samurai69 wrote:Scott wrote:samurai69 wrote: like all articles its directed at the inane running machine type gym goers
.
yeah. its too easy to keep cardio within your comfort zone. you see a lot of that.
there was an article on tnation recently as well from Martin Rooney about mma training where he basically talked about how people should be basing their mma training around strength training more than the more common cicuit based 'hammer it til ya puke' style.
read that
i have a guy at the gym preparing for his first aba boxing match its 3 rounds of 2 minutes, he doesnt need the cardio of a marathon runner, but was coming in and pushing the cardio too hard.....better to train smart rather than just hard............if he had more power and speed he could take the guy out quicker or get more points attempting it!!
.
Finding that balance between the two is what separates the winners from the losers. The problem with telling a client he should be concentrating more on strength and speed is they often times take this a bit wrong and cut out too much conditioning (if left to train on their own). I am not saying this is happening with any of you guys or your clients.
I have worked both ends of this balance. In the beginning I was strong and had no problem muscling out of jams or using it to my advantage as suggested, but inevitably comes a time when your competition gets better and then you find yourself getting gassed in the middle of a fight. Their is nothing worse that gassing out in a fight and after this happened to me, I concentrated most of my focus to conditioning (which I am assuming you mean cardio). The problem with this angle was I did lose a significant amount of strength and this hurt me executing some moves that I normally could without a second thought.
Finding that balance and developing a program that addresses both is the key and as you can see watching any venue most of fighters are on one side or the other.
I have worked with a guy that could literly kill me with his punching power. In order to beat the guy all you had to do was avoid him for 1:30-2min and victory was pretty much assured for even the novice of fighters.
I know what your saying, finding that balance in a program is the key.
“The universe is run by the complex interweaving of three elements. Energy, matter, and enlightened self-interest.” Citizen G’Kar