Monday, 29 April 2013

Sponsored Athlete - Nicole Humphrys


Name - Nicole Humphreys
Sport - Netball


1. What sport do you take part in?
Netball

2. What level do you participate at?
England U19 squad member, Mavericks NTL, London and South East Regional AcademyClub- Senior County league.

3. What do you love about Sport?
I love all sports because it stimulates competition and I like the fact that what you put into it and you’re training, you are more likely to get out. What I love about Netball in particular is that I never get bored of playing it because every game is exciting and different in its own way. I also love the social side the team sport brings.

I also like that I can give back to the little ones and coach them what I’ve learnt myself.

4. What are your top goals in Sport?
The ultimate goal for me in Netball, would be to get selected to play for England in the European championships next year.

5. What achievements are you most proud of in your career so far?
I am proud of my achievements in netball for this past season. Firstly I was proud that I got into the Mavericks Youth squad and managed to get court time and was starting line up in some matches. I was also very proud to get selected for the England U19 National Academy in March.

6. What do you think makes a good athlete?
I think that the aspects which add up to making a good athlete are; Determination, commitment, perseverance, Positive attitude, confidence and self belief.

7. What are you hoping the f4p Sponsorship and sequencing program will bring to your performance?
I am hoping that Fit4Purpose will enhance my sporting ability and make me stronger and more stable on the netball court, so that I can; run faster, change direction quicker, jump higher, to be able to catch those dodgey passes that no one would normally be able to catch and to intercept balls easier.

8. Tell us an interesting or funny fact about you!
I achieved my Gold medals in Ballroom and Latin dancing. And in 2006, my 4 couple formation team came 1st in the British Open Championships.


Tuesday, 16 April 2013

Athlete Update: Georgina Fisher!



1. Sum up your recent progress compared to 12 months ago

I have made excellent progress in
the past 12 months. I am stronger on court and my endurance and stamina levels have increased in both my netball and swimming, both of which compliment each other. I know my core is getting stronger although there's still room for improvement!!
I have just completed my first season with Mavericks Youth and was lucky enough to get on court for almost every game!! Its been a fantastic experience and I hope to be back with them next season.


2. What benefit has/is the Athletic Performance Program given you/giving you over other athletes you compete with?

My general fitness and stamina are far better than a lot of the girls I train with. Completing my S&C with Fit4purpose has increased my agility and my movement on court is stronger and smoother than many girls of my height. I feel more confident that I can perform at all levels.

3. Sum up your most recent accomplishments! (times, successes, goals etc!)

In February 2013 I attended England Netball U17 trials and was selected for the squad. At 14, year 9, I am one of the youngest players ever selected. I attend the first England camp at Easter and loved it. They were very impressed with my speed and fitness levels as at 6'2" I am not expected to be at the levels I'm at. I am still competing in the pool and achieved several PB's and a Bronze medal at the recent Essex County Championships.  My short term goal is to get selected onto the England Netball U17 European tour and walk out on court in the Red & White dress!!

Friday, 22 February 2013

Amy Godsave - Swimmer


Amy has worked with me now for 9 months. She is on the long term athlete development program focussing on movement, flexibility and progressive strength... here is what she has to say about her land based training!

I work with Stu twice a week and his training programme has helped me improve many aspects of my swimming. I am now much more aware of my body position in the water. My core strength has improved and I can feel this particularly in my dives and turns and under water phase. All my strokes feel stronger in the water and I have recently achieved personal bests in my 50 backstroke, 100 fly and finally managed to go under 28 seconds for my 50 freestyle. I am now looking forward to the county championships and hope that the work I have done with Stuart will help me get close to or even achieve my 100 freestyle national time.


Wednesday, 20 February 2013

Ellie Newman - NETBALL


Ellie Newman has taken part in the sponsorship program now for over 3 months and here is what she says...

"Stu's strength and conditioning program has dramatically improved my performance in netball. His training has developed my core strength and balance on court which has reduced the chance of injury. He has made me aware of how my body works and how I use different rotations when I move which helps me to change direction quicker during a game. My muscle strength has improved along with my speed and the power in my pass.
I feel my play has really improved and allowed me to take the court for Mavericks and progress to the Turnford premier team."

Ellie knows that to develop an athlete it takes more than 3 months corrective and sequencing training, but her commitment to her sport is a great example of why and how the sponsorship program can help young athletes to retain focus and improve their performance. 

For more information on our athletes or to help sponsor young talent, please contact Stu on fitpurposept@gmail.com


Sunday, 2 December 2012

SPONSORED ATHLETE

Sponsored Athlete

Name: Ellie Newman - Sport - Netball
 
1. What sport do you take part in?

My primary sport is Netball. I am a member of the Hertfrodshire Mavericks youth squad and East regional netball academy. I play at regional level for Turnford Netball club and coach youth teams.

