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ASCA Podcast #92 - Paul Downes

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Content provided by Australian Strength & Conditioning Association and Joseph Coyne. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Australian Strength & Conditioning Association and Joseph Coyne or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Paul Downes is the Head Of Athletic Performance and Pathways at Moana Pasifika Super Rugby Franchise in New Zealand. He is a PhD candidate at the University of Edinburgh and is an accredited Strength and Conditioning Coach with the UKSCA and ASCA. Within his 18 years applied coaching experience he has worked with developmental and elite athletes in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. QUOTES “We used screening to tell us what we could do, not what we couldn’t do” “In Day 1 of every week at Moana Pasifika, we invested a lot of time in relationships… to connect and calibrate” “We used maximal velocity work as a prophylactic for injury” “Having a bigger bench or better clean from the floor form probably wasn’t going to be a difference maker for us, our difference maker was more likely to be giving our players more movement vocabulary” “A cognitive apprenticeship is a teaching method that really focuses on authentic learning environments and putting the learner in an situation they are likely to experience in the workplace” SHOWNOTES 1) Paul’s journey from the UK to NZ (and back!) in rugby union 2) Setting up a Super Rugby athletic performance department from scratch 3) Maximizing player availability in professional rugby union without a reserve grade or academy 4) Different screening options and a “typical” week in Moana Pasifika 5) Individualizing the preparation of rugby union players in-season and player-led different strength and conditioning options 6) Using the difference in times between COD and non-COD conditioning tests to inform training 7) How strong is strong enough in rugby union and downfalls of over-emphasizing strength and size in rugby 8) Paul’s research on decision making process in S&C, the differences between different levels of experience in S&C and the “cognitive apprenticeship” approach 9) The value of the session preview, setting the intent and outcomes of a session and aligning S&C language to performance language
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102 episodes

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ASCA Podcast #92 - Paul Downes

ASCA Podcast

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Manage episode 352990330 series 1758103
Content provided by Australian Strength & Conditioning Association and Joseph Coyne. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Australian Strength & Conditioning Association and Joseph Coyne or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Paul Downes is the Head Of Athletic Performance and Pathways at Moana Pasifika Super Rugby Franchise in New Zealand. He is a PhD candidate at the University of Edinburgh and is an accredited Strength and Conditioning Coach with the UKSCA and ASCA. Within his 18 years applied coaching experience he has worked with developmental and elite athletes in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. QUOTES “We used screening to tell us what we could do, not what we couldn’t do” “In Day 1 of every week at Moana Pasifika, we invested a lot of time in relationships… to connect and calibrate” “We used maximal velocity work as a prophylactic for injury” “Having a bigger bench or better clean from the floor form probably wasn’t going to be a difference maker for us, our difference maker was more likely to be giving our players more movement vocabulary” “A cognitive apprenticeship is a teaching method that really focuses on authentic learning environments and putting the learner in an situation they are likely to experience in the workplace” SHOWNOTES 1) Paul’s journey from the UK to NZ (and back!) in rugby union 2) Setting up a Super Rugby athletic performance department from scratch 3) Maximizing player availability in professional rugby union without a reserve grade or academy 4) Different screening options and a “typical” week in Moana Pasifika 5) Individualizing the preparation of rugby union players in-season and player-led different strength and conditioning options 6) Using the difference in times between COD and non-COD conditioning tests to inform training 7) How strong is strong enough in rugby union and downfalls of over-emphasizing strength and size in rugby 8) Paul’s research on decision making process in S&C, the differences between different levels of experience in S&C and the “cognitive apprenticeship” approach 9) The value of the session preview, setting the intent and outcomes of a session and aligning S&C language to performance language
  continue reading

102 episodes

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