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By David Pollitt,
BPE, CSCS*D, CFC
Published in Training & Conditioning Magazine 15.2,
March 2005
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Of all
the athletes I’ve worked with over the years, one of my
biggest challenges came from a group of ice hockey
defensemen. At first, they looked like a strength and
conditioning coach’s dream team. They were big and
strong. They were aggressive. They skated fast and
checked hard.
But as preseason training camp progressed, it became
clear that many of our smaller forwards could
outmaneuver them and easily beat them in one-on-one
situations. Agility and first-step quickness were not in
their repertoire.
The coaching philosophy of ice hockey revolves around
getting to the puck first and winning every one-on-one
challenge to control the play. Therefore, my job was to
address these skaters’ mobility issues—to turn these
players into agile athletes who could use their strength
and size as assets instead of liabilities.
On paper, that didn’t sound too hard to the sport
coaches. But, as any strength coach knows, it is.
Improving athletes’ agility may be the most elusive goal
for any coach to achieve. Working with athletes who are
unagile from the start makes the task even harder.
No Easy
Task
In every
sport, on every team, there are players who simply
cannot move or react to fast-changing situations during
competition as well as other players. There are many
reasons. Sometimes, it’s the bulky football lineman who
is overweight for his position. Other times, it’s the
tall and clumsy basketball player who has not fully
grown into his or her body. But, in most cases, there
are multiple factors that contribute to an athlete’s
inability to be agile on the court, rink, or field.
These factors may include a lack of strength, power,
sport-specific skill, balance, or flexibility; the ratio
of slow-twitch to fast-twitch muscle fibers; muscle
balance; the ability to read and react to competitive
situations; excess bodyweight; or the level of
proprioceptive ability. In other words, there are no
simple solutions to solving the unagile athlete problem.
Making the task even harder is that there is no
consensus on the best way to improve agility. Last year,
when the National Strength and Conditioning Association
asked its Research Committee to issue a position paper
on speed and agility, it found that the available
information on the topic did not provide a basis for a
position statement. While many different forums have
been held to discuss training methodology, which program
works and why is difficult to scientifically validate.
Therefore, strength and conditioning coaches faced with
training unagile athletes must start each program from
scratch. They must take into account the particular
athletes, the sport, and the resources available.
To start, coaches should understand the basics of
agility. It is defined as the ability to change
direction of the body or body parts rapidly and under
control. The process begins with the central nervous
system (CNS) as it receives commands from the brain to
perform a certain action and then decides which muscles
it needs to use, and in which order. As it receives
feedback from the muscle fibers on details such as
muscle length, tension, pressure, speed, direction, and
rate of change, the CNS matches up the original commands
with the feedback and makes adjustments to the movement
as necessary. Each time you train agility, it reinforces
the motor pathways of the action, making it easier to
repeat the next time.
Traditional types of training focus on the obvious forms
of agility seen in competition, such as accelerating,
decelerating, changing direction, or stopping. But
agility should also encompass all kinds of movements
that may be seen during the sport, like falling down and
getting back up, jumping over objects, hitting and
taking a hit while staying in balance, ducking, or
reading the play to anticipate movements.
I have found that the most successful programs include
two components. The first is thoroughly testing each
athlete to better understand his or her deficiencies.
The second is making the entire program very
sport-specific.
Testing
The first
step in solving the problem of poor agility is objective
and repeatable testing. The goal is to determine which
athletes may need more work than others and where their
deficiencies lie. The testing guidelines should be
designed by the entire coaching staff with three
criteria in mind.
The first criterion is that the testing drills mimic the
movements and conditions faced in competition. By
focusing on sport actions instead of general agility
drills, the testing becomes much more sport-specific and
the carryover effect for athletes is usually higher.
The second criterion is that the drills allow coaches to
objectively measure the movements. This is the only way
to know precisely where problems are arising and whether
improvement is occurring as a program is implemented.
The third criterion is that the drills should reveal any
potential weaknesses in specific areas, such as skill,
agility, power, proprioception, muscle balance,
flexibility, speed, and strength. By zeroing in on
specific areas, a plan can be developed to address those
areas most in need of help.
For example, with my ice hockey team, I set up a series
of drills that were sport-specific and measurable, and
tested different movements. The drills included:
• Timed skating around a short obstacle course of pylons
forward and backward, with and without the puck.
• Timed skating from one part of the ice to another,
such as from the front of the net to the boards and
back.
• Two-player drills with and without the puck to see how
players battle for the puck, balance, and coordinate
movements, and what result occurs from each drill.
