Go offline with the Player FM app!
#51: What's the point of this training session?
Manage episode 267705624 series 2403970
“What’s the point of this session?”
“What time should I be shooting for on this?”
“What muscle group is this working?”
While these questions are often relevant, coaches need to be able to help athletes zoom out and see the bigger picture, rather than getting caught up in the weeds of their day-to-day training results.
This isn’t just about preventing temper tantrums and insecurity from a bad day in the gym. This is also about understanding that the sport of CrossFit is extremely messy and chaotic, and simple performance metrics rarely capture enough information to be very helpful.
So, if athletes can reframe their focus from trying to hit specific metrics in every training session and instead optimize for bigger picture learning and development, they will get better faster – and have less emotional pain while doing so.
If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles.
You can follow us on Instagram as well for regular training tips and crunchy tactics: @legion.sc
Show Notes:- [00:13] Athletes often want to know what time they should be shooting for on a specific training session. Or what the goal of the session is. Or what muscle group they’re targeting. These are all good questions – and are best answered by understanding how to know when to focus on the “trees” and when to focus on the “forest.”
- [06:15] Training sessions are often better thought of as “an opportunity to learn and gain experience” rather than super specific session with a very particular goal.
- [11:23] Any time people have a metric to shoot for, they will inevitably end up gaming their results to hit that metric. This is especially dangerous in a sport like CrossFit where the most commonly used performance metrics like 1RM strength, cyclical time trials, and max sets of gymnastics don’t have a lot to do with actual performance in the sport.
- [20:29] The role of a coach is often to interpret athletes’ questions and figure out what they’re really asking – rather than just giving an answer to the question on the table.
108 episodes
Manage episode 267705624 series 2403970
“What’s the point of this session?”
“What time should I be shooting for on this?”
“What muscle group is this working?”
While these questions are often relevant, coaches need to be able to help athletes zoom out and see the bigger picture, rather than getting caught up in the weeds of their day-to-day training results.
This isn’t just about preventing temper tantrums and insecurity from a bad day in the gym. This is also about understanding that the sport of CrossFit is extremely messy and chaotic, and simple performance metrics rarely capture enough information to be very helpful.
So, if athletes can reframe their focus from trying to hit specific metrics in every training session and instead optimize for bigger picture learning and development, they will get better faster – and have less emotional pain while doing so.
If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles.
You can follow us on Instagram as well for regular training tips and crunchy tactics: @legion.sc
Show Notes:- [00:13] Athletes often want to know what time they should be shooting for on a specific training session. Or what the goal of the session is. Or what muscle group they’re targeting. These are all good questions – and are best answered by understanding how to know when to focus on the “trees” and when to focus on the “forest.”
- [06:15] Training sessions are often better thought of as “an opportunity to learn and gain experience” rather than super specific session with a very particular goal.
- [11:23] Any time people have a metric to shoot for, they will inevitably end up gaming their results to hit that metric. This is especially dangerous in a sport like CrossFit where the most commonly used performance metrics like 1RM strength, cyclical time trials, and max sets of gymnastics don’t have a lot to do with actual performance in the sport.
- [20:29] The role of a coach is often to interpret athletes’ questions and figure out what they’re really asking – rather than just giving an answer to the question on the table.
108 episodes
All episodes
×Welcome to Player FM!
Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.