TEAM SPORT SPECIFIC WORKOUTS
Email: glen@gtpersonaltrainer.co.uk
Website: www.gtpersonaltrainer.co.uk
SHUTTLE SUPERSETS
Supersets are pairs of exercises, performed one
after the other with, very little or no rest in between.
Shuttle supersets follow the same principle, but
with a brief cardiovascular component in between the exercises.
Not only does this allow the participant to perform
a greater amount of exercises in a shorter space of time, but also to develop
their cardiovascular fitness in the form of short bursts of cardiovascular
exercise in between the paired exercises (in this case 15 metre runs, but any
other form of cardiovascular exercise will produce the same outcome).
Because of the development of muscular strength & endurance, cardiovascular fitness and mental toughness, these types of workout are excellent for a huge range of both team and individual sports. Just think of sports which require fitness in these areas - football / soccer, rugby (union & league), hockey, netball, tennis, lacrosse, american football, australian rules football etc they would also benefit participants in sports such as athletics and golf.
Because of the development of muscular strength & endurance, cardiovascular fitness and mental toughness, these types of workout are excellent for a huge range of both team and individual sports. Just think of sports which require fitness in these areas - football / soccer, rugby (union & league), hockey, netball, tennis, lacrosse, american football, australian rules football etc they would also benefit participants in sports such as athletics and golf.
Firstly, mark 2 points, 15 metres apart.
Perform these exercises in pairs (supersets) – Perform
the first exercise at the first marker, run the 15 metres as quick as possible to
the second marker and immediately perform the other exercise in the pairing,
run the 15 metres back to the first marker; this is 1 set.
Perform at least 3 supersets before moving on to
the next pair of exercises.
Do not rest on completion of each set; rest only
after you’ve completed all 3 sets of each superset, and keep the rest periods
to no more than 30 seconds.
SHUTTLE SUPERSET ONE
1: Burpees x 8 ----------------------------------- run
15 metres ----------------------------- Overhead Reverse Lunges x 8 each leg
2: Press-Ups x10 -------------------------------- run
15 metres ---------------------------- -Squats x 12
3: Kettlebell Push Press x12 ------------------ run
15 metres ---------------------------- -Jump Lunges x 8 each leg
4: Press Up & Mountain Climber x 8 ------- run
15 metres ----------------------------- Squat Jumps x 12
5: Bear Crawls (bear crawl 15 metres from marker 1
to marker 2) ---------------- - Shuttle Runs 4 x 15 metres
6: Fartlek x 4 (walk, jog & sprint, using the
markers as the change points).
Exercise
|
Performance Instructions
|
Burpees
|
·
In this version of the exercise, as well as
performing a Burpee, you must also include a press-up.
·
Stand up straight, with your head up,
shoulders back, chest out, feet together and arms hanging down by your sides.
·
Bending at the knees, drop low into a squat
position and place your hands on the floor in front of you.
·
Next, keeping your feet together, kick both
your legs backwards until you are in the standard press-up position.
·
Now, perform 1 standard press-up.
·
Once you have completed the press-up,
immediately thrust your knees back up to your chest and return to a standing
position.
·
Repeat, without rest, for the prescribed
number of repetitions.
|
Overhead
Reverse Lunges
|
·
Stand with your feet
shoulder width apart and your knees slightly bent.
·
Keep your back straight,
head up and shoulders back.
·
For resistance you can
chose a kettlebell, a pair of dumbbells or a weighted barbell.
·
Whatever form of
resistance you chose, curl it up to chest height then straighten your arms
until the weight is directly above your head with your arms locked straight.
·
Keep your arms in this
position, and the weight overhead, throughout the exercise.
·
As with most alternate
exercises it is entirely down to personal preference which leg you start the
exercise with. As long as you alternate and perform the same number of
repetitions for each leg it is fine. However, for this explanation I will be
starting with the left.
·
Take a big step backwards
with your left leg. When the toes of your left / back foot is planted your
right thigh must be parallel to the floor but your knee must not be forward
of your toes. Your left leg must also be bent at the knee with your knee
stopping just short of touching the floor.
·
Contract your left thigh
and push yourself back up to the start position and repeat with the right.
·
Performing the exercise
with both legs equals 1 repetition.
|
Press-Ups
|
·
Begin in the basic
press-up position: With arms straight, place both hands flat on the floor
shoulder width apart; Place both feet and legs together; Straighten your body
from your shoulders to your ankles and raise up to balance your body on your
hands and toes.
·
To keep your torso
stabilized you will need to contract your core muscles (abdominals, lower
back, gluteals) as you perform this exercise.
·
Slowly, and in a
controlled manner, bending only at the elbows, lower your torso and legs to
the floor, stopping just short of touching your forehead on the floor.