• Passing the puck, then movement to a target for a
return pass, and then a shot on goal.
If videotaping is possible, it is great to record the
tests. Then, instead of evaluating just by times and
your first impressions, you can carefully review the
tapes to better spot deficiencies in athletes.
If an athlete, for example, completed the obstacle
course in 10.5 seconds when turning to the left and in
13.2 seconds when turning to the right, we knew there
was some problem with his left-side agility. Looking at
the video, we would compare the triple extension of the
ankle, knee, and hip, as well as the angle of the trunk,
from the athlete’s right and left sides. I would also
compare his movements to those of more agile skaters on
the team to examine what the differences were.
Planning the Program
Through
the testing you should learn exactly which areas of
agility your athletes need the most work in. From there,
you can implement a periodized program, starting with
basic exercises and leading up to more sport-specific
drills. The following is a collection of training
suggestions to help you design your program.
Improve pure power in the legs and torso with quick
movements such as the snatch, clean and jerk, swings,
squat pulls, and plyometrics. Make sure to use the
one-arm variations of these movements using kettlebells
or dumbbells to promote muscle balance and unilateral
strength and stability. Vary the landings for these
lifts (such as the split style landing or sumo type
landing) so that you teach the feet to move quickly. The
more power the athlete is able to generate, the better
the agility will be during competition.
Improve general body balance, muscle coordination, and
stabilizing ability in the core and lower body so there
is a stable platform to develop and improve agility. The
old saying "you can’t shoot a cannon from a canoe," is
the idea behind this principle.
Improve the fundamental skill level of the athlete by
breaking down skills into the basics and teaching
athletes to be proficient at a slow speed before adding
more complex drills or increasing the speed of the
drills. By eliminating technical flaws in the basic
skills, players are able to eventually compete at a much
faster level because they do not have to think about
what skill to perform during the action.
Develop proprioception by teaching athletes to learn
where their bodies are in space. Use a wide variety of
basic skills like catching, hitting, or throwing
objects, or cross train with other sports such as
football, soccer, or volleyball to provide stimuli for
proprioception development. Because these drills are not
all that sport-specific, it is best to use them as a
warmup prior to sport activities or during the
off-season when specificity is not as important.
Improve the flexibility of the unagile athlete, if
needed. A flexible muscle moves without impingement,
while a limited range of motion is a recipe for
inefficient movement.
Teach correct positional play so that athletes know
where to be and what to do when they are called to act.
In ice hockey, for example, the defensemen should look
at the center of the opposing player who is trying to
get to the net, keep him or her to the outside with
their own body between the other player and the net, and
then angle them off into the corner areas of the rink
where they are less of a scoring threat. By knowing
where to look and the specific movement objective, an
athlete is less likely to get caught off balance or
exhibit confused body movements.
Address bodyweight problems in athletes, if possible.
Some athletes’ agility problems stem from being
overweight, and reducing the excess baggage will go a
long way toward improving the strength-to-bodyweight
ratio and allow the athlete to move more freely.
Use read and react drills that relate to game-type
situations. Improving these skills can be done in a wide
variety of settings, with several players or the whole
team. Many read and react drills can provide friendly
competition within the team as less agile players strive
to keep up with more agile or faster players. (See "Read
& React Drills," below, for examples.)
Use quick feet drills to condition players to move in
all directions with greater ease. These drills can be
used as a warmup to any sport training program, or
separately to focus on specific agility problems. (See
"Quickness Drills," below, for examples.)
Choose quality training over quantity. Repeating drills
at half speed teaches athletes to move slowly. Since
agility training is about conditioning the CNS to
respond and move faster and faster, it is unproductive
to practice at anything less than full speed once the
fundamental skills are in place.
Place drills carefully so they have the greatest
positive effect. Make sure agility training is done at
the start of a workout when the athletes are fresh,
instead of thrown into the mix at the end of practice to
finish off the day. After each drill it is also
important to use active rest such as jogging or other
slow but steady movements to speed recovery.
Use testing results to tweak the program. If an
athlete’s agility is being hampered by an ankle problem,
prescribe specific exercises for this. If an athlete is
having trouble turning with speed, start them with more
core work. You can also combine the testing with
weightroom training to spot deficiencies. Watching the
athletes’ overhead squats, lunges, medball drills, and
deadlift reaches allows a coach to see any further
weaknesses and tweak the program to remedy them.
