Oct 28 2011

Grip Training for MMA

Grip and hand strength can often be an overlooked skill in MMA training.  From the observer, there may be many other components or athletic reasons that a fighter may win or lose a fight but more often then not, grip strength will never be mentioned.  It is a disservice to an MMA fighter’s career to overlook grip strength.

Grip strength is the applied by the hand to pull on or suspend from objects it is also used by strength athletes, referring to the muscular power and force that they can generate with their hands.

In MMA fighting your hands are the first point of contact to your opponent.  Having a good grip will help while in the clinch as well as submissions.  Grappling is the perfect example of where grip strength comes into play to either act as a turning point of the fight for or against your favor.

There are simple activities to add to your preexisting training that will grant you countless improvements in hand and wrist and finger.

-Pull-ups using a gee looped over the bar or oversized pull-up handles

-Hammer work

-Simple plate rotation exercises

-Squeezing a simple spring clamp

-Farmers walks using two or three fingers with plates

-Climbing wall activities

Do not allow this small body part to lose a big fight. The hands are not to be taken for granted during training and should be strengthened like any other body part to avoid injury and weakness.

 

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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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Apr 11 2011

Sandbags and Kettlebells

I have said it before building strength is an important key in training any type of athlete.  Many times building strength is overlooked especially among combat athletes.  Many fighters feel, as though conditioning is the most important in the training spectrum.  In order to increase your conditioning and improve on it is important to build a solid base of strength and be able to maintain and improve upon it.

You don’t need a state of the art facility to become super strong.  I am going to give you a great secret on how to increase your strength.  Now be careful how you use this secret, you may become stronger than you once were.  Are you ready for it?  Here ya go, one way to become strong is to pick heavy things up and walk with it.   Walking with heavy items has many benefits.  First picking the implement up will work you balance and strength in different positions from those that are worked in the traditional weight room.   When at the gym, you pick the weight up in a controlled fashion with proper technique.  In combat sports there is no such thing as proper lifting technique.  Usually in a fight you are off balance or in an awkward position and need to use strength at different angles.  Lifting different implements will help you with this strength.  Some call it functional strength, I like to think of it as raw strength or old man strength.  Ever notice how our fathers are strong as hell, it’s from all those years of lifting heavy stuff and manual labor.

Sandbags and kettlebells are great tools to use as a MMA fighter.  Each of them alone have helped many a combat athlete increase their strength, putting the two together can lead to great advances in your strength.  As you will see in the video below I use both a sandbag and a kettebell to train my strength and work my balance.  The sandbag used in video is fifty pounds and the kettlebell weighs seventy pounds.  Now with the sandbag on one shoulder and walking with the kettlebell in the other it throws you off balance a bit as you need to compensate for the lighter side and the positioning of the sandbag as opposed to the kettlebell.

This movement will help strengthen you grip with farmers walk, work on your balance and depending on the distance you carry both the sandbag and the kettlebell.  If you do not own a kettlebell you can use some a forty-five pound plate or dumbbells instead.  If you take anything from this post make sure you start building your strength and watch how every other aspect of fitness gets better.

Train Hard! Train Smart!

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Oct 18 2010

Training with the Big Boys

Every elementary school picture I was ever in I was always the one holding the class picture sign.  That meant one thing and one thing only being the shortest one in the class.  For God’s sake my mom took me to the Dr. cause she thought something was wrong with me because I was not growing like she thought I should be.  That doctor put me on human growth hormone.  Yes, ladies and gentlemen good all HGH.   Thinking about that now I should have listened to my cousins who were lifting weights all the time when they told me to start lifting with them.  I would have been one jacked up sixth grader.  Here a better idea let me go find that same doctor and see if I can get some HGH now, hmm not a bad idea especially if insurance covers it.

Well the reason I have this recollection from my past is because on Saturday I went out to play with some of the big boys.  Every Saturday I head out and meet up with some guys and we do some strongman training.  Now this Saturday I trained with some big dudes.  They towered my and could possibly have outweighed me by 100 pounds.  I knew right from the outset that I would be moving a ton of weight on a brisk Saturday afternoon.

In one of my many journey’s of reading I once came across a saying and I wish I could remember who wrote it or said it but it has slipped my mind, I guess that comes with old age but it has stuck in my mind since I read it.  It tells people when they train to train with someone who is better than you, someone who is equal to you and someone who you are better than.  They say this is the best way to get the most out of training.  The guy who is better than you pushes you to reach that level, the person you are equal to tests your skills day in and day out and the person you are better than pushes you so you remain better.  Well Saturday that was thrown out the window cause the other four people I was training with were stronger and more powerful than me.  So if you encounter a training session like this there is one thing you should do, and that is step on to the field, in this case it was a parking lot and play with the big boys.  Playing with the big boys produced a pretty great strongman training session.  This is what we ended up doing…

1) Warm-up 10 minutes

2) Prowler Pushes with 90lbs for 20 yards for 10 minutes alternating between 5 guys.

3) 80lb each hand Farmers Walks followed with Clean and Presses with 80lb and 60 lb D-Balls.  Following the Farmers walk 4 clean and presses with the 80lb D-Ball then 4 Clean and Presses with the 60lb D-Ball (3 sets)

4) Chain Drags- With two 150 lb chains attached to a seated rowing handle we pulled the chains about 20 feet for two sets.  Then we unloaded one chain and did pulls one way for 20 feet and pushes the other way for 20 feet for 2 sets.