·
Contracting the muscles
in your chest, shoulders, arms and core slowly push yourself back up to the
start position and repeat.
|
Squats
|
·
Stand with your feet
shoulder width apart and your knees slightly bent; your toes don’t have to be
pointing straight ahead, they can be pointing out slightly.
·
It is entirely up to you
what you do with your hands/arms; you can place your hands on you’re his, or
you can lower and raise your arms as you perform each squat.
·
In the start position,
keep your head up, shoulders back and look straight ahead at something at eye
height e.g. the top of a piece of equipment, a line on a poster or simply a
mark on the wall if you’re inside; or the top of a tree in the distance, or a
point on a house in the distance if you’re outside. This will ensure you keep
your spine in the correct position as you lower and raise your torso.
·
Keeping your eyes on the
mark ahead, slowly and in a controlled manner, bending at the hips, lower
your torso towards the floor until your thighs are parallel to the floor or slightly
lower.
·
As you squat, ensure
your heels are firmly fixed on the floor. If your heels rise up off the floor
as you squat down then raise your toes in your shoes, this results in only
your foot and heels being the point of contact with the floor and you cannot
raise up on your toes/your heels will not be able to raise off the floor.
·
From the low squat
position, contract your leg muscles and slowly raise yourself up to the start
position and repeat.
|
Kettlebell Push Press
|
·
This exercise is similar to
the standard Standing Shoulder Press. However, the speed of the exercise,
together with the inclusion of the legs and hips, makes it an explosive
exercise and also makes it possible to use slightly more weight.
·
Hold a kettlebell close to
your chest.
·
Hold the kettlebell by the
ball component so that the handle is on the opposite side, pointing away from
the chest; You can hold the handles but you must ensure that the handles are
parallel to the floor and the bell is the same height as the handles, not
hanging down or pointing upwards.
·
Place your feet slightly
wider than shoulder width apart.
·
From the start position,
bending at the knees, dip yourself down slightly before explosively
straightening your legs and at the same time driving the kettlebell upwards
overhead.
·
Retract the head backwards
slightly as you explosively push the kettlebell upwards.
·
As the Push Press is an
explosive exercise there is no need to hold the kettlebell overhead for any
length of time. Instead, once you have completed the arm extension, drag the
kettlebell back down to the start position on your upper chest and repeat.
|
Jump Lunges
|
·
This version of the
lunge is a dynamic, powerful, very demanding version.
·
Stand with your feet
shoulder width apart and your knees slightly bent.
·
Keep your back straight,
head up and shoulders back
·
As with most alternate
exercises it is entirely down to personal preference which leg you start the
exercise with. As long as you alternate and perform the same number of
repetitions for each leg it is fine. However, for this explanation I will be
starting with the left.
·
Take a big step forwards
with your left leg. When your left / front foot is planted your left thigh
must be parallel to the floor but your knee must not be forward of your toes.
Your right leg must also be bent at the knee with your knee stopping just
short of touching the floor. This is the start position.
·
Next, contracting your
left thigh, you can use your arms for momentum also, explode upwards as high
as possible.
·
Mid-air you must very
quickly switch your leg position so that you land in a wide stance with your
right foot as the front foot and your left foot the rear.
·
Immediately on landing
perform another lunge, before exploding upwards again and switching leg
positions again also.
·
Keep lunging, jumping,
switching legs and lunging again until you have completed the prescribed number
of repetitions.
|
Alternate Press Up & Mountain Climber
|
·
Position yourself on the
floor in the standard press-up position.
·
Throughout the exercise,
keep your upper body in this position by contracting all of your upper body
muscles, including the core muscles of your obliques, lower back, abdominals
and glutes.
·
Firstly, perform 1
standard press-up.
·
On returning to the top
of the press-up, with arms straight, perform 1 alternate leg squat thrust per
leg, as follows:
·
As with most alternate
exercises it is entirely down to personal preference which side you start the
exercise with. As long as you alternate and perform the same number of
repetitions with each leg it is fine. However, for this explanation I will be
starting with the left.
·
Start with your feet and
knees together, now push hard with the toes of your left leg and using your
left thigh and core muscles, bending only at the knee, thrust your left knee
up towards your chest.
·
Your left foot should
now be just underneath your hips.
·
From this crouched
position thrust your left foot back to the start position, straightening your
leg.
·
Repeat this with your
right leg.
·
Once you have performed
1 press-up followed by 1 alternate leg squat thrust per leg, drop straight
down into 1 press-up again and repeat until you have completed the prescribed
number of repetitions.
|
Squat Jumps
|
·
As with the ‘Jump
Lunges’ this version of the squat is a dynamic, powerful, very demanding
version.
·
Stand with your feet
shoulder width apart and your knees slightly bent.
·
Keep your back straight,
head up and shoulders back.
