I hope this finds you well. As you can likely tell, the new year has been exceptionally busy. We’ve been having a lot of fun at Endeavor as we have a bunch of soccer and lacrosse teams training with us in preparation for the start of their season, and are working on a couple exciting projects. Unfortunately, that has left almost no time for me write.

Last week I had an opportunity to review an advance copy of Lee Taft’s new “Complete Speed Training” program. Over the last decade I’ve read a bunch of Lee’s work. If you’re seeing his name for the first time, Lee has been widely regarded as one of the leading speed experts in our field for years. He knows his stuff, which is why I blocked out a few hours of my schedule to dive into his new program.

Complete Speed Training

Grab your copy here >> Complete Speed Training

This is NOT speed training

When I first started reading books and articles about speed training, so much of my focus was on learning new “quickness” drills, primarily using cones and ladders. My thought process was pretty simple: sports involved a lot of acceleration and transitional patterns, so focusing on quickness should transfer positively to athletic performance.

There are two fundamental problems with this line of thinking:

  1. In order to improve speed, you must know what’s limiting it
  2. When you focus so much on quick foot movement, you lose sight of the rest of the body

The idea that just doing more sprints will make you faster is as flawed as it is pervasive. Speed (or speed development) can be limited by a number of things, including joint mobility, joint stability, mechanics, strength, and when it comes to being able to demonstrate speed consistently in a game, conditioning.

In youth athletes, the primary two limitations I see most commonly are mechanics and strength, of which the strength component is the most often overlooked by parents and coaches. Speed comes down to being able to put force into the ground to propel the body forward. If you can’t produce a lot of force, you can’t be fast. That’s not an opinion; it’s physics.

One of the ways athletes compensate for not being able to produce a lot of force is by over-striding. The general thought is that if they lengthen their stride, they’ll cover more ground with each step. This is true in theory, but when the stride is lengthened by reaching forward, it both increases the braking forces with each stride (the foot hits the ground way out in front of the body, essentially pushing the body backward like a kickstand on a bike) and the risk of injury (this is how hamstrings on the front leg and quads on the back leg get torn).

Having athletes with these limitations simply run more sprints/cone drills/ladders will not help them improve their speed any appreciable amount and may lead to an injury.

THIS is speed training

This is one of the things I loved about Complete Speed Training. Not only does Lee walk through a very comprehensive warm-up, which would help address some of the more common mobility and stability limitations, but he dissects linear, lateral, and transitional movements from a whole body perspective AND integrates speed training drills within a more comprehensive training program that includes strength training and conditioning.

I took a lot away from watching the videos, but here are a few of the highlights:

  1. Proper sprinting mechanics all starts with posture. The athlete needs to be able to get into and hold the right body positions. This can be trained statically before being integrated more dynamically.
  2. Coaches go out of their way a lot of times to correct foot positions that are actually advantageous to the athlete moving quicker. Let athletes open their foot up while shuffling sideways and don’t correct the drop step when they’re starting from a standstill.
  3. Arm motion can be used to drive leg motion. Cue faster arm actions to facilitate more powerful strides.
  4. A lot of his cues were on “covering ground” not on “quick feet”.
  5. Best review of transitional speed mechanics I’ve ever seen. Teaches linear, lateral, crossover, and “retreating” skills with simple, but effective drills. I especially liked the emphasis on keeping shoulders square to a target while covering ground laterally.

Tomorrow I have a great guest article from Lee looking at the difference between quick feet and athletic quickness. In the meantime, Complete Speed Training is available at a $100 discount through Friday 2/13. This is an outstanding resource, so if you’re interested in learning effective speed training techniques, getting a quality training program, and saving some loot, grab a copy today!

