Today’s show is with sport movement expert Adarian Barr. Adarian has been a many-time guest on this podcast, and has been my primary mentor in the world of sport movement and biomechanics. Adarian has many years of coaching experience on the college, high school, club and private level of track and field, as well as in private sports training and movement analysis.
There is a lot of talk in sports performance circles about “absorbing force”, as well as being able to “decelerate” in order to “accelerate”. Although it is certainly helpful to speak outside of concentric/pushing muscle actions only in athletics, a key point is that sport movement is much more than simply accelerating and decelerating things. Moving outwards to another layer of awareness, sport is much more about re-directing momentum than it is abruptly stopping and starting it. Many top experts in speed training now are putting much less emphasis on deceleration, and more on change of direction.
Change of direction concepts can be taken into much more than just running, however, but can be looked at in jumping, throwing, and pretty much any sport skill an athlete will undertake. When we look at the dynamic work we are doing in training from a “collision” perspective, it helps us to appreciate athletic movement, and movement transfer to a higher degree.
On today’s show, Adarian Barr talks details on setting up and managing collisions in sport movements, as well as lots of plyometric considerations. We finish off the show with a brief chat on how this applies distinctly to the foot and sprinting from a timing and lever-based perspective.
Today’s episode is brought to you by SimpliFaster and Lost Empire Herbs. For 15% off your Lost Empire Herbs order, head to www.lostempireherbs.com/justfly
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Timestamps and Main Points
6:13 Adarian’s take on training landings and a criticism of “snap down” exercises to train landings
14:44 Why it takes guts to hit a big collision in sport, and Adarian’s top collisions for athletic performance ability
21:35 Discussing the “ultimate” collision in sport, the javelin-throw final step
31:13 Considerations on setting up, and managing collisions in sport
34:30 Thoughts on using small boxes to manipulate jump takeoffs in track and field
40:25 Low rim dunks in basketball, in respect to collision management
44:55 Adarian’s thoughts on if “landing training” is a good idea for athletes
46:25 What plyometrics actually transfer well to setting up and managing collisions
53:40 Squatting and folding up in context of plyometrics and sprinting
1:01:13 How we can get to the ball of the foot at an optimal rate in sport movement
“There is something people don’t understand about collisions; the impact force at the feet is not the same as what is being transferred to the rest of the body”
“I’m not trying to absorb (the collision) I’m trying to manage (the collision)…. We are not taught to manage the collisions, we are taught to absorb. If you are practicing to absorb collisions, you had better be strong”
“There’s very little times where you are going to come to an abrupt halt in a landing (like a snap-down)”
“When I chew my food, I do a plyometric”
“If you want to build up that (collision management ability) teach everyone to triple jump”
“What do athletes do better than anybody else, they manage collisions better than anybody else, because they don’t have fear”
“As soon as you have fear in the equation, all of a sudden, you can’t manage the collision and you have problems”
“People miss, more than anything, is how you set up the collision; and snap downs don’t teach you to set up the collision”
“Two things to know: 1. How do I set up the collision, and 2. How do I manage the collision”
“When the (cricket bowler) takes that big leap (4 steps out from the plant), that’s where it all starts”
“Landing is the least of my worries when it comes to plyometrics”
“The most difficult thing with plyometrics is asking “what am I stretching to shorten”?”
“One thing about tissue tolerance is, is your tissue tolerant to folding up?”
“When I do a plyo, and I jump and land, to me, when I hit the ground again, I am going to stretch something, and I am going to stretch it to end range”
“Play should be the greatest form of training”
“A skate board activity fits the definition of a plyometric, so why not do it?”
“Part of collision is managing that ground-reaction force, at the foot”
“If the ankle locks up at the right time, and the ground decides to push me back, then I’m going to take advantage of it”
“It cracks me up when people talk about positions and shapes… you need to feel the position; and I’m thinking, no, you need to feel when the ground is about to do something to you, and what are you going to do about it”
“I’m doing a start and I got my hands fixed in (this) position, well then my feet are doing; they are fixed in (this position) too, well then when my foot hits the ground it’ll be too stiff, the ground reaction will be too fast”
“Arches will work, but having arches work is not the same as having a stiff foot”
“How does the foot transition from class 1 to class 2? Calcaneus has to shift”
Show Notes:
Jonathan Edwards 18.43m triple jump “extending the collision”
Christian Taylor with an 18m jump with slightly less “drop” into the collision as Edwards
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rAIqV5yJnkU
Simone Biles “Double Yurchenko”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bKZNkCtgPJ4
Miltos Tentoglou 28’2” long jump (foot flop and reactivity)
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Falling Bunny Hops
About Adarian Barr
Adarian Barr is a track coach and inventor based out of Yuba City, California. His collegiate track and field coaching stops have included UW-Superior, Indiana State, UNC Pembroke, Yuba City Community College.
He has invented 9 devices from footwear to sleds to exercise devices. Adarian is a USATF Level II coach in the sprints, jumps, hurdles and relays. He has a master’s degree in Physical Education.
Adarian’s unique coaching style gets results, and his work on speed and biomechanics is being adapted by some of the top coaches in the nation.