·
As with regular squats,
to save injuring your back with excessive torso flexion, pick out a mark at
eye height when you are stood upright. Keep your eyes on this mark as you
lower down into the eccentric component of the squat.
·
From the upright
position, contracting your thighs, glutes explode upwards as high as
possible. You can use your arms for momentum also by swinging them from
behind your torso to up high, in time with your explosive concentric phase of
the jump.
·
Immediately on landing
perform another squat, and try to squat low enough to touch the floor with
your fingers or hands, before exploding upwards again.
·
Keep jump squatting
until you have completed the prescribed number of repetitions.
|
Bear Crawls
|
·
Bear crawls are an excellent ‘total body’ exercise. As the name
suggests, this exercise requires the participant to crawl, on their hands and
feet, across the floor like a bear (I think it looks more like Spiderman climbing
up a wall myself).
·
Firstly, get down on the floor, resting on
your hands and feet only, not your knees. Keep your bum down and your torso
low, and parallel, to the floor.
·
From this start position, reach out in front
of you with your left hand and place it on the floor; at the same time, twist
your torso slightly to the left, raise your left foot off the floor, bend
your left leg at the knee, and when your left hand is placed on the floor
immediately bring the left knee towards the left elbow and place the left foot
on the floor.
·
At this point your left arm will be far in
front of you, the left leg will be bent at the knee, the left knee will be
close to the left elbow, the left foot will be on the floor (toes only), the
right arm will be bent with the right hand still on the floor but close to
your chest, the right leg will be straightened.
·
From this position, perform the same movement
with the right arm and leg and crawl across the floor alternating from left
arm and leg to right arm and leg.
|
Shuttle Runs
|
·
Run, as fast as possible
from marker one to marker two.
·
This equals one shuttle.
|
Fartlek
|
·
From marker one walk to
marker two.
·
From marker two jog back
to marker one.
·
From marker one sprint
flat out to marker two.
·
This equals 1 set.
|
SHUTTLE SUPERSET TWO
1: Burpees x 8 -----------------------------------
run 15 metres ----------------------------- Body Plank ‘Jacks’ x 8
2: Jump Lunges x 8 each leg ----------------- run
15 metres ---------------------------- -Lying Hip Raises x 12
3: Kettlebell Push Press x12 ------------------ run
15 metres ---------------------------- -Crunches x 10
4: Prisoner Overhead Walking Lunges (from marker
one to marker two) -------- Bellys &
Backs x 5 each side
5: Bear Crawls (bear crawl 15 metres from marker 1
to marker 2) ---------------- - Shuttle Runs 4 x 15 metres
6: Fartlek x 4 (walk, jog & sprint, using the
markers as the change of speed points).
Exercise
|
Performance Instructions
|
Burpees
|
·
In this version of the exercise, as well as
performing a Burpee, you must also include a press-up.
·
Stand up straight, with your head up,
shoulders back, chest out, feet together and arms hanging down by your sides.
·
Bending at the knees, drop low into a squat
position and place your hands on the floor in front of you.
·
Next, keeping your feet together, kick both
your legs backwards until you are in the standard press-up position.
·
Now, perform 1 standard press-up.
·
Once you have completed the press-up,
immediately thrust your knees back up to your chest and return to a standing
position.
·
Repeat, without rest, for the prescribed
number of repetitions.
|
Body Plank ‘Jacks’
|
·
This exercise is simply
the standard Body Plank but with an added ‘jumping jack’ movement with the
legs to increase the difficulty.
·
Start off in the press
up position, body and legs straight, resting your lower body on your toes.
·
Next, lower your upper
body so that you are resting on your forearms.
·
Position your elbows
directly underneath your shoulders, so not to fatigue your shoulder muscles.
·
Keeping your body
straight from shoulders to heels, contract the core muscles of your lower
back, abdominals and glutes.
·
From this position,
keeping your torso parallel to the floor and your legs as straight as
possible, using your abductor and adductor leg muscles, perform a ‘jack’
movement with your legs.
·
Thrust your legs out to
the sides, approximately 4 feet apart, to form a triangle from hips to feet.
·
Next thrust your legs
back together, to form the basic body plank position again.
·
These 2 movements, one
outwards ‘jack’ and one bringing your feet back together, count as one
repetition.
|
Jump Lunges
|
·
This version of the
lunge is a dynamic, powerful, very demanding version.
·
Stand with your feet
shoulder width apart and your knees slightly bent.
·
Keep your back straight,
head up and shoulders back
·
As with most alternate
exercises it is entirely down to personal preference which leg you start the
exercise with. As long as you alternate and perform the same number of
repetitions for each leg it is fine. However, for this explanation I will be
starting with the left.
·
Take a big step forwards
with your left leg. When your left / front foot is planted your left thigh
must be parallel to the floor but your knee must not be forward of your toes.
