The way I view it- we don't plan on variations in a single movement, variations find us and expose us.
Ideally, we'd build an individual with a large physical skill set and work capacity.
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RBE and Movement Variation
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Originally posted by Jordan Feigenbaum View PostI think we probably need to move away from injury being caused my damage because....they're typically not, save for catastrophic high-velocity incidents that are fortunately rare.
That said, a lack of variety reduces the ability to tolerate movement variations, which occur regularly during training while also creating only very specific adaptations, which may limit motor learning and work capacity.
However, I don't really understand the follow-up. If variations occur regularly during training, why would one need to add variation? FTR, I am not trying to be obtuse, I just don't understand.
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I think we probably need to move away from injury being caused my damage because....they're typically not, save for catastrophic high-velocity incidents that are fortunately rare.
That said, a lack of variety reduces the ability to tolerate movement variations, which occur regularly during training while also creating only very specific adaptations, which may limit motor learning and work capacity.
Leave a comment:
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RBE and Movement Variation
Re-listening to the programming Podcasts. A question popped-up, and probably has a simple explanation that I am overlooking.
If RBE is "protective" (limiting muscle damage) then how does it also hold true that highly specific training is correlated with a higher injury risk? In that, if you are continuously training the same movement pattern, shouldn't the muscles involved in that pattern be more resistant to damage?Tags: None
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