2. What do you love about Sport?
 
I Love all sports! I like to push myself as hard as possible to be the best I can. I enjoy team sports as I like to work with other athletes. Being a team player is very important to me.

3. What are your top goals in Sport?
 
My goals are to be successful in trials for the England u17 squad and to take the court for Mavericks. Also, I want to develop my coaching skills and complete my level 1 coaching qualification.

4. What do you think makes a good athlete?
 
I feel a good athlete is hardworking, dedicated and focused, able to work with others and make sacrifices for their chosen sport. They should also be passionate about encouraging others to participate in any sport.
 
5. Tell us something interesting about you!
 
I am the shortest Maverick and have been Miranda the Meerkat the Mavericks mascot!

Tuesday, 6 November 2012

SPONSORED ATHLETE


Sponsored Athlete

Amy Godsave - SWIMMER 

1. What sport do you take part in?

Swimming is my main sport.  I dance twice a week at Ntertainers, a performing arts school, based in Broxbourne, performing shows at the Broxbourne civic. I also compete in school Cross Country, Netball and Rounders.


2. What do you love about sport

I love competing at all levels. I enjoy the challenge of achieving personal bests as well as winning medals. Sport allows me to be part of a team both in training and when competing. Sport motivates me to stay healthy and keep fit and gives me confidence in other aspects of my daily life.




3. What are your top goals in sport?

My top goal last year was to compete at Swimming Nationals in Sheffield which I achieved.  This year I would like to achieve a higher position in the Regional BAGCAT competition. I also want to qualify again for Nationals but this time in more events.

4. How do you think the athletic sequencing and Performance training has helped you?

Sequencing has provided me with the opportunity to link my land training to the technical side of swimming. I am more aware of how to develop my strength in order to improve my strokes. It has provided me with more confidence in and out of the water. I believe sequencing has contributed to my success to date.

5. Tell us one interesting or quirky fact about you

I can touch my nose with my tongue……. Also I am a shopoholic and love Holister & Abercrombie.

Monday, 5 November 2012

SPONSORED ATHLETE

Sponsored Athlete

Georgina Fisher

1. What sport do you take part in?

Netball and Swimming.   I have been swimming since I was 8 years old and have competed at National Level. I started playing netball when I was 11 years old and have just been selected for Mavericks Youth Squad at 13 years old and am allegedly their youngest player ever. I had trials for England U17's Netball in March of this year and am hoping to be re-selected this year.

2. What do you love about sport

I love competing and I like winning. I get a real buzz from sports. I have made some fantastic friends both from the swimming and the netball worlds. 

3. what are your top goal in sport

My top Goals are to win the 100 Freestyle and Backstroke in my age group at National level, play for England at the age of 14 and to be the best Goal Attack in the World by the age of 18.  

4. how do you think the athletic sequencing training has helped you?

Originally I went to Fit4Purpose to help me strengthen my core as I am quite tall my core was very weak. Working with Stuart has helped me feel confident and strong and I know my undulations and turns in the pool have improved greatly. My netball has also improved as we have been working on strengthening my knees, ankles and hips on landing techniques. By building up these areas I hope to stay injury free.

5. Tell us one interesting or quirky fact about you

Although I'm 6'2" I'm known as 'Baby George' by all of the Maverick Players.



Thursday, 1 November 2012

Endurance sport... Why bother with the gym?


As a trainer and a student, working with a polarised range of athletes from Swimmers to footballers , runners to badminton players, sprinters to distance athletes,  The more I learn about the human body in respect of Anatomy and Physiology, the more I am fascinated by what it can achieve through training, up-skilling and development.

One of the questions and barriers that I often come up against with some resilience when recommending a course of gym based action is :-

“Im an endurance athlete, why do I need to train in the gym?”

It’s a good question I guess, there is even some logic to it… if you are a marathon runner, or road cyclist, Iron man, triathlete etc, surely the best thing to do is be out there, pounding the pavements, turning the wheels, lapping the pool, putting in the miles.. right? Well it goes without saying that covering distance in any sport in order to build up your aerobic threshold and V02 max and gain experience is a must, but the human body is complex web of bones connected by joints and many muscles reacting to brain signals to provide a desired movement or counter movement.