5) Sandbag carries alternating arms- Sandbag weighed 75lbs and we ran 25 yds with the bag.  (4 sets)

6) Clean and Presses as many sets of singles in 10 minutes.  But as time went on singles became doubles and triples.

Finisher

Single side Farmers walks with 170lbs for 10 feet (4 sets)

So sometimes being the smallest has it’s benefits as you learn how to train with the big boys and get stronger.

Train Hard! Train Smart!

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Jul 12 2010

Want To Learn More About Conditioning?

Ok ladies and gentlemen, I am excited for this Wednesday night, so excited that I am missing my striking class at Gracie Barra Long Island. What could I be so excited about? I had the honor of being asked by Scott Bird of Straight to the Bar to be the main guest for his TwitterChat 74. What’s the topic that we will be discussing? Conditioning!
Many of you know the importance of conditioning in sports and we all know how important it is to the sport of mixed martial arts. We will be going over several different aspects of conditioning, like when to do it, how often does conditioning need to be done, why conditioning is important in MMA and as well as other sports and what kind implements can be used for conditioning. You won’t want to miss this all important discussion. So if you are a fighter or just someone that love to train come join in on the discussion and give us your thoughts. We would love to hear what you have to say about conditioning and training. For more details on the chat just click here… http://straighttothebar.com/forums/showthread.php?9634-Twitterchat-74-ConditioningHope to see you there. As a little gift I will leave you with a little conditioning protocol that can be easily done in the gym using Farmers Walks, deadlifts and burpees. I used this with my fighter Jessica Richer and she loved it so give it a try.



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Mar 31 2010

Conditioning in Action! The Journey Continues!

Category: Conditioning,Jiu-Jitsu,MMA,Strength TrainingRob @ 10:30 AM

Yesterday I posted a conditioning protocol using Farmer’s Walks, deadlifts and burpees.  Last night after finishingup her strength training program I had Jessica finish off her session with the conditioning protocol.  She had done a variation of the protocol the week before but we worked out the kinks. She pushed through it like a champion does as she gets ready for the Pan American Jiu-Jitsu tournament. Take a look at the video.  Tell me what you think.  I need a name for the protocol, anyone have any ideas? Would love to hear them.

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Mar 30 2010

Let’s Go for a Sprint or Walk…

Category: Conditioning,MMARob @ 12:33 PM

Here is the age old question, should fighter use long distance running in their training? For years we have seen combat athletes from boxers to now MMA fighters using long distance running in their training.  Now I am not here to tell you that long distance running is bad, hey if you want to do it great be my guest.  But what I will tell you is that long slow distance (LSD) training will not help with your cardio in a fight.  I can sit here all night and give you all the scientific study behind all of this or I can get straight to the point and not waste your time.  I am here to research for you and give you what you want and what will work.

In a fight or grappling match of any kind, the pace of the bout is never steady.  One minute you are scrambling around with an opponent the next you can be sitting in his guard waiting to make the next move or floating around the cage or ring using your footwork to make your next strike.  Your heart rate is constantly rising and dropping back down and no amount of LSD training is going to help you with that.

It’s hard to break tradition and trainers are stuck in their ways and will not give in.  It’s just as bad as MMA athletes and jiu-jitsu players using a bodybuilding routine to gain strength and power.  Boys and girls it just ain’t gonna work!  Some have realized the errors in their ways while others are still holding true to what worked well in the past will work now.

So what are we to do?  Well for one you can stop LSD.  So we know that LSD will not help your aerobic capabilities in a fight.  I can also tell you that LSD will also wear on your joints and with all the bumps and bruises the body takes as a combat athlete the last thing you need is excessive pounding on the joints.  Now I will sprint my fighters at times but not in excess because of the pounding on the joints.  I like to keep my sprints short and sweet.  Well there is really nothing sweet about sprinting now is there, but it is effective.

What do I like to do then to condition my fighters?  Like I said above I do like to sprint them at times throughout their training.  I like to take them to a track and have them do 400M sprints or have them sprint the straightaway’s and jog the bends.  The latter sprinting protocol is effective because it raises your heart rate and it drops as you are jogging around the bend similar to what happens in a fight.

Using body weight and weighted conditioning protocols are the most effective way in conditioning a combat athlete.  One can set up a protocol based on the time of your match or fight and then set up specific exercise that will mimic the competition you are in.

I am going to give you a protocol that I have been using with my clients and have been doing myself once a week for a little extra conditioning work.  Get yourself a stopwatch, if you have one that counts down even better.  You will do the following exercises for five minutes.  If you need longer do to your specific fight requirements then add sets to it until you reach the time.  This is fairly simple to follow but doing it is not that simple.  All you need is 45-50 pound dumbbells and a room to walk about 20-25 yards. So here we go…

Conditioning Protocol

Farmers Walk twenty yards.

Five Deadlifts once you reach 20 yards.

Walk back twenty yards.

Five Burpees

Rest ten to fifteen seconds, depending on your level of conditioning.

Continue doing until the five minutes is up Rest one min in between sets.  Do this for 3-5 sets depending on what sort of competition you are getting ready for. Go at your own pace to begin and then as you get better amp it up. You can always add heavier weight to the farmers walks as well. Train Hard, Train Smart!!

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