Monday, May 21, 2012

Strength Training for Fighters - It's Going in the Wrong Direction






I've had the pleasure of working with fighters from different disciplines including boxing, wrestling, mixed martial arts, Brazilian jiu jitsu and Muay Thai and one thing I've found is none of them were "strong enough".

I hear so often that strength training isn't important and that fighters should just focus on technique. This is bad.

A fighter, just like any other athlete, needs to be concerned with strength, power, speed, agility, mobility, flexibility and specific skill work. 

Of course the levels of each depend on the requirements of the sport and what the athlete's current level of preparation is.

What a lot of fighters don't realize is that there are essentially two types of physical preparation for their sport - general physical preparation (GPP)-which constitutes strength training, power training, speed training, agility training, flexibility training, etc-and specific physical preparation (SPP)-which is essentially fight training, technique work, sparring, etc.

Kettlebell training is great supplementary work for fighters, just make sure to do it AFTER you've done your squats, presses and deadlifts!
It seems lately that when fighters spend their time in the weight room it revolves around more "conditioning" work - i.e. light weight / high rep circuits and CrossFit type stuff - not dedicated and progressive strength training. Obviously this does not allow for maximal strength development. Unfortunately fighters are becoming "over-conditioning" and do not possess very high levels of strength. The typical argument here is that fighters don't need strength work, just technique. I say, why limit yourself?

When you say strength training, people automatically assume you mean a super fat, highly immobile powerlifter. No. That's not the case. I say that if you have two fighters squaring off, both of equal skill levels, and one of them spends a bit of time getting stronger while the other only focuses on technique development, I'm putting my money on the guy who's lifted some weight.


I remember a couple years ago talking to my friend Brian Gausman during one of our training sessions about fighters and strength training. Brian is a pretty damn strong guy himself and knows a thing or twelve about MMA and fight preparation so this comment from him was absolute gold-he said, "If strength isn't important to fighters then why the hell are so many of them getting popped for steroids and performance enhancers?" Logic at its finest. That's Brian for you.


It's also important to note that increased strength has a positive impact on speed. Doubt that statement? I remember reading an old squat training article by the great Louie Simmons of Westside Barbell in which he made the comment that sprinter Ben Johnson had made a 620 lb squat at under 200 lbs bodyweight. I'm sure if you checked the training logs of many other good sprinters you'd see some impressive squat numbers.

Think of strength training as one tool in the tool box - don't make it the ONLY tool, but why wouldn't you spend some time developing that physical quality, just as you would spend developing the cardiovascular system, specific skills, etc.?

The best cure for this is to lift barbells. Heavy ones.

Please understand I am not suggesting fighters start killing themselves under 1-rep max loads like a powerlifter-but I am suggesting that adding more weight to basic movements like squats, deadlifts, bench presses, barbell rows, etc. is a great thing for all fighters to do.
Granted, most fighters don't need to be as strong as Derrick - but adding a plate or two in an awesome lift like the deadlift would be time well spent for ANY fighter!

Also - keep in mind, strength training is only one spoke in the physical preparation wheel, there is mobility / flexibility, aerobic and anaerobic conditioning, speed, power, agility and specific physical development.

Thus a fighter's time spent lifting weights should accomplish his or her goals with the fewest number of exercises and not interfere with the other physical qualities that need attention.

BJJ purple belt Jason Gaskill doing a little technique work with kettlebells. Heavy kettlebell clean and presses can make a great tool in a fighter's strength & conditioning tool box.
I recently helped a BJJ purple belt prepare for his first appearance at Pan-Ams and his strength workouts consisted of two days. One day of squats & deadlifts, supplementary work was box jumps, glute/ham raises, heavy ab work and reverse hypers followed by kettlebell work and sled dragging for the duration of his matches. The second day consisted of bench press, supplementary work was plyo push-ups, chins, rows, arm and shoulder work followed by kettlebell drills and sled dragging, again for the duration of his matches.

That's all. Two days a week. Why so little? Because he had four days of BJJ training, 2-3 days of low intensity cardio (cardiac development work) and 1-2 days of anaerobic work (various types of sprints).

