This Sunday the UFC will be live on Versus. In the main event Rick Story will be taking on Nate Marquardt. In this segment of mma strength training, Story and his coach are working on agility using the agility ladder and a band. The agility ladder is a great tool to use, well for agility. Actually there are a couple more uses for the agility ladder. One being in preventing injury, especially in the feet and ankles. I recommend if you use the agility ladder to train with it barefoot as it will help strengthen your feet and ankle.
There a re a few more ways in which the ladder can improve your athletic performance. Using the agility ladder as a warm-up is a great way for an athlete to get their heart rate up, loosen up their muscles and get your central nervous system firing for the training that is to come. Another way to use the ladder is as a conditioning tool. For example preparing one of my fighters for her last fight, I had her doing ladder drills for nine minutes straight which was the amount of time her fight was. Now she choked the girl out in the first round but the ladder really did improve her conditioning.
In the video below Story uses the ladder not only for agility but with his coach pulling on his waist while performing the drill it also forces Story to use his core to stabilize himself as he goes down the ladder. The progression here would be to get the drill, which is a jumping jack down the ladder down first then add the band into the mix.
Jun 23 2011
Rick Story Agility MMA Training
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Jun 21 2011
Matt Mitrione MMA Strength Training
UFC Live on Versus is this Sunday and with a pretty good card to boot. Since I have not written for the site recently, this week I will feature some of the fighters MMA strength and conditioning training. The first person I will feature is Matt Mitrione. Mitrione takes on Christian Morecraft in a heavyweight battle. This TUF alum has really made a name for himself and is proving he belongs in the UFC. With each fight he has you see great improvement in his game.
In the video below produced by none other that Mitrione you will see how explosive this combat athlete really is. His strength coach combines plyometric hurdle hops with the twenty yard shuttle. Using track hurdles you see lower body explosiveness out Mitrione as he jumps over six hurdles. These hurdle hops help Mitrione generate force off the ground. Being able to generate alot of force of the ground will help combat athletes become more powerful strikers and help them have explosive takedowns. As soon as he finishes the hops he sprints to a set of three cones for the 20 yard shuttle. the 20 yard shuttle helps all kinds of athletes with their agility.
Separately these two exercise are great, when combined it adds a little conditioning element to it. My recommendation is to not go out and try this short combo of movements but to train them separately. work on your power using the hurdles but remember in order to do the hurdles you need to develop some kind of strength. As for the agility make sure when performing agility drills to get ample rest in between sets. They are agility drills intended to work on your agility not your conditioning.
Jun 02 2011
Grip Training for MMA
Grip strength is a very important aspect when training for MMA or any other type of combat sports. I have heard many combat athletes talk about how their grips are weak. One area of concern is in the sport of jiu-jitsu when using the gi. If you are a practitioner of gi jiu-jitsu then you know very well the importance of having a good grip. Your grip strength and endurance can save you from your opponent passing your guard or worse submitting you.
So how can we can increase our grip for combat sports? You have seen my oversized pull-up handle video, which have helped with my grip strength. Another great way is by doing Farmers Walks. Basically a Farmers Walk is carrying heavy weight by your and walking with it. They do make Farmer Walk handles, which you can load lot’s of weight on. You can also use a trap bar, which can be found in any commercial gym as well as dumbbells or kettlebells. One thing I have found that has really increased my grip strength is the use of regular 45 pound plates found in pretty much all gyms. If they don’t have forty-five pound plates at your gym just stop reading this article thanks.
Here is what I like to do with the forty-five pound plates. Grab them in each hand using your fingertips. Start with four fingers as you get stronger start reducing the amount of fingers that you use. I then take the plates for a ride. I like to go for about 100yards, once I reach the 100 yard mark I drop the plates and take a brief rest no more that one-minute. Usually around the fifty-yard mark you start to feel the burn as you get closer to the hundred yard mark you will notice how you pick up the pace of your walk just to get it over with. Do a couple of sets of these. If your grip is weaker than you thought grab 25’s or 35’s depending on your level of fitness. Soon enough people will be talking about your firm handshake and you will take your fight game to a new level.
Train Hard! Train Smart!
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May 31 2011
No More Back Pain
By Cat Rivera:
Back pain is indeed no joke! I, for the majority of my life lived with memories of my own mother laid out flat on her back, unable to enjoy the holidays or even after work standing due to a back injury she acquired when we were hit directly in the middle of our Dodge Ram on the way to school when I was in the third grade. I remember her grimacing in pain with the smallest of movements and paralyzed in fear that any form of exercise or free mobility would result in her not being able to move her legs.
During a Rugby game in my senior year at Oswego state I suffered a very bad back injury in a scrum down and at that moment I realized the debilitating pain that my mother must have been undergoing all those years. I also, for the first time was introduced to the fear of pain. How suddenly all of my movements were being recorded by my twinges and stabbing pains to the point where breathing hurt. From that moment on, my slipped L3 disc and I had a hate, fing hate relationship.
