The 7 Principles of Exercise and Sport Training: Individuality

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The 7 Principles of Exercise and Sport Training

BY MARTY GAAL 
When you approach your multisport training, the best way to answer your questions is to better understand the
principles behind the work you are putting in to improve. These are seven basic principles of exercise or sport training
you will want to keep in mind:

Individuality
Everyone is different and responds differently to training. Some people are able to handle higher volumes of training
while others may respond better to higher intensities. This is based on a combination of factors like genetic ability,
predominance of muscle fiber types, other factors in your life, chronological or athletic age, and mental state.

Specificity
Improving your ability in a sport is very specific. If you want to be a great pitcher, running laps will help your overall
conditioning but won’t develop your skills at throwing or the power and muscular endurance required to throw a
fastball fifty times in a game. Swimming will help improve your aerobic endurance but won’t develop tissue resiliency
and muscular endurance for your running legs.

Progression
To reach the roof of your ability, you have to climb the first flight of stairs before you can exit the 20th floor and stare
out over the landscape. You can view this from both a technical skills standpoint as well as from an effort/distance
standpoint. In order to swim the 500 freestyle, you need to be able to maintain your body position and breathing
pattern well enough to complete the distance. In order to swim the 500 freestyle, you also need to build your muscular
endurance well enough to repeat the necessary motions enough times to finish.

Overload
To increase strength and endurance, you need to add new resistance or time/intensity to your efforts. This principle
works in concert with progression. To run a 10-kilometer race, athletes need to build up distance over repeated
sessions in a reasonable manner in order to improve muscle adaptation as well as improve soft tissue
strength/resiliency. Any demanding exercise attempted too soon risks injury. The same principle holds true for
strength and power exercises.

Adaptation
Over time the body becomes accustomed to exercising at a given level. This adaptation results in improved efficiency,
less effort and less muscle breakdown at that level. That is why the first time you ran two miles you were sore after,
but now it’s just a warm up for your main workout. This is why you need to change the stimulus via higher intensity or
longer duration in order to continue improvements. The same holds true for adapting to lesser amounts of exercise.

Recovery
The body cannot repair itself without rest and time to recover. Both short periods like hours between multiple sessions
in a day and longer periods like days or weeks to recover from a long season are necessary to ensure your body does
not suffer from exhaustion or overuse injuries. Motivated athletes often neglect this. At the basic level, the more you
train the more sleep your body needs, despite the adaptations you have made to said training.

Reversibility
If you discontinue application of a particular exercise like running five miles or bench pressing 150 pounds 10 times,
you will lose the ability to successfully complete that exercise. Your muscles will atrophy and the cellular adaptations
like increased capillaries (blood flow to the muscles) and mitochondria density will reverse. You can slow this rate of
loss substantially by conducting a maintenance/reduced program of training during periods where life gets in the way,
and is why just about all sports coaches ask their athletes to stay active in the offseason.

The principles of specificity, progression, overload, adaptation, and reversibility are why practicing frequently and
consistently are so important if you want to improve your performance. Missed sessions cannot really be made up
within the context of a single season. They are lost opportunities for improvement. Skipping your long ride on weekend
A means you can’t or shouldn’t go as far as originally planned on weekend B (progression & overload). Skipping your
Monday swim means your swimming skills and muscles won’t be honed or stressed that day (specificity). Missing a
week due to a vacation sets you back more than one week (adaptation and reversibility). Apply these principles to
your training to get a better understanding of your body and how to achieve success.

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