Complete Speed Training

Grab your copy here >> Complete Speed Training

 

To your success,

Kevin Neeld
HockeyTransformation.com
OptimizingMovement.com
UltimateHockeyTraining.com

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

Today I have another awesome sports nutrition tip from Brian St. Pierre. This tip is a “teaser” from the Nutrition Guide he wrote for my new program Ultimate Hockey Transformation. Most youth athletes have significant room for improvement in every aspect of their eating, but having now looked at food logs for a lot of our clients at Endeavor, I can say without hesitation that this is the area most consistently lacking. It’s simple, and incredibly powerful. You just have to make a choice to do it!

Enjoy! – KN

Tip #4: Eat Vegetables at Every Meal and Most Snacks

As an athlete, your vitamin and mineral needs are increased. And all too often, athletes are deficient in critical nutrients. In fact, research has consistently shown athletes to be deficient in at least 3 nutrients, and as many as 15!

One of the easiest ways to take in adequate amounts of these nutrients is to eat more vegetables. Vegetables are rich in some of the nutrients that athletes are most commonly deficient in, such as magnesium and potassium.

In addition, vegetables are rich in compounds called phytonutrients. These phytonutrients are unique to plant foods, and they provide tremendous benefits to how you look, feel, and perform.

So how do you actually make sure you get in as many as you need?

Veggies – What’s a Serving?

Make a fist. That’s one serving. Easy.

At every meal female athletes should aim for 1 fist of veggies, and male athletes should aim for 2 fists. And everybody should try to get 1 fist of veggies at most snacks too. 

Vegetable Portions

Photo Credit: PrecisionNutrition.com

While you can have less at some meals and more at others, the easiest way to get those veggies in is to simply focus on having veggies at each meal and the total intake will take care of itself.

Eat Your Veggies Today

To rock this tip, simply pick some of the veggie options below and, by the end of the day, make sure you’ve eaten 1-2 “fists” (aka serving) of them at every meal. You can eat these raw or cooked; however you prefer.

And if you really love one kind of veggie (such as broccoli or tomatoes), go ahead and eat a couple of servings! There is no best vegetable. The best vegetables are the ones you will eat the most often, and the most consistently. This list is just to give you an idea, it is not meant to be comprehensive.

  1. broccoli
  2. cauliflower
  3. carrots
  4. eggplant
  5. cucumber
  6. large tomato or cherry tomatoes
  7. onion
  8. leafy greens like spinach
  9. green, red, or yellow pepper
  10. mushrooms
  11. zucchini / summer squash
  12. butternut squash or pumpkin
  13. green beans
  14. sweet or snow peas
  15. beets
  16. parsnips
  17. Brussels sprouts
  18. cabbage (e.g. red cabbage, Napa cabbage, etc.)

A Work in Progress

Now, this amount of vegetables may sound like a lot. And it can be. However, you don’t have to perfect here. You simply have to eat a few more veggies than you do now.

If you’re new to eating a lot of vegetables, it is cool to start smaller. If you normally eat only 1 fist of veggies per day, how about we make it 2 fists? Once that becomes normal, lets make it 3 fists. Slowly adding veggies to your diet is a far better option than just trying to add 5 fists of vegetables all at once, when you usually don’t eat any. That is a recipe for failure.

Here are some things to try:

  1. Slowly increase your vegetable intake over time.
  2. Try new vegetables to find ones you like.
  3. Try a new way of prepping or cooking familiar favorites.
  4. Aim for more dark leafy greens.
  5. Hit up the farmer’s market and try something in season, or buy something that’s organic.

Use the above list to get you going, but don’t feel like everything else is off the table. Like acorn squash? Add it in. Kale in a Super Shake? Why not?

Don’t get bogged down in the details or stress about the “best” kind of vegetable. Just pick at least one vegetable and put it in your mouth. Go get ‘em.

-Brian St. Pierre, MS, RD, CSCS, CISSN, PN1

P.S. For more information on how to get a copy of Brian’s incredible hockey nutrition resource, click here: Ultimate Hockey Transformation

Brian is a Registered Dietitian and received his Bachelor’s in Human Nutrition and Dietetics from the University of Maine, where he also received his Master’s in Food Science and Human Nutrition. He is a Certified Sports Nutritionist as well as a Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist.

