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	<title>KettlebellFitness.net &#187; Triathalon training</title>
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		<title>Kettlebell Training for Triathletes</title>
		<link>http://www.kettlebellfitness.net/2007/02/18/kettlebell-training-for-triathletes/</link>
		<comments>http://www.kettlebellfitness.net/2007/02/18/kettlebell-training-for-triathletes/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 18 Feb 2007 13:32:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jonathan Ginsberg</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Triathalon training]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kettlebell training for triathletes]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jonathanginsberg.com/~kettle/2007/02/18/kettlebell-training-for-triathletes/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>The Western world is gradually listening, receiving and applying simple, primitive and more effective training methods from the archives of the Eastern bloc.&#160; Kettlebells (KB&#8217;s) have already become the tool of choice for &#8216;in the know&#8217; strength and power athletes.&#160; Joint Mobility (JM), a combination of Qigong and dynamic stretching, has also become one of the most effective warm-ups for any athlete.&#160; How can the re-birth of these two timeless protocols benefit triathletes?</p>
<p>Triathletes are a special population due to the fact they are training for three events simultaneously, i.e. swimming, biking, and running.&#160; Efficiency is of the utmost importance, especially for Ironman competitors, 2.4-mile swim, 112-mile bike, 26.2-mile run ALL IN ONE DAY!!&#160; Thus, there are many problems these athletes run into throughout the course of their training programs.&#160; The most common issues are over-training, weak core, tight hip flexors, tight low back, and stress fractures mainly in the lower leg and small bones of the feet.<!--wsa:inline--><br />
<span id="more-7"></span></p>
<p>This article will address some specific protocols that have been effectively used to correct some major strength and flexibility imbalances of a current client.&#160; She is 33 years old and has competed in two Ironman triathlons, as well as many shorter races.&#160; When we started working together, nine weeks prior to her second Ironman, she was rebounding from a stress fracture in the femoral head, major quad/ham imbalance, rotator cuff problems (past injuries from swimming on college scholarship), and tight hip flexors.</p>
<p>Through a combination of JM drills and KB&#8217;s, she was able to effectively overcome many of these weaknesses in nine short weeks.&#160; Every session began with a minimum of ten minutes of joint mobility head-to-toe and then specifically returning to problem areas.&#160; Refer to Super Joints (book or DVD) for these exercises:&#160; Belly Dance, Cossack, extended Cossack, Bootstrappers, and Split Switches.&#160; After a general mobility warm-up, emphasis was on the Wall Squat, essential to recovery and progression of imbalances, weaknesses and mobility of the hip/low back region.&#160; Within two weeks, her squat depth had improved four inches due to increased flexibility and relaxation of the hip flexors.&#160; This almost immediate improvement led to relaxed bike pedal power, relaxed running and overall increased power and efficiency.</p>
<p>The remainder of each training session revolved around KB training.&#160; The foundational movements apply to triathletes as they do for any athlete.&#160; Five main KB exercises were used.&#160; A healthy dose of swings, cleans, snatches, renegade rows and windmills were the focal point.</p>
<p>Swings teach hip and hamstring firing.&#160; Most programs neglect to teach athletes in general how to neurologically program their hamstrings which leads to efficiency in biking and running.</p>
<p>Cleans re-teach the hips to fire while simultaneously relaxing the shoulders&#8230;crucial during a grueling multi-sport race.</p>
<p>Snatches are an extension of the swing and help &#8216;re-wire&#8217; the CNS to fire on demand and also adding to overall efficiency.</p>
<p>Renegade Rows are a full body core workout teaching the abdominals stabilize in a &#8216;relaxed tension&#8217; state instead of mindlessly rowing a weight.&#160; This movement transfers to more effective hip stabilization in triathletes while building a solid core.</p>
<p>Windmills work the core at the same time stretching the glute/hamstring complex while maintaining mental awareness of the upper body, once again engaging the ENTIRE body to work as a unit vs. a collection of body parts.</p>
<p>These five exercises revolve around everything that a triathlete is looking for:&#160; increasing core strength without increasing muscle mass, and increasing work capacity while maintaining aerobic efficiency (relaxed tension).</p>
<p>Treating the body as a &#8216;unit&#8217; vs. a collection of body parts&#8211;which leads to increased efficiency&#8211;is crucial for triathletes.&#160; Kettlebells fill the void where traditional strength training lacks, effective strength workouts in minimal time.&#160; Ask any triathlete:&#160; his/her last priority is strength training.&#160; However, every triathlete is interested and understands the benefits of &#8220;core&#8221; training and the Party knows what the MOST EFFECTIVE core-training tool is:&#160; kettlebells.&#160; Help your fellow triathlete comrades by showing them these intricate Party Protocols.&#160; They will surely thank you!</p>
<p>Brad Nelson is a Minneapolis/St. Paul based certified Level II kettlebell instructor and strength and conditioning coach (CSCS).&#160; Brad is unwavering about getting you results through private or team training and workshops.&#160; For additional information or to witness a demonstration on how and why kettlebells are the single most effective tool for increasing strength, burning fat, general conditioning and teaching movement visit http://www.mtxeconditioning.com or&#160; contact brad@mtxeconditioning.com.</p>
<p>&#169; Copyright 2005 Brad Nelson &#8212; <a href="http://www.mtxeconditioning.com">http://www.mtxeconditioning.com</a></p>