Your right leg must also be bent at the knee with your knee stopping just
short of touching the floor. This is the start position.
·
Next, contracting your
left thigh, you can use your arms for momentum also, explode upwards as high
as possible.
·
Mid-air you must very
quickly switch your leg position so that you land in a wide stance with your
right foot as the front foot and your left foot the rear.
·
Immediately on landing
perform another lunge, before exploding upwards again and switching leg
positions again also.
Keep
lunging, jumping, switching legs and lunging again until you have completed
the prescribed number of repetitions.
|
Lying Hip/Glute Raises
|
·
Position yourself on your back on the floor,
knees bent, feet and head flat on the floor with your arms out to the sides on
the floor for stability.
·
Slowly and in a controlled manner raise your
hips upwards, straightening your body from shoulders to knees.
·
Squeeze your glutes and hamstrings tightly.
·
Hold this position for 2 seconds then slowly
return to the start position and repeat.
|
Kettlebell Push Press
|
·
This exercise is similar to
the standard Standing Shoulder Press. However, the speed of the exercise,
together with the inclusion of the legs and hips, makes it an explosive
exercise and also makes it possible to use slightly more weight.
·
Hold a kettlebell close to
your chest.
·
Hold the kettlebell by the
ball component so that the handle is on the opposite side, pointing away from
the chest; You can hold the handles but you must ensure that the handles are
parallel to the floor and the bell is the same height as the handles, not
hanging down or pointing upwards.
·
Place your feet slightly
wider than shoulder width apart.
·
From the start position,
bending at the knees, dip yourself down slightly before explosively
straightening your legs and at the same time driving the kettlebell upwards
overhead.
·
Retract the head backwards
slightly as you explosively push the kettlebell upwards.
·
As the Push Press is an
explosive exercise there is no need to hold the kettlebell overhead for any
length of time. Instead, once you have completed the arm extension, drag the
kettlebell back down to the start position on your upper chest and repeat.
|
Crunches
|
·
Position yourself on the
floor, knees bent, feet and head flat on the floor.
·
Cross your arms and
place them on your chest.
·
Slowly and in a
controlled manner contract the muscles in your abdominals and curl your upper
body towards your thighs.
·
Do not raise your entire
torso off the floor from the hips.
·
Ensure you perform a
curling motion; firstly roll your head forwards bringing your chin towards
your chest, next roll your shoulders forwards towards your thighs.
·
At the highest point
only your shoulder blades should be off the floor.
·
Contract your abdominals
tightly at the top of the motion.
·
Slowly return to the
start position & repeat.
|
Kettlebell
Overhead Walking Lunges
|
·
Hold a kettlebell, or 2
dumbbells of equal weight, tightly in each hand with thumbs wrapped around
the handle.
·
Next, bending at the
elbows, curl the kettlebell/dumbbells up towards your shoulders; then perform
a shoulder press straightening your arms upwards until the
kettlebell/dumbbells are directly overhead.
·
Lock your arms and keep
the kettlebell/dumbbells in this overhead position throughout the exercise.
·
Stand up straight, with your head up,
shoulders back, chest out, feet shoulder width apart.
·
Keep your torso upright throughout this
exercise.
·
As with most alternate
exercises it is entirely down to personal preference which leg you lead/start
the exercise with. As long as you alternate and perform the same number of
repetitions for each leg it is fine. However, for this explanation I will be
leading / starting with the left.
·
Take a big step forwards
with your left leg and bend both legs, lowering your torso downwards towards
the floor.
·
When your front foot is
planted your thigh must be parallel to the floor but your knee must not be
forward of your toes. Your right leg must also be bent at the knee with your
knee stopping just short of touching the floor.
·
Your legs should now be
in the following positions:
·
Left leg - thigh
parallel to the floor calf 90 degrees to the floor.
·
Right leg - thigh 90
degrees to the floor and calf parallel to the floor.
·
Contract your left thigh
and push yourself forwards with
your right foot, until you are back up to a standing position. Now repeat
this with the right leg, moving forwards with each lunge.
·
Complete however many
repatitions it takes to get from the 1st to the 2nd
marker.
|
Bellys & Backs
|
·
Stand up straight with your head up, chest out
and shoulders back, in front of your exercise mat.
·
Next, simply lower yourself forwards onto the
mat until you are in a flat lying position, face down.
·
Now push on your hands and legs and push
yourself up off the mat into a full standing position.
·
Turn yourself around so that you are stood with
your back to the exercise mat.
·
Now lower yourself backwards onto the exercise
mat until you are in a flat lying position, face up.
·
This counts as 1 repetition.
