Power The Forgotten Component Lecture
Power The Forgotten Component Lecture
THE FORGOTTEN
COMPONENT
Power
• An attitude
• A lifestyle (e.g. tennis, cycling)
• You can sense power even in a handshake
• Pete Pensyres - Use it or lose it
• Do we lose fast twitch fibers with age?
• Power = Speed X Force
• Force = Mass X
Acceleration
• Weight = Mass X Gravity
• Anaerobic power can be defined as the
exertion of force through a given
distance in as short a time as possible.
• Power is the variable on which
extension of the limits of performance
depends.
• Every time you move, velocity is
involved.
• Power can be increased by:
• Increasing speed (rate of force production) -
How fast a muscle can shorten under a given
load.
• Increasing strength
II. RATE OF FORCE
PRODUCTION
• A. TOOLS: :
• Dumbbells and barbells – variable
resistance. Nautilus – must move slowly
( 2 sec. Up, 4 sec. Down) in order to
keep the resistance constant.
• Keiser allows you to push fast and hard
without factors such as gravity or inertia.
• Training at high speed causes injury,
right? Only with the wrong equipment.
Jumping out of an airplane’s okay if you
have a parachute. The parachute is the
tool that allows you to jump out of the
plane safely. So jumping out of an
airplane is okay if you have a
parachute. And power training is okay
too; if you do it safely.
BALANCE
• Reverse Punch
• Relaxed Power on the knife hand block
• Reaction time vs. movement time
PROGRESSIVE POWER
TRAINING
• Increasing strength BEYOND a certain point
doesn’t help. For example, if it’s a REAL FAST
movement, you don’t have enough time to
recruit ALL muscle fibers anyway, so it’s more
a function of speed than strength. EXPLOSIVE
STRENGTH IS THE ABILITY TO EXERT
MAXIMAL FORCES IN MINIMAL TIME.
• Lifting maximal weight has a number of
effects on motor units. A maximum number
of motor units are activated, the fastest
motor units are recruited, the discharge
frequency of motoneurons is at its highest,
and the activity of motor units is
synchronous.
• Maximal force exertion is a skilled act in
which many muscles must be appropriately
activated. This coordinated activation of
many muscle groups is called intermuscular
coordination. As a result of neural
adaptation, superior athletes can better
coordinate the activation of fibers in single
muscles and in muscle groups.
• In other words, they have better
intramuscular and intermuscular
coordination. Thus, the entire movement
pattern, rather than the strength of
individual muscles or single joint
movements should be the primary training
objective.
FORM FIRST:
• EFFORTLESS POWER
• We recruit muscle fibers by thought
(lifting a book). The woman who lifted
the car off her child KNEW she HAD to
do it. Go from point A to point B as fast
as you can.
• Knowing you have to slow down limits your
power. For example when you’re at the end
range of motion on your lift, or you’re afraid to
hurt your hand when you hit a heavy bag, you
limit your power.
• Think about doing a heavy squat. Just by
imagining you’re about to lift the weight,
your heart rate increases. A lifter mentally
preparing to squat a personal best
demonstrated a heart rate of 180 bpm.
FOCUS: NEURAL FACTORS