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ASCA Podcast
Joseph Coyne
138 episodes
2 weeks ago
Tim Mosey holds a Master of Exercise Science (Strength and Conditioning) from Edith Cowan University and a Bachelor of Applied Science (Human Movement Studies) from QUT. He is an ASCA Level 3 Master S&C Coach with over sixteen years of experience across Olympic, professional, and youth development sport. Tim is currently the Senior Strength & Conditioning Coach at the NSW Waratahs, where he leads strength, power, and speed development, as well as rehabilitation programming for the Super Rugby squad. He has previously served in high-performance roles at the Queensland Academy of Sport, the Tasmanian Institute of Sport, as Head of Athletic Performance - Academy for the Waratahs, and as Director of Athletic Development at Brisbane Boys’ College. He has supported athletes to Olympic and international success in diving, rowing, archery, water polo, and skeleton, including preparing athletes for the 2010 Whistler and 2014 Sochi Winter Olympic Games. Tim’s areas of expertise include strength, power and speed development, return-to-play programming, and long-term athlete development. He has contributed to the field through published peer-reviewed research, mentoring emerging coaches, and presenting at national conferences. QUOTES “I'm a reluctant rehabber. I find it the most challenging and frustrating part of strength and conditioning. It doesn't excite me. It challenges me. I find it difficult I guess and that's weirdly why I wanted to dive into it” “If we're thinking about aerobic type work, you can break it down into whether you want to do extensive or intensive type work. So maybe extensive work where the length of your effort is a longer, straighter effort versus an intensive type effort where you might have more shuttle-based work.” “I've always lived off this quote from an old colleague, Nick Lumley and his comment was when the bombs are going off, you don't want blokes who've just been running straight line MAS, you want guys who've been getting off the deck and shuttling. So I guess I'm biased towards a little bit more shuttle-based conditioning work than straight line work”. “The challenge of rehabbing someone in season is the coach wants him back and there's the old adage of are we returning to play or returning to perform? I don't think that really applies in a lot of instances when we're getting guys back out on the paddock, particularly in-season. I would argue that we return blokes that aren't ready to perform a lot of the time but they're ready to go back and play” “I would start generally in the backend of a reconditioning block with more aerobic based extensive work and that might involve longer straighter efforts with maybe one turn. I might progress that down to more intensive based conditioning work with more turns, same sort of work to rest ratios, but more change of direction and off deck work, increasing to intensive anaerobic type work as they get towards the backend of the last third and fourth weeks.” SHOWNOTES 1) Tim’s time in strength and conditioning, from Tasmanian Institute of Sport to Brisbane Boys College and QAS to the NSW Waratahs 2) The basics of reconditioning and using an energy system adaptation led strategy 3) The simplicity of four-minute conditioning blocks and the importance of shuttle-based work 4) Skill work in re-conditioning? 5) Building back into contact after injuries, especially for shoulder cases 6) The difference between returning to play versus returning to perform 7) Reconditioning periodization and the use of extensive and intensive days 8) Tim’s favourite reconditioning drills and the challenges of adapting training to different athlete types within the same squad and sport PEOPLE MENTIONED Peter Culhane Paul Larsen Martin Buchheit Nick Lumley 
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Tim Mosey holds a Master of Exercise Science (Strength and Conditioning) from Edith Cowan University and a Bachelor of Applied Science (Human Movement Studies) from QUT. He is an ASCA Level 3 Master S&C Coach with over sixteen years of experience across Olympic, professional, and youth development sport. Tim is currently the Senior Strength & Conditioning Coach at the NSW Waratahs, where he leads strength, power, and speed development, as well as rehabilitation programming for the Super Rugby squad. He has previously served in high-performance roles at the Queensland Academy of Sport, the Tasmanian Institute of Sport, as Head of Athletic Performance - Academy for the Waratahs, and as Director of Athletic Development at Brisbane Boys’ College. He has supported athletes to Olympic and international success in diving, rowing, archery, water polo, and skeleton, including preparing athletes for the 2010 Whistler and 2014 Sochi Winter Olympic Games. Tim’s areas of expertise include strength, power and speed development, return-to-play programming, and long-term athlete development. He has contributed to the field