What a masterclass right here man. Thanks so much for the value! Your knowledge, integrity, and authenticity is obvious and is inspiring. Keep doing your thing!!
Before I saw this video...I was thinking how hard it is to set your own training up...as an external eye has a better chance of seeing your strengths and weaknesses...and so writing the correct Programme...in other words...can I trust my own self-evaluations ... in most case I would imagine that this does not work...and it is better to have a coach of some kind...
100% following someone else’s programs, or tweaking minor things with what you know especially in the online realm with an online coach…some people can be objective enough tho but if you’re stuck then maybe not objective enough haha , I followed this one program that had good strenght work that I knew I needed and by looking at it I knew I’d improve, but had to change up some of the conditioning more towards base building cause I knew I needed that more then more high intensity stuff and it worked out well …a lot of top coaches usually have a coach because yeah that objective eye is valuable
Your inner critic is your coach. That’s the benefit of knowing how to use your own inner negative talk along with listening to your body when doing solo training
Phil I recently added one of your exercises - the hip thrust dumbbell chest press from the floor - to my routine and absolutely love it. Great explosive movement and pretty much the only chest exercise I have found in a good while that does not set off the tendinitis in my shoulder.
That was a great overview...well timed...as I am just starting again after a deload break and water only fast...so still tired...only thing missing on board are the reps for each division...but that is a minor pt...it's just that I am a very visual learner...your training seems to be top notch, and I look forward to purchasing your book Mr Daru...thanks again many times over!!!
ONE OF THE BEST VIDEOS EVER! Useful, straight to the point and realistic according to fighters actual schedule. I'm taking notes to improve my coaching performance. THANKS A LOT, PHIL! Greetings from Spain
This is exactly what is needed is a more detailed approach to working out I boxed and wrestled my whole life and this is super useful information it shows you why we hit plateaus throughout training you think just going hard 24/7 produces results and it does but there’s a huge net loss that you could be getting back reducing time and effort maximizing results my only question is if you are going to be striking or grappling do you just use the clean up days for the technique training? Or where would would a fighter fit that in?
Big respect for your way of teaching I totally understand videos and see them as lessons maybe watch them every time 3-4 times and taking notes Ps: We waiting for that book
Like your approach to training, with a focus on mental as well as physical strength. Do you have a program for a 70 yr old martial artist still training, still getting after it. Thanks.
Your combat sport will give you all the condtioning you need if you train it 4-5 a week. Strength comes from Barbells 5x5 and it doesn't mix well with your sports practice. High repetitions and rhythmic movemnts are the opposite of strength adaptation so do your strength separately from your combat sport practice and take time to recover or else your just over working yourself like a CF.
Ah finally a good vid about this topic! i watched 3 vids before this and they were all trash, not good information and monotonously narrated. Yours was awesome, thank ypu very much
I just know airbike, kettlebell swings ,rowing and rope pull down go well together in my 5 round circuit that i do, another circuit i do is sled pushes , tire flipping, bench step ups, kettlebell squats,deadlifts each circuit are 1 minute each exercise going hard
Always looking forward when you bring out the white board to explain everything. I wanted to ask, do all trainers leave circuit style work for later in the athlete’s training season? I noticed this another channel called the movement system saying that all anaerobic capacity + strength endurance work is usually done later as the gains from those usually wither away 15-18 days +/-5 days. Would that mean that training for anaerobic capacity or strength endurance early on be a waste? I mean if there is time surely it wouldn’t hurt right? As long as you’re getting strength, power, and cardio work in.
Deliniation of training adaptations all depend on individual differences. There has been some research on it but again I do believe this varies from person to person. Your looking at in the form of long term block Periodization that’s another reason why I prefer a dynamic Periodization approach. Think of vertical integration with focuses and maintenance always present.
