'Party'
Protocol for Triathletes
How
Kettlebells ‘Fix’ Endurance Athletes Typical Physical
Issues
(article
written for www.dragondoor.com)
The Western world is gradually listening, receiving
and applying simple, primitive and more effective training
methods from the archives of the Eastern bloc. Kettlebells
have already become the tool of choice for ‘in the know’
strength and power athletes. Joint Mobility (JM), a combination
of Qigong and dynamic stretching, has also become one of the
most effective warm-ups for any athlete. How can the re-birth
of these two timeless protocols benefit triathletes?
Triathletes
are a special population due to the fact they are training
for three events simultaneously, i.e. swimming, biking, and
running. Efficiency is of the utmost importance, especially
for Ironman competitors, 2.4-mile swim, 112-mile bike, 26.2-mile
run ALL IN ONE DAY!! Thus, there are many problems these athletes
run into throughout the course of their training programs.
The most common issues are over-training, weak core, tight
hip flexors, tight low back, and stress fractures mainly in
the lower leg and small bones of the feet.
This
article will address some specific protocols that have been
effectively used to correct some major strength and flexibility
imbalances of a current client. She is 33 years old and has
competed in two Ironman triathlons, as well as many shorter
races. When we started working together, nine weeks prior
to her second Ironman, she was rebounding from a stress fracture
in the femoral head, major quad/ham imbalance, rotator cuff
problems (past injuries from swimming on college scholarship),
and tight hip flexors.
Through
a combination of JM drills and KB’s, she was able to
effectively overcome many of these weaknesses in nine short
weeks. Every session began with a minimum of ten minutes of
joint mobility head-to-toe and then specifically returning
to problem areas. Refer to Super Joints (book or DVD) for
these exercises: Belly Dance, Cossack, extended Cossack, Bootstrappers,
and Split Switches. After a general mobility warm-up, emphasis
was on the Wall Squat, essential to recovery and progression
of imbalances, weaknesses and mobility of the hip/low back
region. Within two weeks, her squat depth had improved four
inches due to increased flexibility and relaxation of the
hip flexors. This almost immediate improvement led to relaxed
bike pedal power, relaxed running and overall increased power
and efficiency.
The
remainder of each training session revolved around kettlebell
training. The foundational movements apply to
triathletes as they do for any athlete. Five main kettlebell
exercises were used. A healthy dose of swings, cleans, snatches,
renegade rows and windmills were the focal point.
Swings
teach hip and hamstring firing. Most programs neglect to teach
athletes in general how to neurologically program their hamstrings
which leads to efficiency in biking and running.
Cleans
re-teach the hips to fire while simultaneously relaxing the
shoulders…crucial during a grueling multi-sport race.
Snatches
are an extension of the swing and help ‘re-wire’
the CNS to fire on demand and also adding to overall efficiency.
Renegade
Rows are a full body core workout teaching the abdominals
stabilize in a ‘relaxed tension’ state instead
of mindlessly rowing a weight. This movement transfers to
more effective hip stabilization in triathletes while building
a solid core.
Windmills
work the core at the same time stretching the glute/hamstring
complex while maintaining mental awareness of the upper body,
once again engaging the ENTIRE body to work as a unit vs.
a collection of body parts.
These
five exercises revolve around everything that a triathlete
is looking for: increasing core strength without increasing
muscle mass, and increasing work capacity while maintaining
aerobic efficiency (relaxed tension).
Treating
the body as a ‘unit’ vs. a collection of body
parts--which leads to increased efficiency--is crucial for
triathletes. Kettlebells fill the
void where traditional strength training lacks, effective
strength workouts in minimal time. Ask any triathlete: his/her
last priority is strength training. However, every triathlete
is interested and understands the benefits of “core”
training and the Party knows what the MOST EFFECTIVE core-training
tool is: kettlebells. Help your
fellow triathlete comrades by showing them these intricate
Party Protocols. They will surely thank you!
About the Author:
Brad
Nelson is a Minneapolis/St. Paul based strength and conditioning
coach and a certified kettlebell instructor. Brad is unwavering
about getting you results through private or team training.
For additional information or to witness a demonstration on
how and why kettlebells are the single most effective tool for
increasing strength, burning fat, general conditioning and teaching
movement visit www.mtxeconditioning.com
or contact
brad@mtxeconditioning.com.