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!

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Apr 27 2011

Stadium Stairs for MMA Training

When it comes to strength and conditioning training in MMA many people are always looking for the best way to be conditioned for a fight.  There are so many conditioning protocols out there that will help, from bodyweight circuits to sprinting.  Both of the conditioning tools as mentioned above are free and who does not like free ways to train and get well conditioned as a fighter?

So here is another great way that you can train for free and get a great conditioning session in.  Now all of us have a high school around us.  Get in your car drive to the local high school.  Walk out to the main field and look up at the stadium stairs.  Running up and down the stadium stairs is a great way to work on your conditioning.

This is a simple but effective way.  The stadium stairs will work on your conditioning but will increase your muscle endurance in your legs as well as develop power in the lower body. Fighters have used running the stadium stairs for years to train.  So the other day while training I decided to take the stadium stairs and add a little spice to them.  Instead of just running up them I decided that it would be a great idea to bring my two twenty-five kettlebells for the ride.  We all know you need good grip strength for MMA, and walking up and down stadium stairs with two kettlebell will definitely help with the grip training.  I can tell you my forearms were on fire.  So if you want to add a little spice to your stadium stairs add some weight to it.  Dumbbells, kettlebells , a weighted vest can all help add some extra strength and conditioning to your basic run up the stairs.

Train Hard! Train Smart!

Rob DeCillis CSCS

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


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!

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Jan 08 2011

Overhead Squatting with Kettlebells

Category: MMA,Strength Training,Strongman,UncategorizedRob @ 3:24 PM

In order to be pretty successful in MMA many need to join a gym with some qualified instructors and some good competition in the gym.  This is not to say that you can’ do it at home but there is a better chance to improve if you join one of the many MMA gyms that are popping up all over the United States and throughout the world.

In the world of strength and conditioning or lifting weights in general it is much easier to train at home.  For obvious reasons lifting and training can always be done by yourself and do not need a partner to do it unless of course you are one that likes to talk more than you like to train.  That being said the last time I had a commercial gym membership is now over a year ago.  I have stepped into some gyms over that period of time but only because training partners were members there.  In the last year I have been strictly training at one of the local high schools with my training partner or outside on a field.  Once the weather began to get cold it was either join a gym or train at home, I decided to take my training to the basement of my comfortable home.  This has allowed me to also spend more time with my daughter, which is most important.

Now the only problem has some limitations, the fist being that it is not that large and we use a lot of it for storage and the second being unless you are short like me you will be smashing your head up against the ceiling.  But these limitations do not hold me back from training hard.  With the ceiling being low there are some movements that are hard to do when weight is added to the barbell.  Trying any overhead press is difficult and so is snatching.  Dropping under the bar in the snatch is not the problem it’s when you have to stand up.

So for a while I was trying to figure out how to overhead squat.  Overhead squatting is a great total body movement.  It is one of the movements within the Olympic Snatch.  After catching a snatch you are in the low position of a squat with the bar overhead.  You then have to come out from that squat and stand upright for it to be a clean lift.  Overhead squatting strengthens a lifter in those positions.  I use the overhead squats with many of my fighters and other athletes.  The overhead squat obviously makes your lower body stronger as well as your shoulder stronger and more stable.

Back to my basement. With the ceiling being low I found a way to add some weight to my overhead squat and also a new way to challenge my “core” stability a little extra.  Using two 25-pound kettlebells, I slid them onto my barbell.  I then too the clips, but instead of sliding the clips flush against the kettlebells I left some space between them.  This allowed the kettlebell to be able to move a little more free.  I then performed sets of five overhead squats.  Now as I went back and watched the video I see that I need to go down a littler deeper in the squat.  This my friends is the glory of video I can actually coach myself up a little but still would love my own coach.

So if you are running into problems with room to train in or some obstacle to overcome find a solution to the problem by being a little creative.  There are no rules, make up your own just don’t be careless and do something that might get you injured.
Train Hard! Train Smart!

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,


Sep 29 2010

Leg Conditioning for MMA

Having strong, explosive legs is a key component in any combat sport.  In MMA your legs can be a key component to victory.  Your legs help you in every aspect of the sport from throwing a punch or a kick to driving an opponent up against the cage to attempting a takedown, your legs are the base of your success.

It is not enough to have just strong and explosive legs.  In MMA you must be able to use that strength and power in your legs over and over again.  Even in just moving around the cage with basic footwork can be taxing on the legs and can drain them of energy.

As a fighter, strength, power and muscle endurance in your lower body is important.  Let’s take a quick look at how we can develop all three components.  Performing squats and deadlifts are the sure way to build strength in your legs.  These two exercises are surely the two best in my opinion to get the best results when it comes to strength gains.  After developing a good base of strength or within the same training cycle you can turn that strength that you just gained into power.  Utilizing plyometric training as well as using Olympic lifts such as power cleans, snatches, and jerks.

