Today’s show is with Angus Bradley. Angus is a strength coach and podcast host from Sydney, Australia. He coaches out of Sydney CBD, co-hosts the Hyperformance podcast with his brother, Oscar, and is also an avid surfer. Angus appeared previously on episode 249 of the podcast, talking about compressive strategies in weightlifting, as well as the impacts of those compressive effects on narrow infra-sternal angle individuals in particular.
Angus is one of the most brilliant, and practical individuals I know in the world of strength training biomechanics, and connecting it to movement and practical outcomes. When it comes to making sense of how our body structure and pressure systems fit with different setups in the weight room, and how this might apply to dynamic movement, Angus is a top individual to learn from.
So often in the weight room, we will say that it is all “general” (which technically it is) but then use that as an excuse not to understand the movements we are utilizing in detail that fit with greater concepts of the gait cycle. Connecting strength work to the gait cycle is key in better strength training practices, as well as individualization.
On the show today, Angus covers the dimensions of exercises based on center of mass position relative to the foot, and how this connects with the gait cycle, as well as how much an athlete is being “pushed forward” (and why that is important). He’ll cover delayed knee extension in both lifting and sprinting (and how they might connect), concepts of foot shapes, and gait, as well as his take on “floating heel” work not potentially being everything it’s cracked up to be. Angus will also give some practical ideas on giving more sensory information to athletes unable to access early stance well, how far to take wide and narrow ISA types in terms of “balancing their weaknesses”, and much more.
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Timestamps and Main Points
4:25 – How doing the “wrong” intervention in training can still lead to positive results
11:30 – Understanding the implications of working through the various positions of the center of mass in relation to the position of the feet, and what this means for degrees of freedom in movement
18:30 – Some performance implications of wide-vs. narrow ISA’s in regards to mid and late stance, and jump technique
23:15 – The idea of “hamstring curling” one’s self out of the hole of a squat in order to delay knee extension
28:45 – Where Angus sees the benefit in “floating heel” training, and where he finds it not very beneficial
34:45 – How to re-train athletes to “let their femurs be” in squatting when they’ve been taught to shove their knees out in the past
39:30 – Thoughts on oscillatory squatting (and split squatting) and its impact on the mid-stance phase of lifting
43:30 – A discussion on developing mid-stance, narrow ISA’s and single leg squatting
49:00 – Flat vs. high arched individuals and what this means for how this impacts athletes in early vs. late propulsion
56:50 – How Angus’s lockdown sprint work went, and lessons he learned with squatted running
1:02:00 – Thoughts on the role of the adductors in movement, why some people may feel them more (or less) in sprinting, and how to train them in the gym
“You can grab (IR and ER) if you just start pulling athletes back… heavy lifting just has a tendency to shove people forward”
“A sign of a good athlete to me, is they will respond to their environment”
“You can simplify it by looking at where they are in the sagittal plane and looking at that map of the foot, looking at where they are in relation to that base of support… if the center of mass is over the toes, you are going to be in that propulsive ER, if the center of mass is over the mid foot, you are going to be in that compressive IR, that mid-stance, and if you get them further back behind that base of support, they are going to be in that early stance and have nice access to that yielding ER”
“From a performance perspective, I probably only need to pull (a wide ISA) back to midstance (instead of early stance) for a lot of them, just get them back a bit”
“What everyone needs when they suck at anything is more external stability”
“That’s why I love Hatfield squats, you just shove the arms out in front of you to keep the ribcage back”
“I’m very high on goblet squats”
“I think there is an association that slow, stiff people are stuck in their heels, and I just don’t see that”
“If you just want to lift a massive weight, do a deadlift”
“You are not necessarily helping an athlete develop their strengths and you are drawing all these mid-stance qualities out of them in the weight room, but maybe you are just making them a more well-rounded player”
“Triple extension and that spring off the ground, that’s the byproduct of the push, the push happens on the ground with the flat foot, and that sets up that beautiful late stance”
“(Squatted running) was allowing me to get into those sprinting shapes and get a sense of what mid-stance tastes like”
“(To train adductors) Can they center themselves over their stance leg well, and can they do a hip shift well”
About Angus Bradley
Angus Bradley is a strength coach and podcast host from Sydney, Australia. He coaches out of Sydney CBD, and co-hosts the Hyperformance podcast with his brother, Oscar.
After focusing primarily on weightlifting for the first half of his career Angus finds himself spending as much time ‘outside of his lane’ as possible trying to identify the principles that transcend all human movement. He works with a diverse crowd from strongman to surfing and everything in between.
Angus has been mentored by Jamie Smith from Melbourne Strength Culture, and formerly dropped out of his major in journalism to tour Australia with his band.