Countless chiropractors, missed workdays, weight gain and countless fear induced, half assed training sessions later, I met the deadlift. It was just in time too, running, sleeping and sitting all threw my back out, carrying the weight of my own breasts hurt by the midmorning. My hips were becoming misaligned the and one leg was slightly longer than the other due to compression of the disc on one side. It was routine training session that changed the movement of my life.
I remember the stern talking too and the playful yet direct banter concerning bending my arms mid lift that I received from Combat Trainer after our first few sessions of DL’s. The fear of hurting my back was hurting my back. As the weeks went on and my weight increased as did my confidence and form while lifting I realized one day that my back no longer hurt me I could stand and twist and tighten my abs without twinges of pain.
I had to know the science behind my newly found freedom to take my body back from pain. After much research, here are my findings. The Deadlift is one of the most important exercises you can ever do because it works all your muscles under heavy weight. It is an essential component of any, strength and conditioning routine. The DL rears its beneficial head in Olympic lifting, strong man competitions, MMA training and as an overall sign of general strength.
Experiencing backpain during a DL it is a sign that you are doing it wrong. First, you must see the DL as more of a pushing motion instead of a pulling one. You are pushing through your heels, pushing your hips forward and squeezing your glutes as hard as possible. Be sure to not round your lower back because that will stress your spine. Straight back! Chest up and upper body natural. Pull in a big chest breath and keep everything tight. Hold the bar close to your body, arms straight and there ya go.
Mastering the proper DL technique will give you a stronger back, teach you the proper way to lift things from the floor and can illuminate back pain for good.
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May 27 2011
Rick Story MMA Training
MMA strength and conditioning training is very important for all fighters
As UFC 130 rolls around Saturday night the importance of MMA strength and conditioning will be seen. One of the fights on the main card is Rick Story taking on Thiago Alves. In an effort to bring you the best in MMA strength and conditioning training, I found a few videos of Story training in the past for upcoming fights. In this segment of MMA strength and conditioning training Story’s coaches incorporate the use of dumbbells in his training.
Dumbbells are a great tool for fighters. Even though the trend is going towards the use of kettlebells, fighters should not forget about the importance of dumbbells in their training. In the two videos below you will see Story use the dumbbells in a complex fashion. You will notice as completes different exercises without putting the dumbbells down.
This type of complexes can be used as a warmup or if the combat athlete increases the intensity it can also be used as a way to condition. Whatever the case may be, when training coaches should use all the tools at their disposal to get the results that their fighters need.
Train Hard! Train Smart!
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May 24 2011
Matt Hamill MMA Training
Last summer I posted some videos of training on the beach and how it can help you with your MMA training. From sprinting on the beach to training in the water the benefits are great. Hey if Daniel Son did it in the karate kid and it helped him win why not you? Training at the beach can help with your balance and your strength.
Sprinting on sand for instance helps with strengthening your ankles. Because the sand is an unstable as you take each stride your foot and ankle need to adjust to the different levels of the sand. This instability leads to stronger ankles and less injury for a fighter.
I have not done this for the past couple of UFC events but with UFC 130 on the horizon this Saturday, I have gone out to find video of some of the fighters on the card training. One I came across is one of the main event contestants Matt Hamill as he trains in the ocean to begin his preparation for Quinton Rampage Jackson. As you will see in the video Hamill is wrestling in the water with his trainer. This type of training is pretty unique and helps a fighter become stronger. Just going in the ocean to have fun can be tiring try wrestling around as the waves hit you. You will see how it not only tests your balance but your strength as well.
So as summer approaches head to the beach and get some training in. Throw a kettlebell in the trunk and have a blast as you get a tan. I am sure the ladies will think it’s hot. Just remember the sun tan lotion.
Train Hard! Train Smart!
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May 12 2011
Amateur MMA Training
Mainstream? Yes MMA has gone mainstream if you have not figured it out by now. With the growth of the sport also comes many new participants are joining the ranks in the amateur circuit. Now we all know that MMA training is tough and if you are a serious amateur it is very time consuming.
For the most part if you are serious about getting a career started in the cage you will have to make an investment in yourself. Yes you will have to spend some money on quality MMA training but you will also have to make an investment in your time. Unlike the majority of the pro fighters out there amateurs also have full time jobs that take up their time. Add this on top of the countless hours of training in jiu-jitsu, wrestling, boxing and muay Thai it can leave an athlete wanting to quit.
