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#99: Remote Coaching #3 (How We Write Programming)

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Manage episode 334843496 series 2403970
Innhold levert av Todd Nief and Legion Strength. Alt podcastinnhold, inkludert episoder, grafikk og podcastbeskrivelser, lastes opp og leveres direkte av Todd Nief and Legion Strength eller deres podcastplattformpartner. Hvis du tror at noen bruker det opphavsrettsbeskyttede verket ditt uten din tillatelse, kan du følge prosessen skissert her https://no.player.fm/legal.

Coaches who get into individual program design often start because they enjoy the process of, well, writing programming. However, any experienced coach knows the grind of falling behind on writing training and staying up late on a Sunday evening churning out the final few programmes for the following week.

A good process is important if you want to continue to enjoy programming. If you can stay organised and avoid crunch time situations, you can avoid burnout as a coach and better serve your athletes.

In this episode, we take a zoomed out look at how we write and organise programming. We also discuss some of the (many…) mistakes we have made along the way. We explain how we balance writing programming in advance while also staying adaptable to weekly changes that athletes need. Check out the next part of our series on remote coaching to learn a bit more about how we write training for our athletes.

If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles.

We run online workshops for coaches as well. Find out when our next workshop is here: https://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops

These podcasts are posted in video format on YouTube as well.

Show Notes:
  • [1:50] Luke's attempt at making programming more efficient
  • [2:20] A bottoms-up approach to writing training week-to-week
  • [5:30] Long-term planning, athlete priorities, and periodisation
  • [8:15] Being flexible and progressing based upon the athlete's rate of adaptation
  • [10:00] How much variation does Luke use in conditioning?
  • [12:00] Using a fortnightly training split for conditioning
  • [13:30] Progression and variation with beginners
  • [16:15] Using variance to keep athletes engaged
  • [21:00] How Todd plans out training progressions
  • [22:30] Maintaining long-term planning while being adaptable
  • [24:45] The common biases with different programming styles
  • [28:50] Should we come up with progressions week-to-week or plan them in advance?
  • [32:00] Jon's a nice guy, apparently
  continue reading

109 episoder

Artwork
iconDel
 
Manage episode 334843496 series 2403970
Innhold levert av Todd Nief and Legion Strength. Alt podcastinnhold, inkludert episoder, grafikk og podcastbeskrivelser, lastes opp og leveres direkte av Todd Nief and Legion Strength eller deres podcastplattformpartner. Hvis du tror at noen bruker det opphavsrettsbeskyttede verket ditt uten din tillatelse, kan du følge prosessen skissert her https://no.player.fm/legal.

Coaches who get into individual program design often start because they enjoy the process of, well, writing programming. However, any experienced coach knows the grind of falling behind on writing training and staying up late on a Sunday evening churning out the final few programmes for the following week.

A good process is important if you want to continue to enjoy programming. If you can stay organised and avoid crunch time situations, you can avoid burnout as a coach and better serve your athletes.

In this episode, we take a zoomed out look at how we write and organise programming. We also discuss some of the (many…) mistakes we have made along the way. We explain how we balance writing programming in advance while also staying adaptable to weekly changes that athletes need. Check out the next part of our series on remote coaching to learn a bit more about how we write training for our athletes.

If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles.

We run online workshops for coaches as well. Find out when our next workshop is here: https://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops

These podcasts are posted in video format on YouTube as well.

Show Notes:
  • [1:50] Luke's attempt at making programming more efficient
  • [2:20] A bottoms-up approach to writing training week-to-week
  • [5:30] Long-term planning, athlete priorities, and periodisation
  • [8:15] Being flexible and progressing based upon the athlete's rate of adaptation
  • [10:00] How much variation does Luke use in conditioning?
  • [12:00] Using a fortnightly training split for conditioning
  • [13:30] Progression and variation with beginners
  • [16:15] Using variance to keep athletes engaged
  • [21:00] How Todd plans out training progressions
  • [22:30] Maintaining long-term planning while being adaptable
  • [24:45] The common biases with different programming styles
  • [28:50] Should we come up with progressions week-to-week or plan them in advance?
  • [32:00] Jon's a nice guy, apparently
  continue reading

109 episoder

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