Rep effort would be progressed each week via volume. This would be put in in as accessory exercises on your ME and DE days or you can use the off days to clean up what youve missed
Phil I’ve heard people say you can maintain majority of max effort strenght adaptations by doing dynamic effort correctly, would you say that’s true anecdotally speaking? If so would that be speed strenght or strenght speed that’s allowing for maitenance (let’s say we’re in a combat zone with not enough weight for max effort but enough implements for speed strength /strength speed on a low end
Based off of research and my own experience yes you can maintain strength using speed and explosive strength lifts. This is of course after you’ve developed adequate force production
would you recommned to do zone 3 exerciese as part of max effort portions, or dynamic portions, or is it dependent on the exercise. More broadly asked when i train max effort should I only include zone 5 exercises, or also 4 and 3 and vice verca. Thanks in advance for any tips. Great video!
If your going to work concurrently use more of an alactic capacity based training approach using zone style training wouldn’t matter. Since the training is alactic/anaerobic just think repeat sprint intervals at high intensity followed by incomplete rest.
Basics, footwork, proper form, combinations, light sparring with an experienced partner who won’t try to hurt you but let you know when you make a mistake. Skills, repetition at that age can take you a long way vs people your age, then you start adding in the strength when you build the base of your skills. Rope skipping for actual anaerobic practice and building endurance. 3-5mile runs for mental and base cardio conditioning, then the bread and butter lifting. Deadlift, squat, bench, rows, lateral, vertical, and pull downs, people over complicate everything. Farmers walks with a lot of weight are great for building a strong body with supporting musculature, rucking is great as well. This is how we built warriors for thousands of years before all this gimmicky equipment. It’s not overly complicated.
Do you use any plyometric progression system, and do you use plyometrics just for activation purposes or can it be implemented with dynamic effort work to develop explosive power?
I know I will have to watch this video again. How do you maintain strength while cutting weight? I will likely need to cut 10-15 pounds for my next fight. I am likely going from 180lbs to 165lbs. How do I keep the strength when I do that?
Study this multiple times, look up the specific phrases you don’t know.. it’s going to be better than someone summarizing. He says everything you need to hear! Put in the work and retain the information. Best wishes!
How does wrist size enter in this? I wanted to train or gain some muscle but I am 5'6.5 120lbs and less than 6inches wrist circumference (about 5.8 inches-extremely small) I have researched a lot and saw that most man are above 6.5 inches wrist and that the bigger the wrist more skeleton you have so stronger punch. There is a guy who shower all great boxers have big wrists, even the short ones(like Pacquiao or Gervonta Davis). I have never seen a man with wrists as small as mine. Is it even worth trying to get into combat with such a weak body? I feel I will be paying and investing time to become a punching bag.
My man's spittin' some knowledge and droppin' some gems here. And you're zoomin' in to and getting stuck on his accent? Ferreal? Best see your way out and into lil kids room and let the men and grownups around here do their thing.
Wrong. The game completely changes when training for combat sports. Lifting weights incorrectly can slow you down in the ring, it can tire you out/mess up your skill progression, and cause further injuries. This isn't bodybuilding.
EXPERT, no bullshit.
As a military S & C coach and Muay Thai fighter - this was really helpful and explained really clearly 💪🏼
Bro goes right to the point and explains everything right! Thanks a lot man 💪🏻💀🤙🏻
What a masterclass right here man. Thanks so much for the value! Your knowledge, integrity, and authenticity is obvious and is inspiring. Keep doing your thing!!
Thank you🙏🏼
Before I saw this video...I was thinking how hard it is to set your own training up...as an external eye has a better chance of seeing your strengths and weaknesses...and so writing the correct Programme...in other words...can I trust my own self-evaluations ... in most case I would imagine that this does not work...and it is better to have a coach of some kind...
100% following someone else’s programs, or tweaking minor things with what you know especially in the online realm with an online coach…some people can be objective enough tho but if you’re stuck then maybe not objective enough haha , I followed this one program that had good strenght work that I knew I needed and by looking at it I knew I’d improve, but had to change up some of the conditioning more towards base building cause I knew I needed that more then more high intensity stuff and it worked out well …a lot of top coaches usually have a coach because yeah that objective eye is valuable
Your inner critic is your coach. That’s the benefit of knowing how to use your own inner negative talk along with listening to your body when doing solo training
Thank you for the beeakdown. My boy fights in 8 weeks and you've helped us dial strength and conditioning in to a whole nother level
did he win?
