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Strength & Conditioning for Taekwondo, the Party Way

December 21, 2004 08:34 AM

A few years back, I came across Pavel's work. He totally screwed up my whole idea of strength and conditioning. I thought the best way to work out was to use supersets, pyramid,s and compound sets. I resisted the "Party Line" at first. Change is always uncomfortable but I kept coming back to it. I guess you know the truth when you can't take your eyes off of it. Pavel opened my mind to an entirely new way of doing things.
Rewind a few years (pre-Pavel). I used to have no problem training Taekwondo athletes. We would do some stretching, push-ups, forms, drills, sparring, running, abs and stretching, and call it a day. They got tired and I felt I had done my job. As a teacher, I had the confidence of ignorance.
Fast-forward a few years (post-Pavel). I was visiting a friend who was teaching a Taekwondo Class. Watching him reminded me of all the *@%$# I did when I was in Taekwondo. Quite predictably, I had the "If I only knew then what I know now?" thought. I got a little angry with myself. Why was I having these "has been" thoughts? Sure, I'm not in competition shape for Taekwondo, but what if I brought what I had learned to Taekwondo and modernized it? So, I did.
Here is one little wrench in the works ? I had to do strength and conditioning with 15 athletes and basically no equipment. I had a classroom full of 'Naked Taekwondo Warriors'. Here is a just a little taste of how I changed things without my favorite tools (kettlebells, of course, Comrade!).

Warm-Up
Before
Everyone was used to doing static stretches before activity ? Most of the time that is a no-no.

After
The warm-up consisted of joint mobility, active, and dynamic flexibility moves. The warm-up increased in intensity and the stretches in amplitude as we progressed.

Technical / Tactical / Strategic Training
Before
Everyone was doing technical training after they were tired from doing some kind of endurance work.

After
Although technique does need to be fatigue tested, it initially needs to be learned fresh. I put this at the top of the class after warm-ups.

Strength Training
Before
Are push-ups considered strength training or punishment?

After
One week in, the athletes were doing full pistols! The High Tension Techniques rock!

Conditioning
Before
Basically, they were doing Rocky Roadwork. They had long distance, stairs, hills and 100 yd dash days.

After
These athletes had to perform three 3-minute rounds with a minutes rest in between for competition. I had them perform periodized progressive sprints within that time frame. As they moved closer to competition, they moved their technical / tactical / strategic work into their conditioning training.

Core Training
Before
Paralysis via various high rep sit-ups, crunches, and leg lifts

After
Full contact twists (I had one barbell and a few plates). I applied a low set, low rep, high-tension approach. The kids I had doing planks, bridges, and gladiators.

Stretching
Before
Floor stretches and seated buddy stretching (where your friend lays on you until you just can't take the pain anymore).

After
Different versions of Contract-Relax stretching ? my favorite being the standing front, side and back kick stretches with a partner, PNF style.

Comrades, these were just a few of the elements I changed within the class. It was a great experience with great results. If I had it to do over again, I'd do it different. The program worked well, but even innovation needs innovating from time to time. I believe good coaches are constantly innovating, experimenting and looking for that truth they can't take their eyes off of. Hope you found a little here, Comrades!





Frankie Faires, RKC, is a strength and conditioning coach for Taekwondo Instructors and Athletes. To ask questions or find out more, visit him at www.train4tkd.com.
 

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