“You got to find that balance between understanding you can’t be a slave to the numbers. You use it as information and it’s hugely valuable, but at the end of the day you have to take it in conjunction with the subjective piece, and how these players are responding and feeling.”
Jason Dierking from Louisville sits down to share with us how he evaluates his soccer players and how that drives his programming. He starts out by talking about what he’s looking at by defining those parameters, the evaluations they use to look at those parameters, and how those evaluations drive decisions on how to prepare each athlete. Next, he discusses how the plan changes throughout the year looking at it as the individual athlete vs the whole team, and how athlete tracking and monitoring technology is used to help assist the process. We finish off talking about how he handles his swimming athlete’s, how they evaluate them, how that drives training, and how that fits into the culture of the program.
We are hoping to provide the best possible content for strength coaches with each of our shows. If feel this could provide value for anyone else in the strength and conditioning field please feel free to share.
Enjoy the content? Then you should check out The Strength Coach Network!
You can find sensational content just like this in The Strength Coach Network. As a member of The Strength Coach Networks, you can access over 200 hours of the highest-level lecture content just like this one for 48 hours for only $1. Follow the link below to sign up and use the code CVASPS at check out to get a 48 hour trial for only $1. Check out The Strength Coach Network Here! https://strengthcoachnetwork.com/cvasps/
#StrengthCoach, #StrengthAndConditioningCoach, #Podcast, #LearningAtLunch, #TheSeminar, #SportsTraining, #PhysicalPreparation, #TheManual, #SportTraining #SportPerformance, #HumanPerformance, #StrengthTraining, #SpeedTraining, #Training, #Coach, #Performance, #Sport, #HighPerformance, #VBT, #VelocityBasedTraining, #TriphasicTraining, #Plyometrics