Performance Enhancement
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Presentation Transcript
Performance Enhancement Terms & General Conditioning Principles
Cardiovascular Endurance • The body’s ability, over a sustained period of time during physical activity, to deliver oxygen and nutrients to tissues and to remove wastes.
Muscular Endurance • Ability of a muscle or muscle group to sustain repeated contractions.
Power • Ability to exert maximum muscular contraction instantly in an explosive burst of movement composed of strength and speed.
Speed • Quickness of movement of a limb or whole body
Strength • Extent to which muscles can exert force by contracting against resistance
Adaptation • Body’s ability to react to the training loads imposed by increasing its ability to cope with demands • Purpose of training – systematically stress the body so it improves its capacity • If stress is not sufficient to overload the body, then no adaptation will occurs.
Overload • A greater than normal stress or load on the body is required for training adaptations to take place.
Specificity • Sports training should be relevant and appropriate to the sport the athlete is training for. • Examples: • A football player needs to train speed, strength, and power. • A cyclist should train muscle endurance and cardiovascular endurance
Reversibility • Gradual loss of training effect when intensity and duration is reduced.
Periodization • Varying a training program at regular time intervals to achieve optimal gains in performance. • Used to bring an athlete to “peak performance” • 3 phases • Pre-season • In-season • Post-season
Pre-season (preparatory) Phase • High volume / low intensity • Focus on technique • Power & strength workouts introduced during 2nd half of this phase.
In-season (competitive) Phase • Low volume / high intensity • Focus on technique • Bring athlete to “peak performance”
Post-season (transition) Phase • Active rest – low volume / low intensity • Physiological and psychological break • Recreational activity