Originally posted by klacr
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The footwork, balance - its all possible to make an athlete a 10-10 in this area even if they do not have a propensity for speed if you can get them relaxed. But, without a great shoulder, forget it. For my MMA fighter, we took him a long way, but, but, he does not have that magic rotator cuff, proportions and wrist grip strength. That will result in a lot of joint issues, buckling, you name it as he is generating a lot of force from other areas of his body which the shoulders, wrists and elbows cannot handle. To get to where he got to is a major accomplishment in itself, and if he stays out of trouble he will be a good earner as a career coach.
It takes durability for day in, month in and year out competition against the best of the best.
In tennis - maybe you could possibly develop a top tier athlete without klacr's shoulder - but, I am not sure. The Russian's learned a properly developed shoulder would generate speed over short distances, so, you could take a tennis player without much speed and teach them how to not cancel themselves out after they hit and you'd be on the path to something good in the serve and volley department.
Durability is a real important asset - you can't be improving if your not a relaxed athlete or on the injury reserve.
The reason for your durability klacr is simple - you have that magical rotator cuff, you come in and serve and volley which takes pressure off that shoulder and you were a swimmer (which means you fully understand how to relax properly, not buckle your nuerology, elongate properly and fire the small muscles and underlying nueroligical stimulus properly).
I never want my MMA, tennis or hockey players to be taught how to swim, as it creates a few land issues that are hard to fix. But, what I do, is take my athletes into the pool, put them in all types of MMA folds and force them to battle it out for six seconds using there small muscle groups. Its taxing on the body, and hard to get injured.
The big heavyweight fighter I had was so unrelaxed in water, and he'd panick all the time. Heavy man, who always would muscle out of everything which is crazy - its not what great athletes do. I had to teach him to snake his way out of things and uses muscles he did not want to use that would make him a better athlete. Never quit able to get to where I needed to go in that area with him because he was a typical big man who spent a career powering through everything using the wrong activations. But, we got enough done to get to where we needed to go. He'd get out of the pool and be dead, and not even be able to raise his hands or walk on two feet he'd be so tired. His footwork that looked nice, wasn't as projectable or durable as I would have liked. My ten year old, she gets it. A big girl, but, she is learning to generate power and send the proper messages to the brain very quickly. I like teaching young athletes to fight, wrestle and play around in that water because it teaches you relaxed power.
I also have a big seven foot foam pit in the basement, and I throw the kids and they move round and round. Makes them very tired, its fun, doesn't break down the body and its teaching them the right type of power.
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