's actually much more nuanced than that and I'm cringing a little bit just reading your hot takes. I can't wait until your studies are in the Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research - who knew it was that easy?!

From what I understand Eastern European lifters do a lot more volume. The whole “lift 3 times a week so you don’t overtrain” is American garbage and it doesn’t work.
You don't understand, but I'll be happy to inform you as to why the USA is not successful in weightlifting.

First of all, Eastern Bloc countries don't play American football so I'm not sure why you're comparing 2 different sports. We use the Olympic lifts in football because they involve rapid extension and re-flexion of the hips, which we know improves stride turnover and correlates to improved power and speed. For them, Olympic lifting IS the sport.

Eastern Bloc athletes competing in Olympic weightlifting do more volume (depends on the phase) because the lifts are more neurologically taxing in nature and the nervous system recovers much more quickly. In certain phases of training, the time under tension is so low they can do snatches/cleans/clean and jerks in the 85-95% ranges and come back and do it again tomorrow. Football players don't train in this way, at least not until they're through their strength phase and into the season. But you don't know anything about that since you think everyone should just lift heavy weights as often as possible.

@Dilber is correct. The reason the USA doesn't win in weightlifting is mostly 2 reasons: The first is because other countries have state-sponsored and extensive doping programs. We can't compete with that because we have USADA, the exact opposite of what other countries do.

The second reason is because other countries like China round up 50,000 children and force them to go through training camps for weightlifting. Slowly and methodically they weed out the less genetically-gifted of the groups until they're down to a small enough selection that are genetically optimized for weightlifting. Lu Xiaojun (one of the greatest lifters ever) was found on a rural farm; turns out he had perfect femur length, muscle physiology, and other attributes that made him perfect for lifting.

Once they're down to a select few, those chosen will go on to spend their entire childhood in training camps for the State. This is considered an honor to the families, but they have no choice anyway. They will spend every waking minute from the age of 10-20+ eating, sleeping, training, and juicing in the hopes to represent their country at the Olympics every 4 years.

We don't do that in the US because, you know, we value freedom. Also there's no money in it so all the best athletes go towards football, basketball and baseball.

The Navy Seal type is exactly what I want for Miami.
Fortunately this is unlikely to happen.
 


S&C is one of my favorite topics on these boards. But before we we get into please watch the video above.


Now that you’ve been blessed by that classic you’ve learned two things: 1) intensity can break good (love) or bad (hate) and not much separates the two and 2) I’m an old school motha****er.


The debate over injury prevention and raw rip your head off muscle is as old as strength training. The truth is you need a both of you get bad results. In college athletes you can get away with sub optimal recovery and auxiliary movements because athletes don’t have the years tightening up shoulders and hips that older athletes have. Doesn’t mean you should do it, but there is more tolerance for stupidity in training.

I don’t have formal training in S&C but I’m a garage lifter who’s put up respectable numbers in the big 3 power lifts. Here are some observations:

1) the eyeball test means **** all for performance, if you are looking for body builder physiques.

2) S&C and nutrition can’t turn genetic slow twitch muscle kids into usain bolt.

3) competent S&C should manage injuries and have the team conditioned to compete for 4 quarters, while accumulating strength in the off-season AND maintaining it in season.

4) most people are retarded. if you google right now “best lifts for football” you will find a bunch of bad advice. #1 piece of bad advice is for football players to do deadlifts. Risk to reward for deadlifts make them no good for athletes who aren’t competing in dead lifts. Hangcleans/ power cleans/ and even heavy KB are much better risk vs return plus, they are explosive lifts that teach hip explosive hip extension. Deadlifts are classic lifts, but represent a perfect example of old school hardcore training that isn’t worth it .

5) similarly American athletes over focus on pressing exercises. movements like the bench press are generally retarded for athletes. Maxxing on bench is even more retarded as it’s a very technical lift once you get over say 300 pounds and why waste time perfecting technique? Not to mention the straight bar isn’t great for shoulders. Pulling and loaded carrying will get more bang for the buck. DB presses with neutral grips if for pressing IMO.

6) the last two points are personal observations and historically I’m sure many people have run great programs using the power lifts I’m saying I’d avoid. So what’s the point? The point is programming matters a lot less than buy in, effort, and adherence.

7) Couple of things about increasing intensity in the weight room, our guys are football players. If it doesn’t make them better, it doesn’t ******* matter. The Bulgarians were notorious in the 70s for lifting 6 days a week 2/3 times a day at 95% of 1rm max. They were juiced to the gills for recovery, but ignore that for a second. This type of intensity in the weight room would be terrible for a football team. Why? No conditioning and no skill training. See for weightlifters, lifting weights is the skill and they don’t need much else in general physical preparedness. In fact metabolic training beyond a very light amount is probably a negative for them.

Which leads to the final point of all of this rant: it’s easy to say we need to do more, get more results, look better, etc. But it’s very hard to chase multiple rabbits at the same time and catch any of them. I’d say our current staff is getting our guys to the physical level. Not sure we can say much more as we haven’t seen multiple classes come through, but we look conditioned and compete well with teams with equal or lesser athletes.
 
