Saturday, February 24, 2024

Functional Training: Building Upon Nutrition

Functional Training: Building Upon Nutrition

We just put on our hitting clinic and had a great turnout of youth athletes. Many of the questions we received from the parents were about what we can do to strengthen our young athletes without weights. In our last post, we talked about nutrition and the importance that it has on athletic development and how it impacts the CNS. Nutrition will be the foundation of strength development regardless of the age of the athlete. A coach I had in college constantly repeated the phrase, "Success is built in the kitchen," and I never really understood that until recently. What my former coach meant was regardless of how hard we train or how serious we are in our drill work, none of it matters if we don't have nutrition figured out. So, before jumping into this post, be sure to go back to the post on nutrition.

Below is a picture of the strength training pyramid we use at Utah Rotational Athlete Training. We set the foundation as broad as possible so that we can build on top of it with high stability. Just like building a home or structure, the better the base, the more sound the building overall.
 


In this post, we are going to focus on the base of the pyramid. "Pre-Hab" work is about making sure we don't run into injuries. This level will focus on speed, endurance, coordination, stability, and utilizing concentric, eccentric, and isometric types of movement. This level can vary between footwork with ladders and cones and linear or curved sprints. Change of direction is also a must in this phase. But, the most critical aspect of this phase is building stability in movement. Our coaching manual goes much more in-depth on all these aspects. See this article on the importance of building resilience and strength (lumbopelvic control) for injury prevention in baseball.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25159541/

How do we build this stability? The easiest way is to use the ArmCare app. It will give you the essential training you need to develop balance and strength throughout your body. If this is not something you are interested in using, then I would recommend using the general Watkins Back Program. If you can build up to a level 3 in his free program, you will be more than stable and strong enough to build skill on top of that foundation. The Watkins Program will focus on double and single leg isometric, core work through concentric and eccentric training along with adding in light dumbbells and resistance. While doing the Watkins Program is a very good starting point custom training is where you get a large amount of progress. Thankfully ArmCare gives that custom training. It is also where a lot of our large velocity increases at West High have come from due to the fixing the imbalances the athletes have. Also, as a general rule of thumb, the younger the athlete the more they need to focus on bodyweight and resistance band training as opposed to weight training. When an athlete is showing balance and comprehension in movement I personally like to add in a weight vest before moving onto weights. I will recommend a weight vest at the bottom of the post as well.

While this post is not an all-encompassing view of training, it is a good starting point to get you seeking your own solutions. If you need help we are more than happy to help you along the way. Our goal is to keep kids playing as long as possible and as healthy as possible. Feel free to reach out with any questions you have. Thanks for reading.

Weight Vest: https://amzn.to/3OK0idK
ArmCare/Crossover System: www.armcare.com
Use code: Throwfuzz15 for 15% off 


Friday, February 16, 2024

Nutrition: The Building Blocks for Success

Nutrition: The Building Blocks for Success

In the previous post, we went over the direction we want to go in our development journey. This week, we are going over the foundation of development, which is nutrition. A highly valued but little cared about development aspect: most don't realize that most of our battles are won or lost in the kitchen. In America, we do not have access to food problems; we have a relationship with food problems. Most of what we put in our body hurts our development. My mentor, Tom House, always used the analogy of two Ferrari's. Ferrari #1 put all the high-end oil and gas and kept up on maintenance, while Ferrari #2 just put in whatever it could find. Ferrari #2 will outperform all the Honda Civics on the road, but when it comes head-to-head with Ferrari #1, it will lose. Ferrari #1 has better nutrition, or at least as food applies to a car. The same would apply to the human body.

Since I moved back into youth baseball, it is apparent that most players will take the extra swings and ground balls, throw their bullpen, and do whatever the coach asks. They still don't make the progress they expect or hope to make. It is not a work ethic issue. It is a nutrient issue. If you don't believe me, here is a published research study showing how mal/poor nutrition can impact the Central Nervous System (CNS) development. 

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0079612308600588

If our CNS is not developing to its maximum capability, why would we improve from the training we are doing? The CNS is fundamental in movement, and proficiency in a skill-based game like baseball and nutrition is fundamental in developing the CNS.

There are also great studies on baseball players in professional baseball and their body compositions. You can find that article here: https://journals.lww.com/nsca-jscr/Fulltext/2009/11000/Development_of_a_Baseball_Specific_Battery_of.00001.aspx

In a summary of the article, professional baseball players have high lean body mass. As they progress to higher levels, they see a rise in overall body fat %, but it is also important to note that MLB players still have a higher lean mass than minor league players. We can gather from this article that our athletes must strive to have high body mass with as much lean mass as possible. MLB players run faster, jump with more power, change direction better, and are more physical than the minor league players. But we will discuss that in more depth in a future post.  