through published peer-reviewed research, mentoring emerging coaches, and presenting at national conferences. QUOTES “I'm a reluctant rehabber. I find it the most challenging and frustrating part of strength and conditioning. It doesn't excite me. It challenges me. I find it difficult I guess and that's weirdly why I wanted to dive into it” “If we're thinking about aerobic type work, you can break it down into whether you want to do extensive or intensive type work. So maybe extensive work where the length of your effort is a longer, straighter effort versus an intensive type effort where you might have more shuttle-based work.” “I've always lived off this quote from an old colleague, Nick Lumley and his comment was when the bombs are going off, you don't want blokes who've just been running straight line MAS, you want guys who've been getting off the deck and shuttling. So I guess I'm biased towards a little bit more shuttle-based conditioning work than straight line work”. “The challenge of rehabbing someone in season is the coach wants him back and there's the old adage of are we returning to play or returning to perform? I don't think that really applies in a lot of instances when we're getting guys back out on the paddock, particularly in-season. I would argue that we return blokes that aren't ready to perform a lot of the time but they're ready to go back and play” “I would start generally in the backend of a reconditioning block with more aerobic based extensive work and that might involve longer straighter efforts with maybe one turn. I might progress that down to more intensive based conditioning work with more turns, same sort of work to rest ratios, but more change of direction and off deck work, increasing to intensive anaerobic type work as they get towards the backend of the last third and fourth weeks.” SHOWNOTES 1) Tim’s time in strength and conditioning, from Tasmanian Institute of Sport to Brisbane Boys College and QAS to the NSW Waratahs 2) The basics of reconditioning and using an energy system adaptation led strategy 3) The simplicity of four-minute conditioning blocks and the importance of shuttle-based work 4) Skill work in re-conditioning? 5) Building back into contact after injuries, especially for shoulder cases 6) The difference between returning to play versus returning to perform 7) Reconditioning periodization and the use of extensive and intensive days 8) Tim’s favourite reconditioning drills and the challenges of adapting training to different athlete types within the same squad and sport PEOPLE MENTIONED Peter Culhane Paul Larsen Martin Buchheit Nick Lumley 
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Sports
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ASCA Podcast - Christian Bosse
ASCA Podcast
1 hour 8 minutes 11 seconds
4 months ago
ASCA Podcast - Christian Bosse
Christian Bosse has over 20 years of experience in coaching athletes at the elite level, working with more than 20 Olympians, 13 Olympic medallists, 7 Olympic champions, and 23 World champions. More recently, Christian has worked as a Strength & Conditioning Coach for the German Cycling Federation, where he is responsible for the S&C support of the national track cycling team. Christian also educates and mentors the coaches of the German Cycling Federation to improve the strength and conditioning support in the regional training centres. Prior to this, Christian has worked for different national and international governing bodies, including the National Olympic Committee of the Netherlands, Catalan Tennis Federation, the British Lawn Tennis Association, the International Tennis Federation, the Chinese Olympic Committee. QUOTES “I just looked at what can I build in the entrepreneurial space. They call it the minimum viable product, meaning a product that works. It doesn't have all the features that you need in the end, but it works and it should be at a minimal cost.” “So I don't necessarily ask them to send in a video of every exercise they do. It's more like, okay, you have to improve whatever your turnover in the clean, you have to improve your posture in the squat or something like this. So then that person sends me the video regarding their points of improvement and the corrective exercises I've prescribed” “I'm a big fan of limited amount of exercise selection, meaning one of my core philosophies as an S&C coach and that's probably opposed to many others, is just have a handful of exercises that you can dominate very, very well, and then do them as good as you can.” “The innovation is not, yes, somewhere in the world we already know this. But over here, you don't do it. So the innovation is, in a way, we bring what we already know to that place where it's needed.” “My point is is it correlation or causation that makes the cyclists legs big? I think it's more because of the stuff they do on the bike and… it's unlikely the work in the gym, it's more likely the work on the bike that leads to the big legs. So anyway that was definitely