A Simple and Free Strength Programme For Athletes
Fiona Mernagh of TOP Therapy shares this free simple programme
(Ian’s note - delighted to be able to share this free program for strength and conditioning from Fiona Mernagh. Fiona has spent many years playing and coaching at the elite level and in recent years has been doing fantastic work as a physio and S&C coach for individuals and teams. I don’t write about fitness/S&C stuff here because I always rely on Fiona for that on my teams - keep an eye out for more content from her in future)
I’ve gotten a lot of free information from the internet in my time and I hope to continuously add my own bits of information here and there for others in turn! Here is my list of go-to exercises for a decently rounded strength programme for athletes.
Plyometrics
If you’re an athlete, you have to be doing some form of plyometrics! Three things to consider:
Be explosive
Land well
Make sure to do variations on one leg
Here are 2 of my go-tos:
Linear bounds
Lateral bounds
Lower Body
Key points! Try to lift:
As heavy as you can
As smoothly as you can (jerky, slow movements mean you’ve gone too heavy)
While breathing
On one leg or in a split stance
My number one choice here is the split squat. It gets the knees bending, the ankles dorsi-flexing and the hip flexing and extending. Lots of wins.
Upper Body
Push-ups – doable everywhere and there are just so many variations, why complicate things?
In order to balance all this pushing, it’s a good idea to do some pulling. DB Rows are a fun way to get strong.
In order to get out of mostly sagittal plane movements, adding in this chop series is highly recommended.
Other
I’m loosely categorising everything else as ‘other’. What we don’t have above are overhead actions. Exercises like chin-ups and overhead presses can come in here. However, we also don’t have much free bodyweight movement. So I’m going to give a couple of exercises that focus more on that area, combining the core (if you feel that was missed above) and overhead reaching.
First up is the bear crawl. No adult likes it – so of course all my adult clients get given it.
Inchworm – this one is great for hamstring flexibility and shoulder and core stability.
Lastly, I’m going to finish with a mobility trio of movements. Being able to get into a deep spiderman position is a particularly good sign for hip health. I learnt this through Mike Boyle’s internship and it follows me into every year as still being super useful and effective.
Putting it all together
So how do structure this as one piece? Assuming you put it all together in one workout, I would normally superset* it something like this:
Superset 1 x 1 set
Spiderman-hamstring thoracics x 3ea
Inchworm x 5
Superset 2 x 3 sets
Linear bounds x 5 ea
Lateral bounds x 5 ea
Superset 3 x 3 sets
Split squats x 8 ea
Push-ups x 8
Superset 4 x 3 sets
DB Row x 8 ea
Bear crawl over 10m
Inline chops x 8 ea
*A superset means you group exercises together, doing one set of each exercise before going back to the first exercise and starting the second set of each, etc. The opposite is a straight set which means you perform all sets of one exercise before moving on to the next one. Straight sets are more time consuming usually as you tend to need to rest longer between sets.
Repeat the above for 3-6 weeks, trying to increase the quality of your reps or the load (how much weight you use). Then change the rep count, the number of sets or the variations. There are endless options when you take a template like this and tweak it every month rather than trying to come up with new exercises all the time. It may be a little boring and certainly does not provide as much stimulus as a more complete programme but for a beginner or someone who just needs something to get them going or maintain their physical fitness, this is a fine workout to turn to.
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