·
Repeat this lying face down, getting up, lying
face up, getting back up until you have completed all the prescribed repetitions.
|
Bear Crawls
|
·
Bear crawls are an excellent ‘total body’ exercise. As the name
suggests, this exercise requires the participant to crawl, on their hands and
feet, across the floor like a bear (I think it looks more like Spiderman climbing
up a wall myself).
·
Firstly, get down on the floor, resting on
your hands and feet only, not your knees. Keep your bum down and your torso
low, and parallel, to the floor.
·
From this start position, reach out in front
of you with your left hand and place it on the floor; at the same time, twist
your torso slightly to the left, raise your left foot off the floor, bend
your left leg at the knee, and when your left hand is placed on the floor
immediately bring the left knee towards the left elbow and place the left foot
on the floor.
·
At this point your left arm will be far in
front of you, the left leg will be bent at the knee, the left knee will be
close to the left elbow, the left foot will be on the floor (toes only), the
right arm will be bent with the right hand still on the floor but close to
your chest, the right leg will be straightened.
·
From this position, perform the same movement
with the right arm and leg and crawl across the floor alternating from left
arm and leg to right arm and leg.
|
Shuttle Runs
|
·
Run, as fast as possible
from marker one to marker two.
·
This equals one shuttle.
|
Fartlek
|
·
From marker one walk to
marker two.
·
From marker two jog back
to marker one.
·
From marker one sprint
flat out to marker two.
·
This equals 1 set.
|
SHUTTLE SUPERSET THREE
1: Burpees x 10
---------------------------------------------- run 15 metres
----------------------------- Fartlek x 2
2: Ketlebell Squats x 12
------------------------------------ run 15 metres ----------------------------
-Bellys & Backs x 6 each side
3: Kettlebell Offset Reverse Lunges x 8 each leg
-----run 15 metres ---------------------------- -Fartlek x 2
4: Squat Jumps x 12
-----------------------------------------run 15 metres
----------------------------- Shuttle Runs x 4
5: Squat hold x 20 seconds
----------------------------------- run 15 metres --------------------------
Jumping Jacks x 20
6: Bear Crawls (bear crawl 15 metres from marker 1
to marker 2) ---------------------------- - Shuttle Runs 4 x 15 metres
Exercise
|
Performance Instructions
|
Burpees
|
·
In this version of the exercise, as well as
performing a Burpee, you must also include a press-up.
·
Stand up straight, with your head up,
shoulders back, chest out, feet together and arms hanging down by your sides.
·
Bending at the knees, drop low into a squat
position and place your hands on the floor in front of you.
·
Next, keeping your feet together, kick both
your legs backwards until you are in the standard press-up position.
·
Now, perform 1 standard press-up.
·
Once you have completed the press-up,
immediately thrust your knees back up to your chest and return to a standing
position.
·
Repeat, without rest, for the prescribed
number of repetitions.
|
Fartlek
|
·
From marker one walk to
marker two.
·
From marker two jog back
to marker one.
·
From marker one sprint
flat out to marker two.
·
This equals 1 set.
|
Kettlebell Squats
|
·
Hold a kettlebell, or 2
dumbbells of equal weight, tightly in each hand with thumbs wrapped around
the handle.
·
Next, bending at the
elbows, curl the kettlebell/dumbbells up towards your chest. Keep the
kettlebell in this position throughout the exercise.
·
Stand with your feet
shoulder width apart and your knees slightly bent; your toes don’t have to be
pointing straight ahead, they can be pointing out slightly.
·
In the start position,
keep your head up, shoulders back and look straight ahead at something at eye
height e.g. the top of a piece of equipment, a line on a poster or simply a
mark on the wall if you’re inside; or the top of a tree in the distance, or a
point on a house in the distance if you’re outside. This will ensure you keep
your spine in the correct position as you lower and raise your torso.
·
Keeping your eyes on the
mark ahead, slowly and in a controlled manner, bending at the hips, lower
your torso towards the floor until your thighs are parallel to the floor or slightly
lower.
·
As you squat, ensure
your heels are firmly fixed on the floor. If your heels rise up off the floor
as you squat down then raise your toes in your shoes, this results in only
your foot and heels being the point of contact with the floor and you cannot
raise up on your toes/your heels will not be able to raise off the floor.
·
From the low squat
position, contract your leg muscles and slowly raise yourself up to the start
position and repeat.
|
Bellys & Backs
|
·
Stand up straight with your head up, chest out
and shoulders back, in front of your exercise mat.
·
Next, simply lower yourself forwards onto the
mat until you are in a flat lying position, face down.
·
Now push on your hands and legs and push
yourself up off the mat into a full standing position.
·
Turn yourself around so that you are stood with
your back to the exercise mat.
·
Now lower yourself backwards onto the exercise
mat until you are in a flat lying position, face up.
·
This counts as 1 repetition.