a challenge to get them away from, or to implement the thought of maybe we don't need that much of hypertrophy work for the legs” SHOWNOTES 1) Christian’s journey in strength and conditioning including stops in India, Spain, China, Netherlands, and Germany across tennis and cycling 2) How limited resources drove innovation in supporting the German national cycling team 3) The use of video feedback across a decentralized team model and the advantages of being able to stockpile and tag videos from athletes over time 4) Technical coach strength and conditioning education and making sure old knowledge is being applied in the right places 5) Differences between German and Dutch athlete preparation in cycling 6) Christian’s long term athlete development approach through reverse engineering performance and rates of progression over developmental years for younger athletes 7) Adapting to the demands of working with athletes remotely in different sports 8) What a typical session looks like for strength and power development with German cyclists 9) Staying away from right or wrong when working with coaches and athletes and Twan Van Gendt’s Bulgarian split squats People Mentioned Dietmar Schmidtbleicher Katharina Dunst Narelle Sibte Reid Hoffman Twan Van Gendt
ASCA Podcast
Tim Mosey holds a Master of Exercise Science (Strength and Conditioning) from Edith Cowan University and a Bachelor of Applied Science (Human Movement Studies) from QUT. He is an ASCA Level 3 Master S&C Coach with over sixteen years of experience across Olympic, professional, and youth development sport. Tim is currently the Senior Strength & Conditioning Coach at the NSW Waratahs, where he leads strength, power, and speed development, as well as rehabilitation programming for the Super Rugby squad. He has previously served in high-performance roles at the Queensland Academy of Sport, the Tasmanian Institute of Sport, as Head of Athletic Performance - Academy for the Waratahs, and as Director of Athletic Development at Brisbane Boys’ College. He has supported athletes to Olympic and international success in diving, rowing, archery, water polo, and skeleton, including preparing athletes for the 2010 Whistler and 2014 Sochi Winter Olympic Games. Tim’s areas of expertise include strength, power and speed development, return-to-play programming, and long-term athlete development. He has contributed to the field through published peer-reviewed research, mentoring emerging coaches, and presenting at national conferences. QUOTES “I'm a reluctant rehabber. I find it the most challenging and frustrating part of strength and conditioning. It doesn't excite me. It challenges me. I find it difficult I guess and that's weirdly why I wanted to dive into it” “If we're thinking about aerobic type work, you can break it down into whether you want to do extensive or intensive type work. So maybe extensive work where the length of your effort is a longer, straighter effort versus an intensive type effort where you might have more shuttle-based work.” “I've always lived off this quote from an old colleague, Nick Lumley and his comment was when the bombs are going off, you don't want blokes who've just been running straight line MAS, you want guys who've been getting off the deck and shuttling. So I guess I'm biased towards a little bit more shuttle-based conditioning work than straight line work”. “The challenge of rehabbing someone in season is the coach wants him back and there's the old adage of are we returning to play or returning to perform? I don't think that really applies in a lot of instances when we're getting guys back out on the paddock, particularly in-season. I would argue that we return blokes that aren't ready to perform a lot of the time but they're ready to go back and play” “I would start generally in the backend of a reconditioning block with more aerobic based extensive work and that might involve longer straighter efforts with maybe one turn. I might progress that down to more intensive based conditioning work with more turns, same sort of work to rest ratios, but more change of direction and off deck work, increasing to intensive anaerobic type work as they get towards the backend of the last third and fourth weeks.” SHOWNOTES 1) Tim’s time in strength and conditioning, from Tasmanian Institute of Sport to Brisbane Boys College and QAS to the NSW Waratahs 2) The basics of reconditioning and using an energy system adaptation led strategy 3) The simplicity of four-minute conditioning blocks and the importance of shuttle-based work 4) Skill work in re-conditioning? 5) Building back into contact after injuries, especially for shoulder cases 6) The difference between returning to play versus returning to perform 7) Reconditioning periodization and the use of extensive and intensive days 8) Tim’s favourite reconditioning drills and the challenges of adapting training to different athlete types within the same squad and sport PEOPLE MENTIONED Peter Culhane Paul Larsen Martin Buchheit Nick Lumley