Brian worked for three years at Cressey Performance as the head Sports Nutritionist and as a Strength and Conditioning Coach, working with hundreds of athletes and recreational exercisers of all types. During this time, he also authored the High Performance Handbook Nutrition Guide, Show and Go Nutrition Guide, Ultimate Hockey Nutrition and dozens of articles for publication.

Nowadays, he works closely with Dr. John Berardi as a full-time coach and a nutrition educator at Precision Nutrition. In particular, working closely with our elite athletes and fitness professionals. As part of the Precision Nutrition mission, he helps to deliver life-changing, research-driven nutrition coaching for everyone.

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

Get Ultimate Hockey Transformation Now!

Year-round age-specific hockey training programs complete with a comprehensive instructional video database!

Ultimate Hockey Transformation Pro Package-small

Get access to your game-changing program now >> Ultimate Hockey Transformation

“Kevin Neeld is one of the top 5-6 strength and conditioning coaches in the ice hockey world.”
– Mike Boyle, Head S&C Coach, US Women’s Olympic Team

“…if you want to be the best, Kevin is the one you have to train with”
– Brijesh Patel, Head S&C Coach, Quinnipiac University

As I’ve said in the past, this is my favorite time of year. For the 7th consecutive year, my friend Joe Heiler from Sports Rehab Expert is putting together an awesome teleseminar series with some of the world’s top professionals in sports rehabilitation and performance training known as the 2015 Sports Rehab to Sports Performance Teleseminar.

Sports Rehab Expert

The series starts Tuesday, January 27th at 8pm EST, and will feature a new guest speaker each weeks. The best part is that the interviews are completely FREE.

Each Tuesday Joe will email you a link where you can catch the interviews.  You don’t need to be online at the time of the call to get access to it. The interviews will be recorded and available for another 2 weeks from that point.

The speakers always deliver great content, as Joe asks really good questions. In fact, I still have some of these interviews saved on my computer from years ago and re-listen to them pretty frequently.

Register for FREE here >> 2015 Sports Rehab to Sports Performance Teleseminar

Check out this year’s line-up!
  1. Charlie Weingroff – Motor skill acquisition and long term development, movement competency, and high performance programs
  2. Donald Chu – The foremost authority on plyometric training discusses potential benefits, progressions, injury prevention, and more
  3. Derek Hansen – Speed development qualities, hamstring injury mechanics and running rehab, front side vs. back side mechanics
  4. Mike Cantrell – Exploring the mechanics behind sports hernia, FAI, and shoulder impingement through the PRI lens.
  5. Rob Panariello – Single limb vs. bilateral training, Olympic lifts during performance training and rehab
  6. Phil Plisky – Injury risk/prevention research, the state of current prevention programs, UE stability testing, and what’s new with the SFMA.
  7. Gary Gray – Applied Functional Science (AFS) and it’s principles, functional soft tissue transformation, and functional movement screening systems
  8. Linda Joy Lee – Thoracic Rings Approach and the Integrated Systems Model, finding the meaningful task and primary driver
  9. Sarah MottramKinetic Control system, understanding the biomechanics of normal and abnormal function, and motor control retraining of uncontrolled movement
  10. Chris and Jennifer Poulin – PRI principles in sports performance and injury prevention programs

Register for FREE here >> 2015 Sports Rehab to Sports Performance Teleseminar

To your success,

Kevin Neeld
HockeyTransformation.com
OptimizingMovement.com
UltimateHockeyTraining.com

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

Get Ultimate Hockey Transformation Now!

Year-round age-specific hockey training programs complete with a comprehensive instructional video database!