·
Repeat this lying face down, getting up, lying
face up, getting back up until you have completed all the prescribed repetitions.
|
Kettlebell Offset Reverse Lunges
|
·
This version of this
exercise is very similar to the standard reverse lunges. The main different
being that you will be holding a kettlebell on just one shoulder. This
creates an imbalance and makes your core muscles work that much harder to
stop from leaning towards the side which you are holding the weight.
·
Stand with your feet
shoulder width apart and your knees slightly bent.
·
Keep your back straight,
head up and shoulders back.
·
For resistance you can
chose a kettlebell or a dumbbell.
·
Whatever form of
resistance you chose, hold it tightly in your left hand with thumb wrapped
around the handle.
·
Next, curl it up to
chest height then externally rotate your left arm and shoulder until the
kettlebell/dumbbell is at shoulder height.
·
Keep your left arm in
this position, and the weight to the left, throughout the exercise.
·
For balance you can
place your right arm out to the sides, or place the right hand on your hips,
it is entirely up to you.
·
As with most alternate
exercises it is entirely down to personal preference which leg you start the
exercise with. As long as you alternate and perform the same number of
repetitions for each leg it is fine. However, for this explanation I will be
starting with the left.
·
Take a big step backwards
with your left leg. When the toes of your left / back foot is planted your
right thigh must be parallel to the floor but your knee must not be forward
of your toes. Your left leg must also be bent at the knee with your knee
stopping just short of touching the floor.
·
Contract your left thigh
and push yourself back up to the start position and repeat with the right.
·
Performing the exercise
with both legs equals 1 repetition.
|
Fartlek
|
·
From marker one walk to
marker two.
·
From marker two jog back
to marker one.
·
From marker one sprint
flat out to marker two.
·
This equals 1 set.
|
Squat Jumps
|
·
As with the ‘Jump
Lunges’ this version of the squat is a dynamic, powerful, very demanding
version.
·
Stand with your feet
shoulder width apart and your knees slightly bent.
·
Keep your back straight,
head up and shoulders back.
·
As with regular squats,
to save injuring your back with excessive torso flexion, pick out a mark at
eye height when you are stood upright. Keep your eyes on this mark as you
lower down into the eccentric component of the squat.
·
From the upright
position, contracting your thighs, glutes explode upwards as high as
possible. You can use your arms for momentum also by swinging them from
behind your torso to up high, in time with your explosive concentric phase of
the jump.
·
Immediately on landing
perform another squat, and try to squat low enough to touch the floor with
your fingers or hands, before exploding upwards again.
·
Keep jump squatting
until you have completed the prescribed number of repetitions.
|
Shuttle Runs
|
·
Run, as fast as possible
from marker one to marker two.
·
This equals one shuttle.
|
Squat Hold
|
·
This exercise is similar
to the standard squat in that you are squatting down. However, you are not
lowering and raising for repetitions, once your thighs are parallel to the
floor you must hold this position in an isometric hold for the prescribed
time.
·
Stand with your feet
shoulder width apart and your knees slightly bent; your toes don’t have to be
pointing straight ahead, they can be pointing out slightly.
·
In the start position,
keep your head up, shoulders back and look straight ahead at something at eye
height e.g. the top of a piece of equipment, a line on a poster or simply a
mark on the wall if you’re inside; or the top of a tree in the distance, or a
point on a house in the distance if you’re outside. This will ensure you keep
your spine in the correct position as you lower and raise your torso.
·
Keeping your eyes on the
mark ahead, slowly and in a controlled manner, bending at the hips, lower
your torso towards the floor until your thighs are parallel to the floor or slightly
lower.
·
As you squat, ensure
your heels are firmly fixed on the floor. If your heels rise up off the floor
as you squat down then raise your toes in your shoes, this results in only
your foot and heels being the point of contact with the floor and you cannot
raise up on your toes/your heels will not be able to raise off the floor.
·
One you are in this low squat
position, do not return to a stand, stay in the squat position for the
prescribed time.
|
Jumping Jacks
|
·
Stand up straight, with your head up,
shoulders back, chest out, feet together and arms hanging down by your sides.
·
Bending at the knees, bounce down slightly
then jump upwards, just a few inches off the floor. Before landing, open your
legs out to the sides and land back on the floor with your feet wider than
shoulder width apart.
·
At the same time as you are moving your legs
outwards, raise your arms from your sides in semi-circles until you touch
your hands above your head.
·
You should time it so that your feet land back
on the floor and your hands touch above your head at the same time.
·
Jump up again and bring your arms back down to
your sides and your feet back together and repeat.
|
Bear Crawls
|
·
Bear crawls are an excellent ‘total body’ exercise. As the name
suggests, this exercise requires the participant to crawl, on their hands and
feet, across the floor like a bear (I think it looks more like Spiderman climbing
up a wall myself).