I am in the middle of a training camp with Jessica Richer for her upcoming MMA debut this Saturday, May 14th. Jessica is an amateur fighter that has the full time job and is still able to pursue her dream of fighting. With that being said in a few months I am going to put out a manual detailing the training of Jessica. This manual will help guide amateurs in their training and other life commitments. The manual will serve as a detailed guide to help amateur fighters out there reach their potential and be a successful fighter. The manual will also come with a DVD that will have Jessica’s strength and conditioning sessions as well as the program that I wrote for her. If you are serious about a career in fighting then you will want to get your hands on this. Here at Combat Trainer I strive to help everyone achieve his or her goals! Those that want will, those that don’t, won’t.
Train Hard! Train Smart!
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May 09 2011
The Mental Game
By Wilson Pitts
The most basic necessity is that a fighter relax. He needs to relax during training and he needs to relax during the fight. True mental focus can not be achieved if he is too tense. Pacing, shot selection, power generation, and strategic decisions are all affected by being tense.
One aspect of this is the same as stage fright for performers; it takes repeated exposure to being on stage and performing in front of an audience to get over it. Some kids can never get over this and so they do not progress beyond the novice stage. However, boxing is full of stories of experienced fighters tensing up and blowing big fights. What we are really talking about is ways to manage adrenalin released due to stress.
In the mental game there are these different ego games and they can affect a fighter’s performance. They have to do with the fighter’s internal dialogue, or what’s going on inside his head during the fight. There is positive ego, “I am the greatest” but this usually only carries them so far and if the build up is too big it makes losing more painful than it needs to be. There is negative ego “I can’t do anything right” and this often leads to tentative, low energy performances. There is a third state, a neutral state, where the fighter “gets out of his own way” mentally and stops placing his ego between himself and what he is doing. This is “the zone” where all of the fighter’s training can come out, his reflexes are at their best, and he is able to stay relaxed and give his best performance.
The key to relaxing during training is to have a “happy camp” where the mammalian politics are held to a minimum and the day to day environment is relaxed. If the atmosphere is tense it uses up a lot of energy unnecessarily. Fighters tend to be high strung and they don’t need anyone at camp making this worse, especially handlers, sparring partners or management. In this rap star age many of today’s fighters are very prickly about feeling like they are being disrespected and so this has to be taken into account.
There has to be a level of trust among professionals so that open dialogue can exist between the trainer and the fighter. The trainer needs to be able to make corrections in a way that does not offend the fighter, and the fighter needs to be able to communicate to his trainer what is going on in his body, especially if he is hurt. If there is no trust in this crucial relationship it can lead to disaster.
When I watched trainers like Georgie Benton work with fighters in Joe Frazier’s Gym back in the day the instructions were always positive. “Do this,” they never discussed strategy or tactics during sparring and there was never any criticism. It was a public gym and the press and gamblers were watching the big names. Working in the gym was like a show and they never scolded fighters out loud there. A fighter can’t learn like that, it is all happening too fast.
I found out that they had a small gym, a room really, with mirrors and bags and this is where they worked on specific moves at slower speeds, if need be, in preparation. This work was done in the mornings after roadwork and breakfast, they didn’t start going to the big gym until the afternoon. Everything that needed to be said between fighter and trainer had been said earlier in private, everyone was on the same page, it was just work in the gym. This is how professionals like Benton handled themselves and their fighters with class and at the same time gave the fighter time to learn new skills without the pressure or any lose of self esteem.
The old time trainers were psychologists as well as conditioning experts and boxing coaches. They spent a lot of time with their fighters beyond the hours in the gym. Many of the fighters became dependant upon certain trainers to keep them calm as well as get them in shape. Anxiety decreases wind and so staying calm is an important part of peaking. They talked to them about boxing and played cards with them at night in the age before TV and video games. Even in the 1980’s Larry Holmes hired Ray Arcell, then in his eighties, to come to camp just talk to him about boxing!
Throughout history there have been many attempts to find a method for getting a fighter into the “neutral zone” mentally. Attempts were made in ancient China by melding meditation practices taken from Buddhism and Taoism with martial arts. Today we know that calm repetitive action increases Serotonin levels in the brain while reducing Cortisol levels which reduces stress. Cortisol inhibits memory retrieval of already stored information and is an important aspect of the brain chemistry of stage fright. If you are pushed beyond the level of your conditioning, “taken where you havn’t been before” your anxiety will increase as your energy level goes down. However, there are many examples of fighters who have done the work, are in the best shape they can get in, and still have poor performances because of stress. This is because their stress level has risen until it effects their brain chemistry negatively and they are unable to control their breathing.
Sugar Ray Robinson preferred ping pong for this mental training. It was a way to daily practice getting into that flow, to stop talking to himself and just react, in a context that was fun and had nothing to do with boxing. I recommend it to fighters today but they usually prefer video games. Great champions like Robinson tended to make this level of concentration, “mental energy” as Arcell called it, look easy but it requires daily training for many years to be able to do it under the duress of a fight.