<p>Article Source: <a href="http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Brad_Nelson">http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Brad_Nelson</a><br />
<a href="http://EzineArticles.com/?Kettlebell-Training-for-Triathletes&#38;id=98129"> http://EzineArticles.com/?Kettlebell-Training-for-Triathletes&#38;id=98129<br />
</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.kettlebellfitness.net/2007/02/18/kettlebell-training-for-triathletes/" class="more-link">More on Kettlebell Training for Triathletes</a></p>


]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Western world is gradually listening, receiving and applying simple, primitive and more effective training methods from the archives of the Eastern bloc.&nbsp; Kettlebells (KB&rsquo;s) have already become the tool of choice for &lsquo;in the know&rsquo; strength and power athletes.&nbsp; Joint Mobility (JM), a combination of Qigong and dynamic stretching, has also become one of the most effective warm-ups for any athlete.&nbsp; How can the re-birth of these two timeless protocols benefit triathletes?</p>
<p>Triathletes are a special population due to the fact they are training for three events simultaneously, i.e. swimming, biking, and running.&nbsp; Efficiency is of the utmost importance, especially for Ironman competitors, 2.4-mile swim, 112-mile bike, 26.2-mile run ALL IN ONE DAY!!&nbsp; Thus, there are many problems these athletes run into throughout the course of their training programs.&nbsp; The most common issues are over-training, weak core, tight hip flexors, tight low back, and stress fractures mainly in the lower leg and small bones of the feet.<!--wsa:inline--><br />
<span id="more-7"></span></p>
<p>This article will address some specific protocols that have been effectively used to correct some major strength and flexibility imbalances of a current client.&nbsp; She is 33 years old and has competed in two Ironman triathlons, as well as many shorter races.&nbsp; When we started working together, nine weeks prior to her second Ironman, she was rebounding from a stress fracture in the femoral head, major quad/ham imbalance, rotator cuff problems (past injuries from swimming on college scholarship), and tight hip flexors.</p>
<p>Through a combination of JM drills and KB&rsquo;s, she was able to effectively overcome many of these weaknesses in nine short weeks.&nbsp; Every session began with a minimum of ten minutes of joint mobility head-to-toe and then specifically returning to problem areas.&nbsp; Refer to Super Joints (book or DVD) for these exercises:&nbsp; Belly Dance, Cossack, extended Cossack, Bootstrappers, and Split Switches.&nbsp; After a general mobility warm-up, emphasis was on the Wall Squat, essential to recovery and progression of imbalances, weaknesses and mobility of the hip/low back region.&nbsp; Within two weeks, her squat depth had improved four inches due to increased flexibility and relaxation of the hip flexors.&nbsp; This almost immediate improvement led to relaxed bike pedal power, relaxed running and overall increased power and efficiency.</p>
<p>The remainder of each training session revolved around KB training.&nbsp; The foundational movements apply to triathletes as they do for any athlete.&nbsp; Five main KB exercises were used.&nbsp; A healthy dose of swings, cleans, snatches, renegade rows and windmills were the focal point.</p>
<p>Swings teach hip and hamstring firing.&nbsp; Most programs neglect to teach athletes in general how to neurologically program their hamstrings which leads to efficiency in biking and running.</p>
<p>Cleans re-teach the hips to fire while simultaneously relaxing the shoulders&hellip;crucial during a grueling multi-sport race.</p>
<p>Snatches are an extension of the swing and help &lsquo;re-wire&rsquo; the CNS to fire on demand and also adding to overall efficiency.</p>
<p>Renegade Rows are a full body core workout teaching the abdominals stabilize in a &lsquo;relaxed tension&rsquo; state instead of mindlessly rowing a weight.&nbsp; This movement transfers to more effective hip stabilization in triathletes while building a solid core.</p>
<p>Windmills work the core at the same time stretching the glute/hamstring complex while maintaining mental awareness of the upper body, once again engaging the ENTIRE body to work as a unit vs. a collection of body parts.</p>
<p>These five exercises revolve around everything that a triathlete is looking for:&nbsp; increasing core strength without increasing muscle mass, and increasing work capacity while maintaining aerobic efficiency (relaxed tension).</p>
<p>Treating the body as a &lsquo;unit&rsquo; vs. a collection of body parts&#8211;which leads to increased efficiency&#8211;is crucial for triathletes.&nbsp; Kettlebells fill the void where traditional strength training lacks, effective strength workouts in minimal time.&nbsp; Ask any triathlete:&nbsp; his/her last priority is strength training.&nbsp; However, every triathlete is interested and understands the benefits of &ldquo;core&rdquo; training and the Party knows what the MOST EFFECTIVE core-training tool is:&nbsp; kettlebells.&nbsp; Help your fellow triathlete comrades by showing them these intricate Party Protocols.&nbsp; They will surely thank you!</p>
<p>Brad Nelson is a Minneapolis/St. Paul based certified Level II kettlebell instructor and strength and conditioning coach (CSCS).&nbsp; Brad is unwavering about getting you results through private or team training and workshops.&nbsp; For additional information or to witness a demonstration on how and why kettlebells are the single most effective tool for increasing strength, burning fat, general conditioning and teaching movement visit http://www.mtxeconditioning.com or&nbsp; contact brad@mtxeconditioning.com.</p>
<p>&copy; Copyright 2005 Brad Nelson &#8212; <a href="http://www.mtxeconditioning.com">http://www.mtxeconditioning.com</a></p>
<p>Article Source: <a href="http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Brad_Nelson">http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Brad_Nelson</a><br />
<a href="http://EzineArticles.com/?Kettlebell-Training-for-Triathletes&amp;id=98129"> http://EzineArticles.com/?Kettlebell-Training-for-Triathletes&amp;id=98129<br />
</a></p>


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