·
Firstly, get down on the floor, resting on
your hands and feet only, not your knees. Keep your bum down and your torso
low, and parallel, to the floor.
·
From this start position, reach out in front
of you with your left hand and place it on the floor; at the same time, twist
your torso slightly to the left, raise your left foot off the floor, bend
your left leg at the knee, and when your left hand is placed on the floor
immediately bring the left knee towards the left elbow and place the left foot
on the floor.
·
At this point your left arm will be far in
front of you, the left leg will be bent at the knee, the left knee will be
close to the left elbow, the left foot will be on the floor (toes only), the
right arm will be bent with the right hand still on the floor but close to
your chest, the right leg will be straightened.
·
From this position, perform the same movement
with the right arm and leg and crawl across the floor alternating from left
arm and leg to right arm and leg.
|
Shuttle Runs
|
·
Run, as fast as possible
from marker one to marker two.
·
This equals one shuttle.
|
SHUTTLE SUPERSET FOUR
1: Kettlebell Overhead Walking Lunges (walk the 15
metres) ------ run 15 metres ----------- Shuttle Runs x 4
2: Jumping Jacks x 20---------------------
------------------------------------ run 15 metres ----------- Kettlebell
Squats x 12
3: Squat Jumps x 12
----------------------------------------------------------- run 15 metres
----------- Fartlek x 2
4: Mountain Climbers x 10 each leg
-------------------------------------- run 15 metres ------------ Body Plank ‘Jacks’
x 10
5: Bear Crawls (bear crawl 15 metres from marker 1
to marker 2) ------------------------------- Shuttle Runs 4 x 15 metres
6: Fartlek x 4 (walk, jog & sprint, using the
markers as the change of speed points).
Exercise
|
Performance Instructions
|
Kettlebell Overhead Walking Lunges
|
·
Hold a kettlebell, or 2
dumbbells of equal weight, tightly in each hand with thumbs wrapped around
the handle.
·
Next, bending at the
elbows, curl the kettlebell/dumbbells up towards your shoulders; then perform
a shoulder press straightening your arms upwards until the
kettlebell/dumbbells are directly overhead.
·
Lock your arms and keep
the kettlebell/dumbbells in this overhead position throughout the exercise.
·
Stand up straight, with your head up,
shoulders back, chest out, feet shoulder width apart.
·
Keep your torso upright throughout this
exercise.
·
As with most alternate
exercises it is entirely down to personal preference which leg you lead/start
the exercise with. As long as you alternate and perform the same number of
repetitions for each leg it is fine. However, for this explanation I will be
leading / starting with the left.
·
Take a big step forwards
with your left leg and bend both legs, lowering your torso downwards towards
the floor.
·
When your front foot is
planted your thigh must be parallel to the floor but your knee must not be
forward of your toes. Your right leg must also be bent at the knee with your
knee stopping just short of touching the floor.
·
Your legs should now be
in the following positions:
·
Left leg - thigh
parallel to the floor calf 90 degrees to the floor.
·
Right leg - thigh 90
degrees to the floor and calf parallel to the floor.
·
Contract your left thigh
and push yourself forwards with
your right foot, until you are back up to a standing position. Now repeat
this with the right leg, moving forwards with each lunge.
·
Complete however many
repatitions it takes to get from the 1st to the 2nd
marker.
|
Shuttle Runs
|
·
Run, as fast as possible
from marker one to marker two.
·
This equals one shuttle.
|
Jumping Jacks
|
·
Stand up straight, with your head up,
shoulders back, chest out, feet together and arms hanging down by your sides.
·
Bending at the knees, bounce down slightly
then jump upwards, just a few inches off the floor. Before landing, open your
legs out to the sides and land back on the floor with your feet wider than
shoulder width apart.
·
At the same time as you are moving your legs
outwards, raise your arms from your sides in semi-circles until you touch
your hands above your head.
·
You should time it so that your feet land back
on the floor and your hands touch above your head at the same time.
·
Jump up again and bring your arms back down to
your sides and your feet back together and repeat.
|
Kettlebell Squats
|
·
Hold a kettlebell, or 2
dumbbells of equal weight, tightly in each hand with thumbs wrapped around
the handle.
·
Next, bending at the
elbows, curl the kettlebell/dumbbells up towards your chest. Keep the
kettlebell in this position throughout the exercise.
·
Stand with your feet
shoulder width apart and your knees slightly bent; your toes don’t have to be
pointing straight ahead, they can be pointing out slightly.
·
In the start position,
keep your head up, shoulders back and look straight ahead at something at eye
height e.g. the top of a piece of equipment, a line on a poster or simply a
mark on the wall if you’re inside; or the top of a tree in the distance, or a
point on a house in the distance if you’re outside. This will ensure you keep
your spine in the correct position as you lower and raise your torso.
