The following briefing document synthesizes key insights from Michael Brinson, a veteran strength coach with experience spanning the collegiate, tactical, and high school sectors. The core of this analysis focuses on the successful implementation of in-season strength training, the evolution of coaching methodology from high-volume "meathead" mentalities to efficient, essentialist programming, and the critical role of the coach as the primary deliverer of athletic success.

Key Takeaways:

  • In-Season Progression: Contrary to traditional "maintenance" philosophies, in-season training can and should yield Personal Records (PRs). Brinson reports a 100% PR rate among his athletes during an active championship season using a specific undulating model.

  • The Coach-Centric Model: In a training environment, the coach—not the athlete—is the most important figure. If the coach fails in delivery, communication, or consistency, the athletes have no path to success.

  • Tactical Readiness: Military populations benefit most from a conjugate approach due to the unpredictable nature of deployment and the need to train multiple physical variables (strength, mobility, durability) simultaneously.

  • Autoregulation vs. Rigid Programming: For experienced lifters and coaches, the ability to "autoregulate" based on the "coach’s eye" and perceived effort (RPE) is superior to strict adherence to spreadsheets, which often lead to overtraining or injury.

Professional Philosophy and Career Evolution

Michael Brinson’s approach to strength and conditioning is informed by a dual background as a collegiate football player and a competitive powerlifter. His career has transitioned from Division I athletics (Southern Miss, Kansas, Liberty, Missouri) to tactical training with the 82nd Airborne and to his current role in the high school sector.

The "Noble Profession" of Coaching

Coaching is viewed as a "calling" focused on the development of young people. Brinson emphasizes that coaches must model the behavior they expect—spiritually, socially, and emotionally. Consistency is the hallmark of effective coaching; athletes require a stable authority figure to navigate the complexities of their development.

The Delivery Method

A coach’s knowledge is only as valuable as their ability to communicate it. Brinson posits that:

  • The coach is the "deliverer of the product."

  • Successful training environments require the coach to know the program and the athletes as well as they know their own names.

  • A lack of clear, concise communication leads to a breakdown in the training system.

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 Comprehensive Athletic Development

The Balance of Strength and Skill

Brinson identifies a common "blessing and a curse" for naturally strong athletes: the tendency to rely on physical dominance at the expense of technical skill.

  • High School: Superior strength can mask poor technique (e.g., a defensive lineman who does not know how to read blocks but dominates through sheer force).

  • Collegiate Level: When physical parity is reached, athletes who neglected skill development often fail.

  • Coaching Intervention: Coaches must ensure that the weight room contributes to durability and performance without replacing the necessary hours of film study and field-specific drill work.

Delayed Specialization and Burnout

Reflecting on his own journey, Brinson advocates for delayed entry into tackle football (starting in 7th grade). Early exposure to soccer, bike riding, and unstructured outdoor play contributes to general athletic qualities that formal training cannot replicate. Early specialization often leads to mental burnout by high school.

In-Season Strength Training: The 100% PR Model

Brinson’s most notable achievement in the high school sector was a season in which every athlete on the football team set a PR in the squat, bench, or power clean. This was achieved through a rigid, yet flexible, three-week undulating wave.

The Three-Week Undulating Cycle

Training is structured into three-week blocks that rotate volume and intensity. This model is used year-round for all sports and age groups.

Week

Volume

Intensity

Objective

Week 1

Moderate

Moderate

Technical reinforcement and baseline stimulus.

Week 2

High

Low

Building work capacity and muscle endurance.

Week 3

Low

High

Realizing strength gains; opportunity for training PRs.


Tactical Execution In-Season

  • Frequency: The team lifts three days per week (Sunday, Monday, Wednesday).

  • Psychology: In-season training is pitched as "confidence through preparation." Athletes are reminded of their strength gains during pre-game warm-ups to provide a "visual intimidation" factor.

  • Flexibility: If a major rivalry game occurs during a "high-intensity" week, the coach may back off the load while maintaining the structure, ensuring recovery without abandoning the stimulus.
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Tactical and Military Strength & Conditioning

During his tenure with the 82nd Airborne, Brinson applied athletic training principles to a population that is elite in their profession but often "novices" in the weight room.

The Conjugate Approach in the Military

The military environment necessitates a conjugate method (training multiple variables at once) for several reasons:

  1. Readiness: Soldiers must be ready to deploy in 24 hours. They cannot afford to be in the middle of a "hypertrophy block" that leaves them fatigued.

  2. Unpredictability: Training missions frequently interrupt linear plans. A conjugate or undulating model allows soldiers to jump back into a cycle without having "missed" a critical linear phase.

  3. Generalism: Soldiers need durability, mobility, and muscle mass simultaneously to carry heavy loads (100+ lbs of gear) and navigate battlefields.

Changing Metrics

The military's shift from basic tests (push-ups/sit-ups) to the Army Combat Fitness Test (ACFT)—which includes deadlifts, medball throws, and carries—has forced a modernization of Physical Training (PT). This shift provides coaches with specific metrics to train toward, moving PT away from "running for the sake of running."

Advanced Methodology: Autoregulation and Efficiency

Transitioning from Volume to Essentials

As a coach matures, or as time constraints tighten (e.g., moving from 2-hour collegiate sessions to 45-minute high school sessions), the focus must shift from "more is better" to "what is essential."

  • The Meathead Trap: Early in their careers, coaches often overtrain, believing that more volume equals more progress. This can lead to injury and "setting the athlete back a month."

  • The 45-Minute Window: Effective training in short windows requires supersetting accessories and focusing on the "main movement" with high intent.

The "Coach’s Eye" and RPE

Brinson does not use printed spreadsheets with fixed percentages for his high school athletes. Instead, he relies on:

  • Bar Speed and Technique: Weights are adjusted on the fly based on how the athlete moves.

  • RPE (Rate of Perceived Exertion): Training typically stays in the 80% to 90% range (8 or 9 out of 10 difficulty).

  • Technical Freedom: While novices (7th-9th grade) must maintain perfect form, older athletes are granted slight "wiggle room" during heavy sets to learn how to strain under load, provided the movement remains safe.

Mentorship and Environmental Control

In a high school setting, the weight room serves as a hub for discipline.

  • The Assembly Line: The goal is to prepare 7th graders for the 8th grade, and JV players for Varsity.

  • Filtering the Noise: Coaches must help athletes navigate the distractions of "travel ball" and "AU" circuits, which often prioritize short-term competition over long-term physical development. Brinson emphasizes that for those seeking collegiate scholarships, training for athletic ability must eventually take precedence over the "fun" of weekend tournaments.


The Integrated Athlete

Brinson rejects the false dichotomy between "powerlifting" and "athletic training." He argues that if the goal is to get stronger, one must look to the world's strongest people (powerlifters and strongmen) for programming and technical cues. Speed training should likewise mimic track-and-field standards. By integrating the most effective methodologies from specialized strength sports into a general athletic framework, coaches can build more durable, powerful, and confident competitors.

Dave Tate
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