Athleticism is the ability
to perform athletic movements (run, jump & throw) at optimum speed, with
precision, style and grace within the context of your sport. In many ways it is
easy to isolate out a component of athletic fitness and focus on the development
of that component to the detriment of overall athleticism. As athletic development
coaches it behooves us to always keep the big picture at the forefront of our
thinking. I think Australian discus thrower Dani Samuels (The youngest women to
make the Olympic final) sums it up quite nicely: "I think of myself as not
a thrower who trains like a thrower, I train like an athlete. I look after my
diet, see a nutritionist, do a lot of cross training. It's not just throw and
lift, throw and lift, which is (what) the old-school throwers do. I'm an
athlete." Getting to see her train on 07 I can attest to the athleticism
she exhibits. This is precisely why I think the term Athletic development is a
more accurate term than strength and conditioning. Athletic development is
about the integration of all components of athletic development to produce results
in the competitive arena, not artificial meaningless measure in isolated
activities that have little or no carryover to the actual sport performance.
1 Comment
joe difeo
vern
is “athletic development with an emphasis on acceleration” for the game sport athletes hold water ???
joe difeo