Now comes taking all the strength and power that was developed and being able to use it over and over again in a fight.  A great way to develop this type of conditioning for your legs or any other muscles in your body is by using complexes. Complex’s is combining two or more exercises with a set amount of repetitions with minimal rest in between exercises. Complexes will maintain your strength and power but also give you some great metabolic conditioning.

The complex in the following video will increase your conditioning in your legs dramatically.  It a complex taken from Dan John called the “Big 55”.  With the use of a Kettlebell you perform two exercises.  For this particular complex we used Kettlebell Swings and Goblet Squats.  This complex is done a little different and will drain your legs.  Starting with the swings you perform 10 reps followed by the squats for 10 reps, then you go to 9 reps of each then 8 reps all the way to 1 rep.  That is a total of 55 reps for each exercise making it a grand total of 110 reps between the two exercises.  All 110 reps are done without rest.  This is great conditioning for your lower body and will allow you as a fighter to continue to use your strength and power.  Give it a try!

Train Hard! Train Smart!

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Sep 27 2010

Saturday Training Session 9/25/2010

Instituting the strongman type training into my overall training has helped tremendously with my Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and Muay Thai.  In BJJ my grip strength has improved and has saved me from some armbars while rolling.  I can feel that I have more control over partners while rolling.  This control has led to me being able to pull off more and more sweeps.  As for my Muay Thai, the training of my legs during these strongman sessions has given them incredible conditioning.  Since I have been using a lot more footwork during our sparring sessions, I have needed my legs a great deal more.  Usually when using footwork to dodge an opponent your legs begin to fatigue quicker.  Once your legs begin to fatigue then you begin to get slower and slower and that is when you start to get caught with shots.

So this past Saturday I met up with one of my weekend training partners for a pretty intense session.  This is how we conducted the training session:

Dynamic warm-up

Good warm-up opened up the hips and activated the glutes and hamstrings.

Sprinting 6 sets 100 yards working up to 80% of our max speed.

Prepared the legs for the heavier sprinting that was to come.

Kettlebell Work

Kettlebell Squats with two 72 lb Kettlebells

Five to ten squats right into a 100-yard sprint for four sets.

Recovery was the walk back to the Kettlebell

Prowler Training

Fifteen-yard Prowler push with 144 lbs loaded on it.  Once the fifteen yards was done ten reps of pulling the Prowler backwards.  Squat down grabbing the thinner handle on the Prowler, take a frog hop back and pull the Prowler using your lats and legs.  Once done with the ten-rep push the Prowler back for the remaining yards back to the starting position.

Playground Finisher

6 pull-ups into 12 dips

5 pull-ups into 10 dips

4 pull-ups into 8 dips

3 pull-ups into 6 dips

2 pull-ups into 4 dips

1 pull-up into 2 dips

As you can see the leg work in this training session helps with not only the conditioning of your legs but helps with the strength and power development as well.  If you have read my posts in the past you know I am a big proponent in using sprinting to help produce power as well as for conditioning purposes.

Train Hard! Train Smart!!

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Aug 09 2010

Kettlebells and Sprinting

Category: Conditioning,MMA,Speed,Strength Training,UncategorizedRob @ 10:19 PM

One night in my search for training equipment I finally found some bumper plates that I had been looking for on Criagslist.  When I arrived at the guy house he took me to his garage to get the plates.  He had all sorts of great training equipment; clubs, sand bells, kettle bells, plyo-boxes and the list could go on and on.  But we began to talk and he said that he and some friends get together on Saturdays and train in the parking lot of a local school and he asked me to swing by.  So the training session came and went and it was great.  Now I am hooked and go out to train every Saturday I can.

The last time I was able to train, he started to talk to me about a strength and conditioning coach by the name of Dan John.  John is a contributor on the site T-Nation.  In one of his articles he talks about former world champion hammer thrower, Sergey Litvinov.  That day we did a modified version of what is called the “Litvinov workout”.  Here is what Litvinov used to do.  He would head out to the track, front squat 405 pounds, rack the weight and sprint 400 meters.  He would do three sets and call it a training session.  That’s a pretty brutal session.

So I now started to incorporate this workout into my training and that of my fighters. But this type of training needs to be adapted, for I do not recommend front squatting 405 pounds then sprinting 400 meters to start.  So following the idea of Dan John, I take one exercise and have been using kettlebells to do this.  Either a swing, a squat, a clean, a press.  I perform the movement for the predetermined reps and then sprint 100 yards.  I perform 3-5 sets and call it a session.

So this is how it would look on paper:

Kettlebell Swings 5-8 reps

Sprint 100 yards

Kettlebell Overhead Presses 5-8 reps

Sprint 100 yards

Repeat 3-5 times.

You can also modify it by adding more exercises and reducing the yards on the sprint for instance:

Kettlebell Swings 5-8 reps

Sprint 50 yards jog back

Kettlebell Squats 5-8 reps

Sprint 50 yards jog back

Kettlebell Clean 3-5 reps

Sprint 50 yards jog back

You get the point you can add more movements or add distance on the sprint.  This is just another type of training to incorporate into your program or that of your athletes.  Below is just a short clip of a movement and the sprint!



Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,