How’d it go
@@jarel7871 he lost the decision, but it was a great fight and his conditioning was solid through the fight
Phil I recently added one of your exercises - the hip thrust dumbbell chest press from the floor - to my routine and absolutely love it. Great explosive movement and pretty much the only chest exercise I have found in a good while that does not set off the tendinitis in my shoulder.
Which video was that?
Love learning about the conjugate system, and the break down is always on point too. Thank you!
That was a great overview...well timed...as I am just starting again after a deload break and water only fast...so still tired...only thing missing on board are the reps for each division...but that is a minor pt...it's just that I am a very visual learner...your training seems to be top notch, and I look forward to purchasing your book Mr Daru...thanks again many times over!!!
Combo days work:
1) Upper Lifts + lunge jumps
2) Lower Lifts + pushups / throws
In 2 days you’ve hit full athleticism
ONE OF THE BEST VIDEOS EVER! Useful, straight to the point and realistic according to fighters actual schedule. I'm taking notes to improve my coaching performance. THANKS A LOT, PHIL!
Greetings from Spain
This is exactly what is needed is a more detailed approach to working out I boxed and wrestled my whole life and this is super useful information it shows you why we hit plateaus throughout training you think just going hard 24/7 produces results and it does but there’s a huge net loss that you could be getting back reducing time and effort maximizing results my only question is if you are going to be striking or grappling do you just use the clean up days for the technique training? Or where would would a fighter fit that in?
Thank you sir
Another great post
All coaches need coaches you Da man 🦍😎✅
Big respect for your way of teaching I totally understand videos and see them as lessons maybe watch them every time 3-4 times and taking notes
Ps: We waiting for that book
Like your approach to training, with a focus on mental as well as physical strength. Do you have a program for a 70 yr old martial artist still training, still getting after it. Thanks.
Your combat sport will give you all the condtioning you need if you train it 4-5 a week. Strength comes from Barbells 5x5 and it doesn't mix well with your sports practice. High repetitions and rhythmic movemnts are the opposite of strength adaptation so do your strength separately from your combat sport practice and take time to recover or else your just over working yourself like a CF.
Ah finally a good vid about this topic! i watched 3 vids before this and they were all trash, not good information and monotonously narrated.
Yours was awesome, thank ypu very much
Great video Phil!
I just know airbike, kettlebell swings ,rowing and rope pull down go well together in my 5 round circuit that i do, another circuit i do is sled pushes , tire flipping, bench step ups, kettlebell squats,deadlifts each circuit are 1 minute each exercise going hard
Always looking forward when you bring out the white board to explain everything. I wanted to ask, do all trainers leave circuit style work for later in the athlete’s training season? I noticed this another channel called the movement system saying that all anaerobic capacity + strength endurance work is usually done later as the gains from those usually wither away 15-18 days +/-5 days. Would that mean that training for anaerobic capacity or strength endurance early on be a waste? I mean if there is time surely it wouldn’t hurt right? As long as you’re getting strength, power, and cardio work in.
Deliniation of training adaptations all depend on individual differences. There has been some research on it but again I do believe this varies from person to person. Your looking at in the form of long term block Periodization that’s another reason why I prefer a dynamic Periodization approach. Think of vertical integration with focuses and maintenance always present.
Thanks man for this. ME and DE were easy to grasp but could you elaborate more, what's happening on Repetition days?
Rep effort would be progressed each week via volume. This would be put in in as accessory exercises on your ME and DE days or you can use the off days to clean up what youve missed
Good job bro come to Sénégal
Jeff Nippard - Miami Collectors Edition
Phil I’ve heard people say you can maintain majority of max effort strenght adaptations by doing dynamic effort correctly, would you say that’s true anecdotally speaking? If so would that be speed strenght or strenght speed that’s allowing for maitenance (let’s say we’re in a combat zone with not enough weight for max effort but enough implements for speed strength /strength speed on a low end
Based off of research and my own experience yes you can maintain strength using speed and explosive strength lifts. This is of course after you’ve developed adequate force production
would you recommned to do zone 3 exerciese as part of max effort portions, or dynamic portions, or is it dependent on the exercise. More broadly asked when i train max effort should I only include zone 5 exercises, or also 4 and 3 and vice verca. Thanks in advance for any tips. Great video!