Many fighters have been able to focus and stay calm in fight after fight against ordinary competition, only to “blow it” when they stepped up to a higher level of competition or got a title shot. This effect is especially noticeable when they step up to fight a great champion for the first time. These are the fights that haunt them in their old age, the ones where they know they didn’t give their best performance.
One of the best examples of this sad aspect of the mental game is Ernie Lopez, older brother of featherweight champion Danny “Little Red “Lopez. He was a very good welterweight who fought from 1963 to 1974 and had the misfortune to come along in the era of Jose Napoles, one of the greatest welters ever. At the time of their first meeting in 1970 Lopez was 36 6 1. Ernie was very smooth counter puncher without much power. The hype, the pressure of meeting a great champion, really got to him and he came in “tight”. You can really see this on the film of the fight. The tension is visible in Lopez from the beginning and so his punches fall short and seem to have nothing on them. He was knocked down in the first, the ninth, and KO’d in the fifteenth round. Lopez came back with ten wins in his next twelve fights and got another shot at Napoles’ title in 1973 but it was worse this time and he was KO’d in the seventh round.
For years at the Englewood Coliseum they talked about the night the real “Indian Red” Lopez didn’t show up. He ended his career with a record of 48 13 1 with 465 professional rounds boxed and a KO percentage of 38.71. Lopez passed away in 2009 at the age of 64.
May 04 2011
Agility Ladder Circuit
By Cat Rivera
Training for an event like the Metro Dash does something to your thought process. With all the mental and physical preparation that takes place in your quest to attain such a goal, you begin to clearly see how internal competition, mental toughness and willingness to go through obstacles are so prevalent to so much of our lives. How complicated we as people make so many things in our lives like change, yet how simple we accept other things like failure.
Along with these things that can “throw you” or “grow you”, come the ability to actually put into better perspective the small things that often derail us. The Dash has allowed me to push my own limits as to what I expect from myself mentally and physically. It has also allowed me to shake off more easily the nay sayers and negative people who really mean they feel they can’t when they say that I shouldn’t. Accomplishing physical feats in the recent months has only strengthened my resolve to overcome my own self inflicted limitations.
One activity that favors an athlete’s ability to change quickly, deal with mishaps fast and without the luxury to harp on small failure that Combat Trainer has implemented as a vital part of our Dash training is the agility ladder sequence. This is when you follow your partner through a sequence of agility drills designed to make your feet and mind fast. Synchronizing movements and then having to quickly regain composure at your quickest speed in order to keep going is important in all sports and life. No time for self doubt or to harp on a small mishap. Get back in step and catch up. There is also something therapeutic about following someone on their heels and knowing that they will be right behind you too.
A 10 minute round of constant movement during these agility activities will indeed work up a sweat and condition you as well. Cycling through high knees, icky shuffle, bunny hops, even adding sprawls will make you faster in footwork, build leg and knee stability and leg power as well as mental responsiveness. These activities in repetition look deceptively easy but are fun, fast and important in training both in general and for the Dash.
So, move forward in your training always, keep quick in mind and body, follow a good leader, don’t harp on small mishaps in footing or life. Do not make failure simple or success complicated, just keep it moving!
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May 01 2011
Kettlebells Walks for MMA Training
By Cat Rivera
My left wrist knows too well the beating an ill executed kettle bell clean can give. I also know the inspection I often give the fleshy outer part of my wrists to evaluate the previous days cleans. Still, the clean is a vital basic in KB training that aquires mastery before moving too swiftly onto other KB exercises like the clean and press, waiter’s carry etc.
In this leg of Combat Trainer we are pairing a KB clean by one arm and a KB clean and press walked into a waiter’s carry with the other arm. The clean itself is controlled and graceful when done close and tight to the body. The press, strong and purposeful a movement, almost begging to be marched around.
Start with a swing on a one handed gripped KB. As you swing upward from the ground between your legs thrust you hips and shrug your shoulder in as you pull the bell tight to your body tightly and controlled flip the bell over to lie on your forearm. Careful to your keep the arm tucked close to your body and close against your belly. The bell will rest and a on your forarm and a small piece of shoulder.
Repeat this movement with both arms and with one arm press that KB to the sky in one solid controlled movement. Now carry those suckers, one pressed overhead and one cleaned close to your body. Waiter’s walk 100 feet, one minute, 50 to 100 yards, uphill, downhill, go, go,go. Switch arms and go,go,go.
So, what’s the point of all this overhead weighted walking? Core strength for one, your entire midsection is bracing your spine and keeping tight to carry the weight, you are activated. Your glutes are tightened to stabilize you from wobbling side to side.
Your grip and forearms are also being strengthened as your forearms are ignited. Your traps and shoulder stabilizers are activated and conditioning has begun while you walk those KB’s around. Twenty minutes and you will be wondering why gyms have not replaced their treadmills with these two unassuming yet powerful little bells!
So, keep it moving!
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