Most individuals tend to rely on one side of their body more than the other in every day life as well as sport… this means that they are dominant through one side of their body and most likely stronger or more importantly, they can sequence a range of movements through that side more proficiently than the other. I wont profess to fully understanding why this happens in humans, but I imagine there are a complex group of reasons relating to DNA, inherent traits , environmental factors and so on… Rarely do I come across an individual who can use one side of their body as well as the other and perform a group of movements bi-laterally perfect. That said… like any skill, I believe, as do others, that these imbalances and uni-lateral weaknesses can be trained, improved and corrected.

Back to the question…  Imagine this scenario…

You are a runner or a cyclist with a right side dominant gluteal group (backside). This gluteal group ensures that when I cycle, run, perform any activity, I use and prefer this leg to dominate any locomotive movement and as such… maybe ever so very slightly, I rely on this side to assist in the drive of any motion created in my sport or activity regardless of distance, game, sport.

Now, arguably, there may be ways of correcting these on the track, on the bike, in the swimming pool etc, but I believe that the best way to correct these weaknesses is to assess them through hands on and visual approaches in function (i.e watch the activity), the prescribe a range of motions in the studio that best bring in to action the necessary muscle groups through a sequence of movements.  Once the weakness is identified the work begins, exercises with strict prescription are formed and routine is developed. Through structured, repetitive movements with introduction  of resistance, balancing and holding techniques these body regions and weaknesses can begin to be strengthened, improved and evened out through the body, both ensuring a more stable and ‘balanced’ body and also reducing the risk of injury.

What is the end result?

These changes don’t just happen over night… Ignore anyone that tells you there is a ‘quick fix’ solution. It takes commitment, time and patience… like any training program. If I said to a marathon runner that by balancing your gluteal range right side dominance you would achieve a 1-3% improvement in performance, would that be acceptable? As an elite level athlete completing a marathon in 2 hours 20 minutes, 1% improvement could arguably lead to an improvement significant enough to qualify, Personal best, win a competition and so on…

You tend to find the higher quality the athlete the better they are at hiding imbalances or the lesser the imbalance that they naturally have.

The biggest fight I come up against personally in any sport is Swimming… I used to be a swimmer and swam to a reasonably high level and for a time, was putting 30 hours a week training in… The emphasis, particularly in Britain, is to get people in the pool, keep them in the pool and then swim lengths, lengths, lengths. It probably isn’t the only sport that this attitude takes dominance, however if you refer to the above, think about the bodies imbalances and what happens if you continue to put miles, hours and strain through these imbalances, it becomes clearer as to why a body balancing routine is important to any athlete…  i.e. you always perform an activity with a minor or major structural imbalance, no matter how naturally talented you are, there is a limit to you reaching your peak performance. Its mechanics and science!

The issue is often peoples/coaches/athletes perception of the word ‘GYM’. The immediate response is “I don’t want to be a big muscle bound athlete”. At this point, I know I have my work cut out for me, but I love a challenge and half the battle is convincing people. In these instances I refer back to the preceding columns. If that still fails to convince someone of the importance of a gym based routine somewhere in their plan, I tend to accept that some people will never move out of the dark ages, after all, the difference between most athletes is the way they chose to train and what methods they adopt and believe in!

You only have to look at the some of the best endurance athletes in the world to see that some gym based work is crucial… for example, Mo Farah,

In conclusion, structurally, there is always something that we can work on to ensure that our bodies are operating at their balanced best. Why wouldn't you want to improve your muscle balance to improve your performance?

Stu Clark
Fit4Purpose Athletic Performance.



Wednesday, 10 October 2012

Be the better Coach/Instructor



There are a few things bugging me about the fitness and coaching industry of late. Im not usually a big moaner when it comes to work and tend to carry on with my train of thought without really getting too involved in the politics of training, marketing ploys and new fads, but there are 2 things that have really got me frustrated lately…

-----

Coaching woes

Firstly... Check out this Youtube clip... This will only serve to highlight my point!


The first issue, which I initially thought was purely sport related, is one of coaching. Having being involved with a good standard of Rugby Fitness and Conditioning, swimming and Football, now using the skills I acquired through recent courses from an insightful education provider and my own general thought process, I am starting to see a pattern in UK based sport which highlights why so many kids and even older members of the sports community get injured, bored or lose interest.
The issue for me stems from poor education as part of the backbone of courses that are provided for these so called ‘qualified’ individuals. I am yet to meet a coach, in charge of health, fitness and recovery that fully understands why they are performing a particular drill, conditioning aspect of training or exercise. They often do not fully understand the outcome of the exercise or drill in relation to the individuals body and mental capcity to perform that sequence of movements and the most challenging part is that if an individual has a moderate to high imbalance somewhere within their body, whether it is superficial or hidden, coaches simply do not understand how to regress/progress a drill which ends in injury or an individual lacking the physical capability to perform the exercises components within a drill.

