I recently relased an article on coaching mistakes in our local market. In it, I talk specifically about 5 critical mistakes coaches make with respect to athletes. The article will likely ruffle some feathers. I am not anti coaches in any way (I am one). However, I do believe coaches need to be educated about how to integrate training to maximize sport performance and reduce injury risk.
Today, I witnessed another example of how good intentions coupled with lack of proper insight about the impact of conditioning can harm an athlete. We had a new lacrosse athlete in our facility today working with one of my performance coaches. At the end of the session, my coach asked me to look at the athlete’s knee as the client apparently had anterior knee pain.
The staff member and father informed me that the lacrosse player’s coach was having everyone on the team not participating in a fall sport train for the Columbus half marathon coming up in October. The aim was simply to accomplish team building (an admirable goal) and keep them fit. You may know where this is heading.
I performed a movement screen on the athlete and discovered decreased hip strength and reduced ankle mobility. The player had obvious imbalances on both sides, left greater than right. The player then mentioned shin splints on the left leg as well for the past week (now 3-4 weeks into the 1/2 marathon training).
So, after performing a thorough knee eval, I concluded the athlete has anterior knee pain and left sided shin splints related to muscle imbalance and overuse with the recent addition of 4 days of distance running. Is running bad? In a word, no. But this type of running for this particular athlete is not helping further performance goals.
The father enrolled the athlete in our program to work on speed, agility and power for lacrosse. The bottom line is that this 1/2 marathon training is going to work against the very training adaptations my staff is working to achieve, not to mention now causing more knee pain and shin splints.
I am not opposed to the idea of scheduled conditioning for athletes not participating in a sport. However, coaches need to step back and ask themselves what is the best way to condition their players for optimal performance and injury prevention. In this scenario, I have all the confidence in the world the coach has the very best intentions for his players.
Unfortunately, the results may be less than expected here – more importantly they may be counterproductive as the wrong energy system training and adaptations are being emphasized, while some players may suffer injury.
In my professional opinion, the player should probably consider dropping out of the half marathon training for three very important reasons:
- Resolve pain and shin splints
- Focus on fixing muscle imbalances
- Maximize the training with us
This seems so simple, right? Well, I see situations like this every week in my facility. I see too many injured athletes. Why? In many cases it has to do with faulty conditioning principles or over training. My mission is to educate coaches about how best to blend injury prevention with performance conditioning relative to their respective sport. We have to remember that one size never fits all either.
Thoughts, comments or questions? Let me know. I am happy to address them in a constructive and positive public forum.