Today’s episode features Cal Dietz and Chris Korfist, two highly regarded individuals in the world of sports performance who are no strangers to this show.
I was excited about getting Cal and Chris on the show together since they created one of my favorite sports training book on the market: Triphasic Training for Football. In this manual, French Contrast training is used heavily throughout the entire training cycle, and the results of the program on high school football athletes were huge gains in sprinting and vertical jump abilities.
We’ll kick off today’s show chatting about how the Triphasic Football Manual came together, as well as the idea that French Contrast training is something that isn’t just for peaking situations. From there, we get into something that Chris and Cal have been working heavily on, and that is training the foot. A good athletic foot requires more than simply doing calf raises, and Chris Korfist in particular has a variety of isometrics specially designed to train the foot in different aspects of gait.
Cal Dietz is well known for his use of oscillating repetitions and the great results he gets form them, and we also cover the use of oscillating repetitions, not just in peaking situations, but their effectiveness to bring out explosive strength in athletes to a greater degree than standard repetitions. We’ll also touch on the Exogen weighted fusiform technology that is revolutionizing technique and special strength training for sports.
Today’s episode is brought to you by SimpliFaster, supplier of high-end athletic development tools, such as the Freelap timing system, kBox, Sprint 1080, and more.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 1:02:58 — 54.3MB) | Embed
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon Music | Android | Pandora | iHeartRadio | JioSaavn | Podchaser | Gaana | Email | Deezer | Anghami | RSS
Key Points
- The creation of Triphasic Training for Football
- Tissue change in deep squatting
- Importance of the foot in athletic performance/vibration pickup
- Elastic contribution to movement in athletes and animals
- Foot strength training progressions
- Usage of oscillatory reps in strength training in non-peaking situations
- Use of the Exogen gear in sprint training
“If you consistently do deep squats, then the pliability of that quad tendon becomes less; and then you have altered a ton of free energy return that is a quick and explosive contraction”
“The foot dissipates about 30% that comes into the body so you can properly deal with it”
“When the foot hits the ground, it’s absorbing vibrations of what the ground is”
“Your gait changes momentarily when you switch from one running surface to another; the best athletes can change and adapt quickly”
“We wouldn’t have knee problems if we ran on air… the foot is the problem”
“The basis of the foot is getting the isometric strength down first… if you don’t have the isometric strength, it’s just not going to work very well”
“The true value of oscillatory reps is very specific stress”
“Start using Exogen with the calf sleeves…. you are talking about rotational inertia”
“The common thing you’ll see with people doing a high knee action is to throw their torso forward”