No idea
No idea
So I have a brand new fitness center at my school and now I finally have some serious time to weight train between indoor and outdoor. The problem is, I've read all the topics and training plans here and I have no idea what most of them are and what to do. Bubkas, cleans? All i really need is a solid, but uncomplicated strength training program specific to the pole vault. I've looked at all the topics here and at advantageathletics and really don't know what is the best. help? (possibly someone here could just tell me straight up what the vaulter need for strength and what to do?) I'm really asking this because I am going to be the only vaulter left on my high school team next year and my coach said I need to get good.
- VAVAULTER
- PV Nerd
- Posts: 71
- Joined: Mon Dec 06, 2004 6:08 pm
- Expertise: College coach for 10 years.
- Lifetime Best: 17'(5.20)
- Favorite Vaulter: Bubka
- Location: Oswego, NY
- Contact:
hey,
i think you should not really concentrate on exactly what you do but thatyou are just doing something. anything that you can do on a rope, highbar, and in the weight room will be good for you in you stage of training. i did not say not specifically what to do but i think you should not limit yourself to hust what people think you should do. anythink you can do that buildings strength will work. the harder you work the better to an extent.
i think you should not really concentrate on exactly what you do but thatyou are just doing something. anything that you can do on a rope, highbar, and in the weight room will be good for you in you stage of training. i did not say not specifically what to do but i think you should not limit yourself to hust what people think you should do. anythink you can do that buildings strength will work. the harder you work the better to an extent.
Love Life, Live Life, Be Happy!!!!!
-
- PV Whiz
- Posts: 178
- Joined: Fri Dec 16, 2005 3:16 pm
Do this twice a week for four weeks:
Bench 3x8
Overhead Press 3x8
Pull Ups 3x8
Seated Row 3x8
Start with a weight you could do about 10-12 times for one set. If you can't do 3x8 on Pull-ups, don't sweat it, just do 3x whatever you can. If eight reps is easy for you on pull ups, hold a dumbell in between your legs. Each week increase the weights a little bit.
In the mean time, go to this site http://www.strengthforsport.com/MKPMemb ... EM_ID=5800
Check out the videos on the following lifts; Deadlift, Back Squat, Front Squat, Overhead Squat, Romanian Deadlift, Cleans and Snatches. Study them frequently and very well. During the first two weeks practice with just a bar or a broom stick the Deadlift, Overhead Squat and Front Squat. Practice everyday if you can and exagerate proper form.
After two weeks, start adding a little bit of weight for those lifts and start practicing the Cleans, Snatches and RDL with no weight. If you do this for four weeks, let me know on this thread and I will give you a more sophisticated program tying in the upper body lifts with the Olympic/Power lifts and using a better periodization model. This should carry you into your track season.
Bench 3x8
Overhead Press 3x8
Pull Ups 3x8
Seated Row 3x8
Start with a weight you could do about 10-12 times for one set. If you can't do 3x8 on Pull-ups, don't sweat it, just do 3x whatever you can. If eight reps is easy for you on pull ups, hold a dumbell in between your legs. Each week increase the weights a little bit.
In the mean time, go to this site http://www.strengthforsport.com/MKPMemb ... EM_ID=5800
Check out the videos on the following lifts; Deadlift, Back Squat, Front Squat, Overhead Squat, Romanian Deadlift, Cleans and Snatches. Study them frequently and very well. During the first two weeks practice with just a bar or a broom stick the Deadlift, Overhead Squat and Front Squat. Practice everyday if you can and exagerate proper form.
After two weeks, start adding a little bit of weight for those lifts and start practicing the Cleans, Snatches and RDL with no weight. If you do this for four weeks, let me know on this thread and I will give you a more sophisticated program tying in the upper body lifts with the Olympic/Power lifts and using a better periodization model. This should carry you into your track season.
-
- PV Whiz
- Posts: 178
- Joined: Fri Dec 16, 2005 3:16 pm
- ashcraftpv
- That one guy
- Posts: 1202
- Joined: Thu Sep 12, 2002 1:06 pm
- Expertise: Former College Vaulter (D1), Current High School Coach, 1999 Outdoor Big Ten Champion
- Lifetime Best: 5.25m
- World Record Holder?: Renaud Lavillenie
- Favorite Vaulter: Jason Hinkin
- Location: Gig Harbor, WA
- Contact:
Try to do as many exercises where you are moving your own body weight as possible: pull ups, push ups, bubkas, abs, dips, wipers, etc.....
As far as free weights go, focus on the core and olympic lits (cleans, deads, squat, bench)
You want to develop general strength rather than absolute strength.
As far as free weights go, focus on the core and olympic lits (cleans, deads, squat, bench)
You want to develop general strength rather than absolute strength.
PoleVaultPlanet is coming.....
-
- PV Beginner
- Posts: 23
- Joined: Sun Mar 12, 2006 11:12 am
- souleman
- PV Lover
- Posts: 1015
- Joined: Tue Dec 28, 2004 5:56 pm
- Lifetime Best: 12-7.5
- Favorite Vaulter: Bob Seagren, Bob Richards
- Location: Wyoming, Minnesota
- Contact:
PM me. I have a weight routine that will follow what DJ is recommending. Bubba gave it to me and Kris Allison uses it and said he also did it when he was training off season.It will compliment the pull ups, rope work and inversion drills (we used to call them "skin the cats" on the monkey bars).It's pretty simple and takes about an hour. Later...Mike
Return to “Pole Vault - Training”
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 54 guests