Ultimate Hockey Transformation Pro Package-small

Get access to your game-changing program now >> Ultimate Hockey Transformation

“Kevin Neeld is one of the top 5-6 strength and conditioning coaches in the ice hockey world.”
– Mike Boyle, Head S&C Coach, US Women’s Olympic Team

“…if you want to be the best, Kevin is the one you have to train with”
– Brijesh Patel, Head S&C Coach, Quinnipiac University

2014 was a memorable year for a lot of reasons. Emily and I got engaged, bought a house, I got a new (used) car, and then we expanded our family to include a new dog, Ruxin. In quick succession, we learned that he…

IMG_2266

despite being from Jacksonville, is an Eagles Fan

Ruxin in the Man Cave

like me, prefers watching games in the Man Cave

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is a little protective over his things

Ruxin Sleeping

is…not shy

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likes sitting by the camp fire

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is festive

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and no stranger to the weight room

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may or may not be familiar with the Heisman

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has the same response I do when Emily puts on the Bachelor

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adopted Emily’s favorite sleeping position

Emily and I also attended 6 weddings of very close friends of ours, which added a lot of excitement to the year to say the least!

On a professional note, this has been an awesome year for us at Endeavor. Not only was this our largest off-season hockey group ever, but 2014 saw Johnny Gaudreau win the Hobey Baker (and then get off to an incredible start to his NHL career), Anthony DeAngelo get drafted in the first round of the NHL draft (and then compete in his first World Juniors, while leading all OHL defensemen in points), Dwyer Tschantz become the first Delaware-native to ever get drafted in the NHL, and a number of other individual accomplishments that I, along with the rest of our staff, am incredibly proud of.

And while the focus of this site tends to drift toward hockey-specific topics, we have also had a great group of soccer, softball, and baseball players train with us, which includes some of the most dedicated athletes we’ve ever trained.

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Christmas Eve training group

A quick aside about the group above. The two HS pitchers to my left are both committed to good D1 schools. One is training 6 days/week with us; the other 5. They came up to me about a week before Christmas and asked about our holiday hours, so I ran them through what the schedule looked like, notably that we’d be closed Christmas Eve and Christmas. Upon hearing this, the one player said, “So you’re closed Christmas eve?”. But he didn’t say it in a way that lead me to believe he was just clarifying. It was said more like “I heard you say you were closed Christmas eve, but I think what you meant to say was that you’ll open so we can come train that morning…right?” A sentiment that was reaffirmed by the fact that they both just stood there with their arms crossed staring at me, intently.

Emily had to work that day anyway and I have a hard time not supporting that level of dedication so I opened up. Upon hearing the news, several others hopped in as well. As a coach, it’s exciting to see extremely talented players are still pushing their development.

With all of that said, I wanted to recap the year by sharing the Top 10 posts of 2014. Enjoy, and if you find one you particularly like, please feel free to pass it along to your friends.

Top 10 Posts of 2014

10) PRI Cervical-Cranio-Mandibular Restoration Course Review

9) Assessing and Monitoring Performance Indicators

8) A New Way to Isolate Your Core

7) Slideboard Intervals for Increased Skating Power

6a) Analyzing the Skating Stride

6b) Analyzing the Skating Stride: Physical Barriers

5) Understanding Range of Motion: More is not Better

4) Ultimate Pull-Up Transformation

3) 10 Qualities of a Great Teammate

2) 5 Things Every Youth Athlete Should Know

and the most popular post of 2014 by a landslide victory..

1) Why Your Kid is Slow!

To your success,

Kevin Neeld
HockeyTransformation.com
OptimizingMovement.com
UltimateHockeyTraining.com

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

Get Ultimate Hockey Transformation Now!

Year-round age-specific hockey training programs complete with a comprehensive instructional video database!

