Strength Coaches

thehamma

New Member
Who is regarded as the "best" strength and conditioning coach in the U.S.A.? When I say the best I mean the person who has the reputation as the most knowledgable, and/or has produced olympic, or collegiate, or some kind of champions or results?

thanks,
thehamma
 
Yea Ive heard of Bill Starr and Pendelay as well...are they still alive?

Who are a few of the highly respected trainers today?

Im sure no matter how numerous they are someone can post a few

Joe G
 
[b said:
Quote[/b] (Joe G @ Feb. 09 2006,2:22)]Yea Ive heard of Bill Starr and Pendelay as well...are they still alive?
Who are a few of the highly respected trainers today?
Im sure no matter how numerous they are someone can post a few
Joe G
Starr is still alive from memory, Pendlay is relatively young and still alive.

Depends on what you are looking for. Pure strength from a powerlifting front (like louie simmons) or more of a sports specific strength coach (joe schoeder) or somebody in between.

each does a differen thing and you cant say one is better than another per se,


Theres a lot of whacky coaches :) like you could go Chucky P, and learn about fire water and sand or whatever he goes on about

Then you can go with Chek and measure the length of your dumps
 
Except by the people who dont respect him
biggrin.gif
 
Olympic Weightlifters are the most powerful athletes
in sport. Olympic Weightliftings execute ballistic
resistence movements with their feet on the ground and
using the entire body. Although not the only way to
train for power, Weightlifting has been around for so
long, is so well studied and so effective that it has
become the core training method of virtually every
serious post prep school athletic training program in
the US.
Speed is an expression of power. You have 300 lb. plus
football linesmen running sub 4.5 40's primarily due
to the power developed executing Olympic lifts. It is
not possible to do Weightlifting without full range of
motion of the joints. Weightlifters develop tremendous
strength and power through a full range of motion
because their training forces them to. This is a
reflection of the Specificity of Training Principle.
So is the fast twitch muscle fibre training and
nervous system adaptation inherent in lifting
ballistically. Weightlifting's multi joint, standing
erect movments, as a result of lifting dumbells or
barbells from the floor ballistically to overhead,
requires synchronous use of the entire body's
musculature, improving coordination. All of which
properly applied through a well designed program will,
in fairly short order, profoundly improve the athletic
performance of virtually any athlete.
Example:
Karch Kiraly won the 1996 Olympic Beach Volleyball
Championship at 37 yrs. old.
In winter 1994 he put on 20 lbs of lean muscle mass in
four months doing predominately muscle hypertrophy
training initally and progressively moving to a
combination of 20% strength, 20% plyometrics and 60%
Weightlifting.
In 1996, prior to the Olympic tournament, Kiraly had
won 13 tournaments and the King of the Beach round
robin. In Atlanta he weighed in at 220 lbs, was 37
yrs. old, had a well documented 40" vertical jump,
could routinely power snatch 120 kilos three times in
succession, and could traverse the 30x30 sand court in
two strides. Kiraly was generally recognized by his
competitors to be the best conditioned ahtlete in the
AVP tour and the Olympic Tournament.
The Gold medal confirmed it.
UBERCOACH
 
Back
Top