That’s the technical aspect of coaching that bugs me, the other element is that of how coaches approach, teach and talk to clients, team members, players etc. The Role of a coach should be diverse. Rugby, Football Netball and even swimming are great examples… Every individual (individual is the key word here) has their own role, their own thought process, their own motivating influences and their own history. What one person understands, the other person is confused by. What one person finds easy another person finds difficult, the way in which one person moves mechanically is different from the person next to them… The thing that annoys me the most, is single minded one direction coaches that refuse to COACH an individual and learn how they respond to particular stimulus, reactions, requests etc and there are a LOT of them out there.

I don’t have an answer and to be honest, so this article is a little one sided. Its not my place to right the wrongs as I see them, I’m just saying that if more coaches adopt an approach that sees a team as individuals with varied degrees of learning capability and personality, maybe some of the talent that I see daily and educate themselves further on teaching styles, perhaps great athletes wouldn’t be lost through low self-esteem, embarrassment, exclusion and isolation!




Equipment courses - Really?

The other thing that really makes me cringe at the moment are course providers constantly rattling on about new equipment and courses that can teach instructors, coaches, trainers to use them… here is a thought… If you cant look at a piece of equipment, think back to your basic movements patterns and sequences in respect of the way muscles react and the body moves… YOU SHOULDN’T BE IN CHARGE OF SOMEONES PROGRAM let along their health!

It’s a Piece of equipment, much like any other. Granted I will admit that I do love a Vipr, a TRX a MED ball and YES it can keep a client interested to use different equipment, but you don’t need to go on a course to learn how to use it… use your imagination, put some time in, make sure the movement is safe for the relevant individual and then try it yourself through a variation of reps, angles, closed and open chain movements, plyometrically, ballistically and so on!

I bet you will enjoy telling your client that you haven’t seen anyone do the exercise they are doing!



The fitness industry is a lot like any other sector… there are a lot of pretenders out there, laziness is rife, apathy is abundant and safety really doesn't seem to be taken in to account as often as it should. Fundamentally, all movements, drills, exercises should be related back to the educational understanding or how the body moves, why it moves as action and reaction and these should drive an instructors session with a client or team…

I will try and think of something a little more positive to write next time! I welcome your thoughts and constructive debate!



Wednesday, 1 August 2012

Becky Reed - Netball


Name: Becky Reed
Sport: Netball

1. What sport do you take part in?
Netball

2. What level do you participate at?
Mavericks Youth (NPL), East Regional Performance Academ, Club; Wyvern Grangers Regional League 1.



3. What do you love about Sport?
I love every aspect of sport; both training and competing. I enjoy pushing myself in order to perform my best and love the buzz you get when things finally go right and fit into place. I love netball as I love being part of a team and working with other athletes, I have made some fantasic friends through sport.

4. What are your top goals in Sport?
I hope to take to court for Mavericks Youth this season, which would be a huge achievement for my, particularly after being injured for 4 months, I hope to be selected for England U19’s and ultimately go on to represent England at Senior level.

5. What achievements are you most proud of in your career so far?
Firstly I am proud of my determination not to give up to huge setbacks; I wasn’t selected for the Regional Academy last season, but, I didn’t give up. I pushed myself hard and made it into RPA and Mavericks Youth. I am also proud that I have now been selected for the 1st team at my club team.

6. What do you think makes a good athlete?
An athlete has to be determined to reach their goal, they cannot give up when things get tough; experiences like that must motivate them futher. I also think athletes must be commited and focussed, their sport must come first. Finally, athletes must be able to listen to any advice that there are given, otherwise they just won’t improve.

7. What are you hoping the f4p Sponsorship and sequencing program will bring to your performance?
After working with Stu for the past year I have been able to see improvemenets in my performance on court. In particular in my change of direction and ability to jump further and longer. I hope that working with Stu this year will enable me to continue to improve my performance further, in particular my strength and power. This will help me improve of court to make more interceptions, mark tighter and attack stronger.

8. Tell us an interesting or funny fact about you!
I have played Rounders for England since I was 15, and played for the senior squad for the first time when I was just 16.


Sunday, 15 July 2012

The Fit4Purpose Philosophy!


If its easy and instant, its not worth striving towards, 

If you acknowledge that the journey is 90% of the battle you can succeed, but first you must discover your inspiration. 

The other 10% is the actual goal! Its all about having the tenacity, the grit and the devotion to stand up and put your barriers to one side and deal with the little things that stand in your way on a daily basis, one at a time! 

Only when faced with adversity will you truly have reached your potential!

This week... DO SOMETHING DIFFERENT!