Nick Tumminello, a Baltimore Personal Trainer, has become one of my go-to resources for new training information. During a recent conversation, he mentioned something so simple that I was (and still am) embarrassed that I didn’t think of it already.

As you probably already know, my dynamic warm-ups include a lot of joint mobility and muscle activation work. The problem with joint mobility work is that the improvements in muscle extensibility and movement quality are short-term.

Nick mentioned that it made the most sense to pair a mobilization of a specific joint with an activation/control exercise for the muscles surrounding that joint.

All I could think was “D’oh!”

This revelation has changed the way I write my warm-ups. Almost all the exercises are the same, but the order is different. Ankle mobility exercises are followed by tibialis anterior activation exercises (or other exercises requiring active dorsiflexion). Hamstring extensibility exercises are followed by hamstring activation/control exercises.

Improve mobility. Improve control. Improve mobility. Improve control. So simple. So effective. Thanks Nick!

-Kevin Neeld

P.S. Check back in the next couple of days as I’ll be posting exactly how I’ve started putting together my new warm-ups.

Please enter your first name and email below to sign up for my FREE Athletic Development and Hockey Training Newsletter!

A couple weeks ago I visited my friend and colleague Nick Tumminello at his facility in Baltimore.

Nick is a brilliant coach so I love stopping by his place to steal some good stuff from him.

While there, I saw him do a hip mobility exercise I had never done before. I started playing around with it this week and really love it. It’s a great way to mobilize the hip into adduction and abduction in a hip flexed position. This is one of those “must-includes” for hockey players and soccer players that tend to have a lot of hip problems.

Check out the video below:

-Kevin Neeld

Please enter your first name and email below to sign up for my FREE Athletic Development and Hockey Training Newsletter!

2009 has been an incredible year for me. I completed my graduate program at UMass Amherst, started a new job as the Director of Athletic Development at Endeavor Fitness, and moved to Baltimore with Emily.

To keep the good times rolling through 2010, I’m making a list of goals for the year:

1) To remove the word “pump” from the lexicon of gym goers everywhere
2) Expose all alleged NO supplements for the imposters they are
3) Smash the cell phones of anyone that texts in the middle of their training session
4) Solve the New Jersey Sleeveless Shirt Epidemic (This is a serious problem and appears to be spreading at an unprecedented rate)

If I accomplish even HALF of these goals in 2010, I’ll enter 2011 a happy man.

Keep training hard through the new year!

-Kevin Neeld

P.S. Over the next couple weeks I’m going to be posting some incredible information that I picked up from Nick Tumminello, so keep checking back frequently.

P.P.S. If you haven’t yet, check out my new hockey training site, which has videos of hundreds of hockey training exercises on it and my Off-Ice Performance Training Course at a drastically discounted $47.

Please enter your first name and email below to sign up for my FREE Athletic Development and Hockey Training Newsletter!

Yesterday Karl (our first intern at Endeavor Fitness) and I went through the Functional Movement Screen together.

I’m proud to say, as the mentor, that I came out victorious with a score of 18 (over his measly 17!).

He “lost” because his hamstring extensibility (or flexibility) was terrible. While most of our athletes have decent hamstring extensibility we do have a few that are pretty locked up.

With Karl, and some of our athletes, I’ll have them do this quick stretching activity to improve hamstring extensibility.  When someone is available, we’ll usually do this with a partner, which allows “on the fly” adjustments to leg positioning, but often times I want our athletes to do this at home, using a wall as their partner.

Please ignore the music in the background!

The protocol is:

1) Set up with one leg raised in a “hamstring stretch” position with your knees of both legs fully extended and the toes of both legs pulled toward your shins. In this position, your lower back should be flat (or with a slight curve), and you should feel a good stretch in your hamstrings on the raised leg. Hold this position for 10 seconds.

2) If you feel like you can, shift your body a little closer to the wall to increase the stretch on your hamstrings.

3) Actively raise your heel off the wall and hold for a few seconds. Return to the wall and rest a few seconds. Repeat 2-3 times.

4) If you feel like you can, shift your body a little closer to the wall to increase the stretch on your hamstrings.

5) Actively press your heel into the wall as hard as you can without it lifting your hips or moving your body at all (or breaking your heel through the wall!). Keep pressing for 3-5 seconds, then rest a few seconds and repeat 2-3 times.

6) If you feel like you can, shift your body a little closer to the wall to increase the stretch on your hamstrings and hold this final position for 10 seconds.

Most people notice a substantial improvement in their hamstring extensibility after performing this circuit. If you’re really locked up, try doing this twice a day for a couple weeks and see how much you improve.

Please enter your first name and email below to sign up for my FREE Athletic Development and Hockey Training Newsletter!

A few weeks ago I started working with a Division 1 bound high school baseball player.

During his first session, he was able to do a set of Dumbbell Reverse Lunges with 40s for 6 reps/side.

2 weeks later he did a set of 4 reps/side with 75s, and he did 70s for 6/side the following week.

There are multiple possibilities to explain this drastic strength increase:

1) Becoming more comfortable with the movement pattern

2) Increased neural drive to the involve musculature

3) Better night of sleep before the training sessions later in the program

While I won’t rule any of these things out, I’ll say that these strength increases aren’t abnormal here.

With all of our athletes, there seems to be one common theme:

When our athletes learn to brace/stabilize their core during the lifts, their weights go through the roof!

Simply coaching athletes to “get up tall” and/or (depending on the lift) “keep their core tight” while they lift has an incredible impact on their ability to transfer force through their core, and therefore the weight they can lift.

Many athletes pick this up from simple coaching cues. For the athletes that need a little more help, I teach them how to brace their core with these instructions:

1) Put their hands on their stomach

2) Tighten up their core, which contracts the stomach musculature

3) Take a deep breath “in through their belly”, without releasing the core tightness

4) Practice taking mini-breaths in and out without losing their core tightness

After teaching them this skill in a static environment, most are able to transfer that to their lifts.

Please enter your first name and email below to sign up for my FREE Athletic Development and Hockey Training Newsletter!

Use CODE: "Neeld15" to save 15%