Ultimate Hockey Transformation Pro Package-small

Get access to your game-changing program now >> Ultimate Hockey Transformation

“Kevin Neeld is one of the top 5-6 strength and conditioning coaches in the ice hockey world.”
– Mike Boyle, Head S&C Coach, US Women’s Olympic Team

“…if you want to be the best, Kevin is the one you have to train with”
– Brijesh Patel, Head S&C Coach, Quinnipiac University

Today’s post from Andreas Wochtl touches on an incredibly important topic that I think may be the single biggest problem with youth sports in general, but especially ice hockey.

Last week I came across an infographic from USA Hockey (Andreas links to the article below) displaying the number of games in a typical peewee, junior, college, and professional season. As you’re probably aware, the NHL, which is largely reliant on ticket sales for revenue, plays an 82 game regular season. A lot of junior seasons are set up similarly for the same reason. The college season, on the other hand, plays about half as many games (typically around 2/week for around 40), but places a much larger emphasis on practice and training. In other words, the focus is on development.

The question, which should be one every youth parent is asking, is why does the typically PeeWee (and Bantam, Midget, etc) season more closely resemble an NHL season than a college one?

Players skate more, handle a puck more, and have infinitely more opportunities to develop skills in practice than in a game, yet kids play 65+ game schedules. The travel associated with these ridiculous schedules also often leads to cancelled on- or off-ice practices. This system sacrifices preparation for competition and ultimately impedes the development of our youth players.

Hopefully the coaches and parents reading this follow Andreas’ call to action! Enjoy the post below.

Is your player getting enough practice?

USA Hockey’s ADM is a great model as I’ve stated in numerous previous posts.  Having grown up in Sweden this concept fits in so well with my own experience and coaching style.  It focuses on progressive skill development at an age-appropriate level.  One aspect of the model that speaks to me is the 3:1 practice-to-game ratio.  Unfortunately there are not many teams (if any) that truly accept, believe, and follow the model.

USA Hockey American Development Model

Some teams claim to accomplish this requirement by taking all the practice offered throughout the calendar year – tryouts, summer ice, summer camps, etc.  The problem here is that a sporadic practice in the summer – in my humble opinion –  is a little bit of a waste of time.  Development takes time and dedication – skating once a week in July is not development.  Although summer practice may be fun, it’s maintenance at best.  

The opposite end of the spectrum of this issue is that teams play around 60 games – some even more (see USAH article citing Team Comcast Peewees).  I’ve worked with players on this team and I know they did not practice 228 times last year (228/3=76 games).  To be fair, this happens at every skill level.  A look at last seasons game stats show Jr Flyers Squirt Minor played 71 games….Delco Phantoms Peewee AA 53 games… Even teams that claim they only play 35-40 games likely play well over that after taking into account the three-four tournaments they played in.

As we are nearing the halfway mark of our seasons, tally up the games and practices.  Ask your coach if the team is on the right track.  At any age or level practices are important, and they should be fun!  It’s on you as a coach to take a stand and work with your organization to fix this problem.  Ask your organization for more practice time, shared ice time, less game slots, and no tournaments.  Stack the deck in your favor.  I’ve never seen a parent want to spend $100 to get 10 extra practices but I know that spending that amount on 4 games in a tournament is never an issue.  Yes, we – the American hockey community – are improving and change takes time but we are still way behind and this is another way we can address it.

Happy holidays!

To your success,

Kevin Neeld
HockeyTransformation.com
OptimizingMovement.com
UltimateHockeyTraining.com

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

Get Ultimate Hockey Transformation Now!

Year-round age-specific hockey training programs complete with a comprehensive instructional video database!

Ultimate Hockey Transformation Pro Package-small

Get access to your game-changing program now >> Ultimate Hockey Transformation

“Kevin Neeld is one of the top 5-6 strength and conditioning coaches in the ice hockey world.”
– Mike Boyle, Head S&C Coach, US Women’s Olympic Team

“…if you want to be the best, Kevin is the one you have to train with”
– Brijesh Patel, Head S&C Coach, Quinnipiac University

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