Showing posts with label Basketball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Basketball. Show all posts

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Basketball Fitness Training - Why Every Hooper Should Hill Sprint

Serious basketball coaches are always looking for ways to get an edge on the competition - to gain an advantage. It's why you spend so much time researching methods of training that will make your players faster and stronger - and jump higher - without taking up too much time to get results.

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That's why I believe that running hill sprints (which includes running bleachers and stairs) is a must for any basketball player.

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This is because hill sprints provide a number of benefits to the basketball athlete. Here are the Top 6:

1. Hill sprints provide the perfect combination of strength and speed training.

It's like lifting weights and sprinting at the same time. The hill gives resistance to your athlete's sprints, making them more difficult while being shorter in distance and duration. Including hill sprints in your training program can bring great results in as little as 15 minutes 1 or 2 times per week.

2. Hill sprints build stamina.

Endurance is something that every basketball player needs - but it is a special kind of endurance. If you want your athletes to perform at their peak, then low, slow distance types of cardio just won't work. Their endurance training needs to mimic the demands of the game. Those needs being - short bouts of intense exertion broken up by periods of lower intensities.

Hill sprints provide just this type of interval training. They will take your players' hearts and lungs to intensities far greater than those found in jogging or traditional types of endurance training. Their body will become used to reaching these higher levels, and recovering quickly in between the "sprints."

More and more scientific studies are showing that VO2 Max (the traditional measure of aerobic endurance) is improved as much - or more- by using high intensity interval-type exercise like hill sprinting.

Want your team to have their "wind" at the end of the game? Hill sprint.

3. Hill sprints increase ankle strength - helping to prevent one of the most common injuries in sports - the ankle sprain.

Ankles are made stronger due to the need to push off harder when sprinting up the hill. Because of the incline, more drive is needed than when sprinting on a flat surface. Improved ankle strength also leads to the ability to push off harder during the game - benefiting a player's important "first step" and lengthening their stride when sprinting in a breakaway on the court.

4. Hill sprints increase basketball players' speed and explosiveness.

This is because hill training promotes two key factors in running faster and jumping higher. First, it forces proper knee lift - essential for driving the legs downward and back for more force. Second, hill sprinting makes the sprinter dorsi-flex their foot while running. The closer the toes are brought to the shin, the more force they can apply on ground contact. Think of dorsi-flexing as loading your foot - then unloading it into the ground - pushing you forward.

Explosiveness is also shown in the way hill sprints can increase your players' vertical jumps - a key measure of power. Jumping is really the same as sprinting - pushing your body forward (or up) against gravity. The more power you can generate from your legs when pushing, the farther or higher you will go.

5. Hill sprints provide a way to safely train your athletes.

In addition to protecting your ankles, hill sprinting protects your athletes' from other types of injuries as well. The last thing you want to do is to injure your athletes while conditioning.

Hill sprinting provides safety in two ways: One, the slightly shorter stride length while running a hill sprint is a great way to protect hamstrings. Most hamstring pulls and strains result from over-extension - something which rarely occurs when sprinting hills.

Second, hill sprints can decrease the pounding on your players' legs. Studies have shown that even a slight grade added to sprints can decrease the impact on the runner's legs by as much as 25%. Shin splints, foot problems and sore knees can be greatly reduced by getting on the hills for your sprints.

6. Hill sprints as mental training

Besides all of the physical benefits of hill sprinting, they also promote mental toughness and goal-setting behavior in your athletes. Looking up at the hill can be daunting when your players are fatigued and nearing the end of their sprint session. By using the hill as a metaphor, you can show them the importance of having a goal (the top of the hill), taking the steps necessary to reach it (one step at a time up the hill), and celebrating their success when they reach their goal (their very own Rocky imitation at the top of the hill). Looking back down the hill after their workout, your athletes can feel the satisfaction of accomplishing something that may have seemed an impossible obstacle.

With all of these benefits for your basketball team, adding hill sprints to your training program should go to the top of your To Do List. It's no coincidence that we found out that this year's NCAA player of the year Kevin Durant made hill sprints a key part of his training. You can develop your own "special" players the same way.

Make your athletes stronger, faster, better conditioned, injury resistant and mentally tough with this "old school" training. You, your team and your fans will be glad you did.

Basketball Fitness Training - Why Every Hooper Should Hill Sprint

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Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Grant Hill Early Life Bio, Former Duke University Blue Devil Basketball Player Now With Phoenix Suns

Grant Hill became a household name for college basketball fans when he rose to national prominence as a contributing member of the Duke University Blue Devils basketball program in the early 1990s. Since that time Hill has endured an NBA career in excess of 15 seasons that have largely been overshadowed by untimely injuries and placement on under performing teams. Most recently in the spring of 2010 Grant has become a relevant NBA player again while serving as co-captain (along with fellow veteran Steve Nash) of the Phoenix Suns.

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Born in October of 1972 in Dallas, Texas Grant grew up in an affluent household as the son of Calvin Hill, a Yale educated pro bowl running back for the Dallas Cowboys. Father Calvin enjoyed a 12 year NFL career after being selected in the first round of the 1969 NFL Draft. After playing the bulk of the prime of his career with the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League Calvin played the latter half of his football career with the Washington Redskins and finally the Cleveland Browns. In addition to a famous father Grant also had a well-educated mother who as a freshman at Wellesley College lived in a suite with future First Lady, Senator, and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham whose married name is Hillary Rodham Clinton.

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Grant came of age through middle school and high school in the 1980s in Reston, Virginia after his father had retired from football in 1981. Reston is located in the northern portion of Virginia not far from Washington D.C. With his 6'8" build and athletic genes Grant Hill became one of the top high school basketball recruits in the country and was awarded a spot on the coveted McDonald's High School All-American Team in 1990.

Interestingly, the man who eventually went onto become one of the most accomplished basketball players in the storied tradition of Duke Blue Devils basketball had to go against the wishes of both of his parents to choose that route. Father Calvin thought it would be in the best interest of his son to attend the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill while his mother Janet believed that playing basketball for nearby Georgetown University would be the best choice for her son.

Grant Hill played basketball for four years at Duke and won national championships in 1991 and 1992. Grant's junior season in 1993 when Duke University was upset in the NCAA Tournament by the University of California - Berkeley with star point guard Jason Kidd was the only time during his four year career at Duke that Hill failed to make it the national championship game.

Grant Hill Early Life Bio, Former Duke University Blue Devil Basketball Player Now With Phoenix Suns

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