Went to the gym for 45 mins instead - if there is anything you haven't heard before just put it into youtube.
Squat - barbell
Lunge - dumbells - forward/diagonal/sideways/backwards
Split squat jumps
Calf raises
Nordic hamstrings - a killer - professional footballers can touch their nose on the floor and come back up! (I can go about 10 degrees!)
Good mornings
Multidirectional hops
Skipping - one benefit of the blog, had this rope lying around and knew I should be using it, finally got round to it. I have new found respect for boxers. How do they do all that fancy stuff?
Core exercises - will list these in separate page.
Stretching
Hope to get to the track tomorrow - but made me remember some new research about the optimal order for different types of sessions. It is common teaching that your sessions should follow; SPEED then STRENGTH then ENDURANCE whether that is all in a day or for most people over a week.
However some new research looking at muscle biochemistry has focused on two enzymes mTORC1 and AMPK. Both are involved in the desired response to exercise - AMPK by endurance and mTORC1 by strength training - however AMPK can turn mTORC1 off but the effect doesn't happen the other way round. Therefore if you go to the gym, lift weights and then go for a run the run stops the gains from the gym. If you go for a run and then go to the gym both training effects continue!
This is a little simplistic but I just wanted to get to the bottom line - the order in which you do things can have a profound effect. There are a series of rules based on this new research which i'll discuss soon.
The other issue from today which I have to continually remind myself is that you improve when you rest and recover not when you train. A lot of people have a problem backing off and taking it easy, leading to overtraining and poor gains just for the sake of "one more session"