So, I bring up that information to give you some jumping-off points to research why nutrition is essential. We need to build high body weight that contains large amounts of lean mass. If we are not putting the correct fuel into our body, we will not develop that aspect in our physical development or our CNS. Nutrition allows us to combine the nervous system (movement) with body composition to produce the most force and speed that we possibly can.  

If you are looking for one specific place to look for nutrition, I cannot recommend enough the ArmCare.Com course MLB Performance and Recovery Habits Course, which will cover many aspects of food. You can find the link to that course here: https://armcare.com/products/2429064
and use the discount code throwfuzz15 to give you 15% off that course. 

Also, if you are looking for just general weight-building nutrition, I recommend the following items:

Muscle Milk Protein: https://amzn.to/3OKJBi7

Athete Cook Book: https://amzn.to/3wli7sW

Nutritional Bar: https://amzn.to/3uFXJSV

Sunday, February 11, 2024

Utah Rotational Athlete Training Introduction



Utah Rotational Athlete Training: My Background
Many people have asked who I am and why they should trust me and my group with their athlete's baseball development.  While I am not much of a self-promoter, I will list a few of my accolades so you can understand that my background qualifies me to speak on baseball development.  
6 Seasons Coaching at Vanguard University
o Pitching Coach
o Recruiting Director
5 Seasons Coaching with the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
o Scouting
o Player Development
o Coordinator
o Analyst
8 Years Mentoring with Tom House
Current Director of Pitching with ArmCare.Com
o Workload Monitoring
o Player Development
o Course Creation on Baseball Performance and Health
Current Head Baseball Coach at West High, Salt Lake City, Utah
Current Consultant with MLB/NCAA Teams and Individuals
Masters Degree: Coaching and Administration
Bachelors Degree: Exercise Science
K-Vest Certified
Rapsodo Pitch Design Certified
ArmCare Specialist Certified
ArmCare Biomechanics Certified 
While this is not a full list of my background and accomplishments, I would like to focus rather on the goal I have set forth, which is changing the landscape of youth baseball development.  While most of my coaching and professional background has been at the collegiate and professional level, focusing on high-level talent development, I see a drastic need for change at the youth level of baseball.  This increasing issue at the youth level has caused me to create the Utah Rotational Athlete Training group, take a job as a head coach at the high school level, and leave professional baseball altogether.  The current landscape of youth baseball has caused a continual decline in High School baseball participation, not just in my home state of Utah but across the country.  As the website projectplay.org points out, baseball is declining at an average rate of 6% reduction in participation per year.  This decrease is not a good sign for the health of the sport.  

So, how do we combat the decrease in baseball participation?  We need to restructure how we develop our athletes at the youth level.  Our country's focus on travel baseball is causing strain mentally and physically on young athletes.  These young athletes often play 80+ games in a calendar year, which is more than a professional player would play in their first season.  Our youth development does not align with the long-term development of high-level baseball.  We see this in how we compete not just at the youth level but at the highest levels regarding countries like Japan and the Dominican Republic, which both have drastically different player development models for their youth than we do here in the United States.  I have linked a great video below on the Japanese Baseball Model.  While I do not agree with everything Japan and the DR do for youth baseball development, I believe we can learn how to improve the development process here in the United States.

Showing more support for my belief is a research article, which I have also linked below, showing injury risk and your odds of reaching the MLB/Professional baseball level in comparison to showcases attended.  The United States Baseball culture has become a culture of showcase baseball.  If you don't want to read the article, a summary is that more showcases = higher injury and less chance to play past high school. 

So what is my goal?  To restructure youth baseball.  I want to move away from the showcase development style and build the foundational skills and knowledge that allow athletes to succeed when they are ready to attend a showcase.  My goal is to increase the length of the amateur career.  Most players will not play High School Baseball; I want to see a high percentage playing in college.  Just this last season alone, we had a 50% placement into college from our Senior class of athletes, which greatly outperforms the National average of 8%.  This number may have changed since I last checked.  We accomplished this by changing the structure of normal development.  We put a process in place that allowed athletes to develop the physical tools and strengths needed to play at the next level.  So what does this entail?  My plan would involve the following implementation.
Less games, more training
Higher Focus on Individual Skills
Drills that Translate to Game Success
Games are Development Focused and Process Based
Individualized Development of the Athlete
Through Planning
  • Nutritional Work
Arm Health and Strength

These are just bullet points
 of what I hope to accomplish and set the foundation of this system.  And I use this opening post to introduce myself and my ideas.  If this is something you would be interested in, and I hope you are, then keep an eye out and follow us on social media to see how we truly are a better development system.

-Jordan Oseguera
jordan@utahrotationalathletetraining.com
Instagram: uratbaseball





Project Play: 

https://projectplay.org/state-of-play-2023/participation#:~:text=Baseball%20dropped%206%25%20and%20soccer,between%20the%20sports%20since%202019

Japan Development Process: 

https://youtu.be/xbSWjb3tlJg?si=WgyTq1xqzFEJIVgW

Showcases and Player Development: 

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/03635465221150509

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