Over the last few months I've gotten a lot of emails from young coaches. Most mentioned that they had watched the podcasts we did over the summer. Obviously, this is cool and very much appreciated. But, the reason I'm banging away on the keyboard is because I realized that they're asking a lot of the same questions. I thought I might just post a few questions and give my opinion. Q: What books should I read about training? A: I've never read a book about training so I have no idea. My knowledge comes from experience and decades of writing my workouts in training logs (actual paper notebooks). I take a tremendous amount of notes on training. Each workout I take a team through I'll have notes for. At the end of each semester I go over them, make changes and write the next part of the workout. I also try ideas on myself. I'm limited with what I can do, but I can at least get an idea. If I'm really interested in getting hard information I make my assistants do at least one cycle and get their feedback. You had better be training, yourself. I've heard coaches say stuff like, "You don't have to be strong to be a good coach.", or something to that effect. I couldn't disagree more. You don't have to be the strongest, but you better be pretty strong and you better look the part. Nothing worse than a 160lb kid telling 300lb linemen how to get big. Laughable. Or, the fat slob yelling at athletes to run harder or eat better. Clowns! As far as what I think is important for young coaches... Learn to communicate. The best book I've read that has helped me the most is Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus. I deal with male and female athletes. You can't talk to them the same. I also read a lot about teaching - specifically how to control a classroom. After all, that's what we do as coaches. Run the class room. With this I've looked into public speaking techniques, as well. I thin it goes hand in hand. Finally, figure out what style of training you believe in (Western Periodization, Block, Westside, 5/3/1, whatever. What resonates with you? Immerse yourself in that. It will most likely change over time, but dive into whatever you're into at the moment. Finally, think about what we do when we train athletes.
- Power Lifting
- Olympic Lifting
- Bodybuilding
- Crossfit (if you do 3 and 4 set circuits I'll relate it to Crossfit)
- Rehab/Physical Therapy
- Yoga (stretching/mobility)
- Psychology (the individual)
- Sociology (the group)
- 5/3/1 (overall training philosophy)
- Block
- Westside
- Olympic lifting
- Bodybuilding
- Nebraska Football (Boyd Epley)
- CrossFit (it pains me to admit, but I have taken some great things from this cult)
- The Tier System
- Track & Field (specifically, speed drills)
- Good, old-fashioned common sense
- My many visits to physical therapists because of injuries



















































