Making
It Work
With the
unagile hockey defensemen, we used several of these
principles to improve agility. We started with technical
proficiency and skill acquisition, then added improved
body balance and power. The athletes learned the basics
of positional play from the coaches, and many lost
weight through our intense training and with a few
nutritional tips. By the end of the year we had a more
mobile and much better-conditioned group of players who
were able to contain the best forwards in the league.
We also retested our hockey players at the midway point
and then again at the end of the season, using the same
testing drills we had used at the start of the season.
Other options are to retest some aspect of the original
test every few weeks with the weaker athletes, and less
often with the more skilled players.
Conditioning the unagile athlete is a difficult task for
the strength and conditioning professional since there
are no hard and fast rules. But, as long as you analyze
the athletes and the sport they play, and make the plan
progressive, you will see the deficiencies disappear and
the clumsiness turn to gracefulness.
Table
One: Read & React Drills
One
important component of agility is the athlete’s ability
to read and react. The following drills aim to improve
the athlete’s efficiency in reading what is happening
(seeing where a person or an object is going to move)
and reacting to that movement by making a
counter-movement. All of these read and react drills
involve several athletes or a group of athletes and a
coach.
Reaction balls. Using a reaction ball (a multi-sided
object that bounces unpredictably when dropped or
thrown), set up a game of bouncing the reaction ball
between two players, off a wall, or with a coach as a
warm-up for athletic activity. Allow two bounces for the
athlete to catch the ball. The athlete must move very
quickly in reaction to the ball’s unpredictable bounce.
Hacky sack. Athletes stand in a circle and attempt to
keep the sack in the air as long as possible. You can
allow athletes to use both hands and feet, just feet, or
just hands. This is a great warm-up for sports, and also
works to improve agility and proprioception, especially
in the lower body.
Reaction belts. The reaction belt is attached to two
athletes with a Velcro™ section holding the athletes
together. The drill involves the first athlete trying to
move away from the other, and the second athlete trying
to counter-move toward the first athlete so the Velcro™
does not break apart. The drill continues until the
Velcro™ breaks.
Shadow drills. This idea can be used in a variety of
ways, from follow the leader type drills to copying
action movements. One athlete is instructed to follow
another athlete and copy his or her movements and
skills. This is a great drill for teams as it allows
weaker athletes to train with faster athletes to improve
agility and quickness.
Rule the circle. Inside a large circle, two athletes
hold onto one stick and compete to see which one can
either knock the other off balance or take the stick
away. Variations to this drill involve pushing or
wrestling each other in the circle to knock the other
person out, sumo style. This is a great drill for
contact sports as it develops balance, agility, and
strength along with reaction ability.
Medicine balls. While medicine balls are primarily used
to improve core strength and balance, they can also
assist with reaction training. A coach can throw the
medballs to an athlete in an unpredictable pattern or
two athletes can throw medballs back and forth, each
trying to get the ball past the other.
Bouncing balls. Using a tennis ball, racquet ball, or
another similar type of ball, bounce one or two balls
between two or more athletes. Balls can be thrown at the
athletes, bounced on the ground, or bounced off of a
wall.
Fun Games. Activities like tag, dodge ball,
monkey-in-the-middle, and keep-away teach athletes to
read and react with games they already know how to play
and enjoyed as younger kids. These drills can also be
used as a warmup or cooldown from the bulk of the
workout.
Table
Two: Quickness Drills
Quickness
drills are designed around short bursts of movement in
various directions to improve the ability to move the
feet and develop first-step quickness. These drills can
be done either for a set distance or as read and react
type drills where players change direction after a
whistle from the coach.
Back-to-front runs. Running backward to forward, or
forward to backward helps an athlete improve his or her
stopping ability and quickness to change direction. This
drill is best done with a coach dictating the change of
direction.
Side shuffles. Moving sideways, the athlete shuffles
from one foot to the other. This builds medial and
lateral strength in the upper leg, coordination,
flexibility, and quick feet.
Grapevine. While moving sideways, have the athlete cross
one foot over in front, and then behind the other. This
drill is good for building coordination and footwork.
Outside edges. The athlete moves forward by crossing one
foot in front of the other, then moves the foot that was
just crossed over the first foot. This forces the
athlete to always land and move on the outside edge of
the foot. The result is development of the hip in terms
of strength, flexibility, coordination, and balance.
Line drills. On any type of playing surface with lines
(basketball court, tennis court, hockey rink) have
players sprint between lines moving in all directions
(forward, backward, sideways, crossovers, etc.) with the
coach signaling changes.
Iron Cross. This hockey drill involves running or
skating in a cross type pattern within a small circle.
This idea is to get the feet moving and learn to cross
over and push off from both sides of either foot.
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