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This is established scientific consensus. Saying, "I disagree with this" is like disagreeing with astrophysicists on how neutron stars are formed. That's nice, but your opinion doesn't really have any weight since you don't know what you're talking about.

Your glass cannon approach was phased out over 2 decades ago because only focusing on performance leads to incredible athletes who only sit on the sidelines because they're too hurt to play. Then you blame "bad luck" on why everyone is hurt. It's ineffective at best and at worst detrimental to the athletes and the program.


This is a strawman argument. I never once implied that proper training protocols are easy spa days for the athletes.


It's actually much more nuanced than that and I'm cringing a little bit just reading your hot takes. I can't wait until your studies are in the Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research - who knew it was that easy?!


You don't understand, but I'll be happy to inform you as to why the USA is not successful in weightlifting.

First of all, Eastern Bloc countries don't play American football so I'm not sure why you're comparing 2 different sports. We use the Olympic lifts in football because they involve rapid extension and re-flexion of the hips, which we know improves stride turnover and correlates to improved power and speed. For them, Olympic lifting IS the sport.

Eastern Bloc athletes competing in Olympic weightlifting do more volume (depends on the phase) because the lifts are more neurologically taxing in nature and the nervous system recovers much more quickly. In certain phases of training, the time under tension is so low they can do snatches/cleans/clean and jerks in the 85-95% ranges and come back and do it again tomorrow. Football players don't train in this way, at least not until they're through their strength phase and into the season. But you don't know anything about that since you think everyone should just lift heavy weights as often as possible.

@Dilber is correct. The reason the USA doesn't win in weightlifting is mostly 2 reasons: The first is because other countries have state-sponsored and extensive doping programs. We can't compete with that because we have USADA, the exact opposite of what other countries do.

The second reason is because other countries like China round up 50,000 children and force them to go through training camps for weightlifting. Slowly and methodically they weed out the less genetically-gifted of the groups until they're down to a small enough selection that are genetically optimized for weightlifting. Lu Xiaojun (one of the greatest lifters ever) was found on a rural farm; turns out he had perfect femur length, muscle physiology, and other attributes that made him perfect for lifting.

Once they're down to a select few, those chosen will go on to spend their entire childhood in training camps for the State. This is considered an honor to the families, but they have no choice anyway. They will spend every waking minute from the age of 10-20+ eating, sleeping, training, and juicing in the hopes to represent their country at the Olympics every 4 years.

We don't do that in the US because, you know, we value freedom. Also there's no money in it so all the best athletes go towards football, basketball and baseball.


Fortunately this is unlikely to happen.

Then why is the US good at other Olympic sports? Sprinting and Swimming, for example? Do the Chinese only farm out weightlifters? No, I think they just have better training methods

I don’t have a sports science degree but I know more than you think I do. believe it or not, I do understand things like periodization and training imbalances, the stuff you’re pretty much hinting at. I just think it’s overbaked. Yes injury prevention is important, and no it’s not the best idea to go caveman every day in the gym, but IMO the pendulum has swung too far in the “soft” direction.

Our ancestors did hard labor every day. Humans are evolved to do a lot of volume, a lot more than the sports scientists of the day seem to think we can do. And football players arent lifting exclusively year round, only for a few months in the offseason.

Either way, you act like sports science is a mature discipline and it isn’t. Just like your astrophysics example. Nobody has ever seen a neutron star up close, so yes you have every right to question how they are formed. And for sports science, nobody really knows how hypertrophy happens. The best paper I ever read on the topic was the one that’s always cited by Brad Schoenfeld, and even he admits it’s far from settled.

For example, he points out that in nearly every study done on muscle building, the test subjects are untrained undergraduate volunteers.

And it makes sense. How are you EVER going to design a proper experiment to get the level of scientific certainty you’re implying exists?

Point is, I have respect for the science, but even the best of the best admit that there’s far more that we don’t know than that we do know.

So Schoenfeld’s advice: just follow what works.
 
https://fausports.com/staff-directory/joey-guarascio/1627

Personal
Education:
Earned an exercise science degree from Sioux Falls; master’s degree in human performance with an emphasis in sports management from Northwestern State
Certifications: CSCCa SCCC, NSCA CSCS, RPR level1, USAW level1, NASM CES, Precision Nutrition level 1

Love it. Not sure what his training philosophy is but the educational background + the experience is great.
He's a great resource for all things power and speed. I'm 100% on board with him or Kurt Hester. Also Army WP's S&C coach is fantastic. I forget his name. Turley would be a great hire but he was pushed out of Stanford and a couple years later winds up at Colorado on the hush-hush.
 
I disagree with all of this.

Injury prevention is good and all but what we need is size, strength and explosiveness. And toughness.

There’s a reason the USA hasn’t won a medal in weightlifting in decades. Because the academic credentials are crap. What they’re teaching is crap.
 
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