·
Keeping your eyes on the
mark ahead, slowly and in a controlled manner, bending at the hips, lower
your torso towards the floor until your thighs are parallel to the floor or slightly
lower.
·
As you squat, ensure
your heels are firmly fixed on the floor. If your heels rise up off the floor
as you squat down then raise your toes in your shoes, this results in only
your foot and heels being the point of contact with the floor and you cannot
raise up on your toes/your heels will not be able to raise off the floor.
·
From the low squat
position, contract your leg muscles and slowly raise yourself up to the start
position and repeat.
|
Squat Jumps
|
·
As with the ‘Jump
Lunges’ this version of the squat is a dynamic, powerful, very demanding
version.
·
Stand with your feet
shoulder width apart and your knees slightly bent.
·
Keep your back straight,
head up and shoulders back.
·
As with regular squats,
to save injuring your back with excessive torso flexion, pick out a mark at
eye height when you are stood upright. Keep your eyes on this mark as you
lower down into the eccentric component of the squat.
·
From the upright
position, contracting your thighs, glutes explode upwards as high as
possible. You can use your arms for momentum also by swinging them from
behind your torso to up high, in time with your explosive concentric phase of
the jump.
·
Immediately on landing
perform another squat, and try to squat low enough to touch the floor with
your fingers or hands, before exploding upwards again.
·
Keep jump squatting
until you have completed the prescribed number of repetitions.
|
Fartlek
|
·
From marker one walk to
marker two.
·
From marker two jog back
to marker one.
·
From marker one sprint
flat out to marker two.
·
This equals 1 set.
|
Mountain Climbers
|
·
Position yourself on the floor in
the standard press-up position.
·
Throughout the exercise, keep your
upper body in this position by contracting all of your upper body muscles,
including the core muscles of your obliques, lower back, abdominals and
glutes.
·
As with most alternate exercises it
is entirely down to personal preference which side you start the exercise
with; As long as you alternate, and perform the same number of repetitions,
with each leg it is fine. However, for this explanation I will be starting
with the left.
·
Start with your feet and knees
together, now push hard with the toes of your left leg and using your left
thigh and core muscles, bending only at the knee, thrust your left knee up
towards your chest.
·
Your left foot should now be just
underneath your hips and your left knee near to underneath your chest.
·
From this crouched position thrust
your left foot back to the start position, straightening your leg.
·
Repeat this with your right leg.
·
Get yourself into a rhythm as you
thrust forwards and backwards.
|
Body Plank ‘Jacks’
|
·
This exercise is simply
the standard Body Plank but with an added ‘jumping jack’ movement with the
legs to increase the difficulty.
·
Start off in the press
up position, body and legs straight, resting your lower body on your toes.
·
Next, lower your upper
body so that you are resting on your forearms.
·
Position your elbows
directly underneath your shoulders, so not to fatigue your shoulder muscles.
·
Keeping your body
straight from shoulders to heels, contract the core muscles of your lower
back, abdominals and glutes.
·
From this position,
keeping your torso parallel to the floor and your legs as straight as
possible, using your abductor and adductor leg muscles, perform a ‘jack’
movement with your legs.
·
Thrust your legs out to
the sides, approximately 4 feet apart, to form a triangle from hips to feet.
·
Next thrust your legs
back together, to form the basic body plank position again.
·
These 2 movements, one
outwards ‘jack’ and one bringing your feet back together, count as one
repetition.
|
Bear Crawls
|
·
Bear crawls are an excellent ‘total body’ exercise. As the name
suggests, this exercise requires the participant to crawl, on their hands and
feet, across the floor like a bear (I think it looks more like Spiderman climbing
up a wall myself).
·
Firstly, get down on the floor, resting on
your hands and feet only, not your knees. Keep your bum down and your torso
low, and parallel, to the floor.
·
From this start position, reach out in front
of you with your left hand and place it on the floor; at the same time, twist
your torso slightly to the left, raise your left foot off the floor, bend
your left leg at the knee, and when your left hand is placed on the floor
immediately bring the left knee towards the left elbow and place the left foot
on the floor.
·
At this point your left arm will be far in
front of you, the left leg will be bent at the knee, the left knee will be
close to the left elbow, the left foot will be on the floor (toes only), the
right arm will be bent with the right hand still on the floor but close to
your chest, the right leg will be straightened.
·
From this position, perform the same movement
with the right arm and leg and crawl across the floor alternating from left
arm and leg to right arm and leg.
|
Shuttle Runs
|
·
Run, as fast as possible
from marker one to marker two.
·
This equals one shuttle.
|
Fartlek
|
·
From marker one walk to
marker two.
·
From marker two jog back
to marker one.
·
From marker one sprint
flat out to marker two.
·
This equals 1 set.
|