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Programming


The Truth About Olympic Lifts for Athletes
Power cleans and snatches look incredible. They are athletic, explosive, technically demanding. Coaches love programming them because they signal seriousness. Athletes love doing them because they feel powerful. The truth is more complicated. Olympic lifts have real value. They also get misused more than almost any other tool in athlete training. What They Actually Develop Olympic lifts train rate of force development. How quickly you can express power. That is genuinely usef
5 days ago2 min read


The Difference Between Speed Training and Conditioning
This is probably the most important thing a high school athlete can understand about their training. Speed training and conditioning are not the same thing. They do not even work the same energy system. Running them together kills the results of both. Most programs mix them because it looks productive. You are always moving, always working, always tired. Tired is not fast. How Speed Works True speed development uses your phosphocreatine energy system. That system is powerful
5 days ago2 min read


How Many Days Per Week Should Athletes Lift?
This is one of the most common questions we get at Güd and the answer is less complicated than the internet makes it seem. The right number of days depends on your age, your training age, your sport schedule, and what you are trying to accomplish. There are some clear guidelines that work for most athletes. The Short Answer Most high school athletes should be lifting three to four days per week during the offseason. Two to three days during the season. That range covers the m
May 282 min read


The Difference Between Training Hard and Training With Purpose
As athletes it's important that we understand the difference in training HARD and training with purpose.
Apr 152 min read
Why Random Workouts Fail Athletes
Why non structured programs FAIL the athlete
Apr 82 min read
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