Friday, May 27, 2011

Don't "run" away from CardioAdvenutre!

The trial class of 'CardioAdventure' went great! Starting out as a group of six (with an age range from 15-50+), we began with a team acceleration run. Running in a straight line, the runner at the back sprinted to the front of the running line, and we continued this for approx 200m. After this, we got to our first checkpoint where we started with box jumps and tennis ball sprints for 45sec on for 2 rounds. Tennis ball sprints were a combination of speed and accuracy. I dropped the tennis balls and as soon as they hit the ground, the sprinters took off at full speed attempting to catch the tennis balls.
 
After a quick water break, we made our way to a basketball court. The group split into two, one group doing sprints in between the basketball poles, and the other doing two-foot hops over a painted line for 60sec. The goal of the bball pole sprints was to see how many times you could touch each pole within a minute. After a brief rest, the runners had to beat their previous score or else they owed me pushups :):) Sounds like fun!? It was! And it wasn't over yet!

At this point we had run about 1.5km, and were 25 minutes into our workout. We continued on at a good pace to the next checkpoint, a park on College Manor St. 10 Hill sprints and 60 sec planks on swings was the challenge at this point!
 
Back to running, we had 1.5km to go to return to the Magna centre. Running at a brisk, but manageable pace we finished in 45 minutes with a total of 3.68km run (including all of the bodyweight strength training at the checkpoints). The final 15 minutes included flying burpees, pushups and jumping jacks.

The CardioAdventure is a great way to test out your running skills. Our farthest distance will be 5km total, will always stay as a group and I'm sure you will find somebody who is at your pace for running!
Running is a great way to experience the outdoors, lose weight, and meet new people. The bodyweight strength training checkpoints are a great intermission from the running, and allow you to strengthen and define the total body - which cardio alone cannot do.

I invite you out to another free trial session. Just email me at allison@acaintraining.com to set it up!

Keep Moving!
Alli

Monday, May 23, 2011

Training Pro Lacrosse player and Team Canada member, Ryan McClelland.


 
Professional Lacrosse (NLL - indoor box) is such an interesting and exciting league. Exciting, because it is fast paced, high-energy and features amazing athletes performing one of the most strenuous sports. Interesting, because these dedicated athletes have regular Mon-Fri jobs and then spend their weekends playing the sport they love all over North America.

I believe that of all professional leagues, lacrosse players are athletes in the purest form as they are playing for the love of the sport. They work their careers, family and personal lives around their commitment to their sport. Ryan McClelland is one of these athletes. As a rookie for the Philadelphia Wings, and an entry-level Management Consultant at Carpedia International, Ryan is on the road literally 7 days a week during season. Flying on Sunday to work in Connecticut from Mon-Fri, then taking the train to Philly for Friday practises and Saturday games, then back to Connecticut on Sunday to begin the work week again. The hectic schedule makes it difficult to fit in anything else during the week, especially any type of strength and conditioning.
 
Finally, once season ends Ryan is able to get training! Having spent the last 5 years playing lacrosse year-round (at the collegiate level for Colgate University, and for different summer leagues including Team Canada, winning the silver at the World Championships in Summer 2010), he has never seriously trained beyond the sport but this summer things are different!
 
Ryan has been using the gym at his hotels (and coming to see me when he is actually in town) to get in some foundational training, and is about to move into a program based upon hypertrophy. We have been focusing on building size, strength, power, speed, endurance and agility (a tall order but lacrosse players must be able to give and take hits, while manoeuvering a ball and a stick).
 
Basic of his current program include :

Agility Ladder
Medball throws
Hurdle Jumps
Cleans
Snatches
Front Squats
Walking Lunges
Interval training (conditioning)  
*this is especially important for box lacrosse due to the intermittent nature of their shifts. Players must sprint at full speed on and off the field in order to substitute offense and defense, as well as move quickly within the field of play.
Core exercises
Long runs 1x/week (30 mins).
 
This is just a brief overview of his program, and is not all performed in one training session. We begin all of his sessions with a warmup, do a significant amount of work with the foamroller (decrease muscle tension and increase flexibility). Ryan performs his strenght training program, and finishes with conditioning. Currently, he is working out 4x a week, using his "off" or recovery days to focus on Lacrosse specific training, or going for a long run. His summer league will be beginning shortly, and his program will be adjusted according to his game/practise schedule.