Results? He dropped about 40 lbs, got a lot stronger, and into the best shape of his life. He also had the best showing out of everyone from his BJJ team that participated at Pan-Ams.

Keep in mind that you don't need to go in the gym and spend hours and hours doing every exercise or machine under the sun. A basic program of squats, deadlifts, bench presses, chins, rows, overhead press, some jumps and heavy ab work will do wonders for most fighters.

How strong do you need to be? Who cares. Just strive to add more weight to the lifts-whether it's for 1 rep, 3 reps, 5 reps-I don't care. More weight and / or more reps mean you've gotten stronger. Leave the fancy formulas to the Exercise Physiology geeks. Just use good technique and common sense and you should be fine.

There is no reason to turn your weight room time into another conditioning session - you should be getting plenty of that from your road work and your sparring and skill training - save the weight room time for what it is intended for - to get stronger!

Stay Strong and Healthy!

-Scott

4 comments:

  1. Scott, great points man! Fighters need to focus on increasing their strength in the weight room, not their cardio. One question about this: How does this affect which weight class they should be in? Is it better to cut weight or to gain strength and be in a higher weight class? This is something so many fighters and wrestlers have to deal with. Would love to know your thoughts on it.

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    Replies
    1. Jeff - great questions!

      Strength training may certainly impact BW and this is a huge concern for some fighters.

      For the primary movements I typically only recommend 3-5 work sets of between 1-5 reps. Heavy weights and low reps / volume typically has a positive effect on strength while not adding a ton of muscle. To build a significant amount of muscle the best way is through heavy weights and higher volume / higher rep training.

      For that reason, if a fighter is at the upper limits of his weight class we would keep the main exercises (squat, bench, deadlift, etc.) to work sets of 3-5 sets of 1-5 reps and keep the supplementary work to low volume, mainly focusing on strengthening weak points.

      For a fighter looking to fill out or move up a weight class, the primary lifts would be for 5x5 with a back off set or two of 6-10 reps; accessory and supplementary work would be more of a "bodybuilding" approach of 3x10-12, 5x10, 6x6-8, etc. This, coupled with the necessary caloric increase, would build a good amount of quality muscle.

      Keep in mind it's usually pretty easy for fighters to keep their weight in check due to all the sparring, road work, etc. they do.

      Thanks for the question man!

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  2. Totally agree about another tool in the toolbox when it comes to strength training and preparing for a fight. I also had the priviledge of working with many fighters over the past 4yrs and helped prepare guys for 22 fights. Out of those 22 fights, there were only 4 losses and that was due to either a submission or TKO, not them "gassing out". I also stated the same thing, that if both are equally skilled, then the stronger athlete is going to have the upper hand
    We tried to work in a 6-8 week training phase, for 3 days per week. We always did total body and started with platform work every session (P cleans/squat cleans, deads, jerks, snatch pulls and full snatches if skilled and flexible enough). Every session was a push/pull with a stronger focus on the pulls. We did do Crossfit stuff and tradidtional strength: squat/front squat, rows, and floor press if using straight bar (not a big fan of traditional bench). KB's, DB's, Ropes, and strongman equipment to keep it fun. We started for the first 2-4 weeks of heavy (getting strong) phase and then went 2 weeks strength/power and then last 2 weeks power/speed/conditioning. For the conditioning, I tried to watch how they responded and if sluggish from training (over training) we would back off. I never had them run to run, aka road work, but did "cardio" (I hate that term by the way) work with battling ropes, C2 rower, airdyne, versaclimber, and sprints. Seemed to work with my guys, but it also helped they were all really talented fighters.
    The really cool thing of working with fighters is that you get to see your work in action come fight day! There are some draw backs of working with them as well, but what pro athlete doesn't come with a little drama. On a side note, had to look up Ben Johnson squatting and found him bench squatting quite a bit, with some help, but seemed legit. Sorry so long of a post, just up my alley and wanted to share.
    Jerry Collett

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  3. wow, it,s really a nice . I like it very much.It,s so many helpfull for me. Amazing concept.

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