If your going to work concurrently use more of an alactic capacity based training approach using zone style training wouldn’t matter. Since the training is alactic/anaerobic just think repeat sprint intervals at high intensity followed by incomplete rest.
I like the t shirt coach 😊
I am turning 14 in November so I can finally go to the gym, what workouts should I focus on if I want to do boxing.
Start with 3 sessions per week
Actual combat training or weight training?
Since ur 14 do skills based and focus on technique@@Ortizboxeo
Basics, footwork, proper form, combinations, light sparring with an experienced partner who won’t try to hurt you but let you know when you make a mistake. Skills, repetition at that age can take you a long way vs people your age, then you start adding in the strength when you build the base of your skills. Rope skipping for actual anaerobic practice and building endurance. 3-5mile runs for mental and base cardio conditioning, then the bread and butter lifting. Deadlift, squat, bench, rows, lateral, vertical, and pull downs, people over complicate everything. Farmers walks with a lot of weight are great for building a strong body with supporting musculature, rucking is great as well. This is how we built warriors for thousands of years before all this gimmicky equipment. It’s not overly complicated.
Do you use any plyometric progression system, and do you use plyometrics just for activation purposes or can it be implemented with dynamic effort work to develop explosive power?
Yes I have plyo progressions built in to the training
1:01
2:22
12:52
I know I will have to watch this video again.
How do you maintain strength while cutting weight? I will likely need to cut 10-15 pounds for my next fight. I am likely going from 180lbs to 165lbs.
How do I keep the strength when I do that?
Awesome!!! Osu
Can you make a video of each of the workouts , or different workouts for fighters
Would you say absolute strength or relative strengh is more important for boxers ? And why ?
Merci Daru !
je t'en prie
Yessir
How does age change things ?
I meant young people can get away to a greater extent...sorry!!!
Changes recoverability and exercise selection for most
Can someone summarize?
Study this multiple times, look up the specific phrases you don’t know.. it’s going to be better than someone summarizing. He says everything you need to hear! Put in the work and retain the information. Best wishes!
❤❤❤❤❤ تحياتي الخالصة أخي الكريم 🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦
Was that Dustin poirier?
Correct
@@PhilDaruStrong diamond shapes diamond 💪
Lactate doesn't sound like it makes a lot of sense in this video
As in?
@@PhilDaruStrong when my ATP is too tired to explain like right now fr
You are not look like combat sport athlete shape your body first of all because combat sport is much harder than any game
Check my background
I would also recommend the Bulgarian hack squat, the Romanian dead lift, and the Hungarian ass press.
How does wrist size enter in this? I wanted to train or gain some muscle but I am 5'6.5 120lbs and less than 6inches wrist circumference (about 5.8 inches-extremely small) I have researched a lot and saw that most man are above 6.5 inches wrist and that the bigger the wrist more skeleton you have so stronger punch. There is a guy who shower all great boxers have big wrists, even the short ones(like Pacquiao or Gervonta Davis). I have never seen a man with wrists as small as mine.
Is it even worth trying to get into combat with such a weak body? I feel I will be paying and investing time to become a punching bag.
Jaysus.. train hard eat well. It’s not complicated
💙❤️⭐♥️🤍💜💖❣️😇
I cannot get past this guy's accent.
🤦🏾♂️ there's no helping some people. just find another video
My man's spittin' some knowledge and droppin' some gems here. And you're zoomin' in to and getting stuck on his accent? Ferreal? Best see your way out and into lil kids room and let the men and grownups around here do their thing.
So complicated!🙄 Just lift, eat, sleep, repeat.
There are levels to everything my friend.. everything is complicated until you understand..
Wrong. The game completely changes when training for combat sports. Lifting weights incorrectly can slow you down in the ring, it can tire you out/mess up your skill progression, and cause further injuries. This isn't bodybuilding.
Yessir