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Strength Training for Women, Young Athletes and Senior Athletes. Chapters 9-11. Female Needs. Upper body strength, size and power Less CSA than males and smaller diameter May use a bodybuilding program? Benefits are the same as males. Myths? Page 176. Strength and Power Development.
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Strength Training for Women, Young Athletes and Senior Athletes Chapters 9-11
Female Needs • Upper body strength, size and power • Less CSA than males and smaller diameter • May use a bodybuilding program? • Benefits are the same as males
Strength and Power Development • Heavy resistance (80-95%) and low reps (3-5RM) • P=(fxd)/t strength vs. speed training • High speed and acceleration training • Typically 30-45% of 1RM for power • Plyometrics and SAQ
Torque & Power Velocity Curves Power Max Torque Force Min Vmax 0 1/3 Vmax
Physiological Gender Differences • Fewer and smaller fibers • Quantity vs quality? • Upper body absolute strength 40% of males • Lower body absolute strength 70% of males • Power 65% of males • Lower body relative strength is SIMILAR • Women may have larger type I than II fibers • RFD and RVD less for women (neural bias)
Hormonal Differences • 10-20 times less T than males • Women adapt faster with type II fibers? • Program design for women • Free weights and machines and high intensity • Upper body exercises • Olympic lifting • Functional strength • Free weights over machines
Injury and Menstrual Differences • Greater ACL injury in women • Less thickness and smaller notch • Neural bias? • Problems with low calorie intake and intense lower body exercise (stress) • Olympic athletes bottom of page 186 • Pregnant women Page 186 • Performance appears the same across the cycle • Female athlete triad Page 187
Youth Training • Safety is paramount SUPERVISION • Injury comes from improper technique • Epiphysis damage, bone fracture and stress fracture RISK are greater in youth • Weight room vs. sports injuries • Risk vs. benefit?
When to Start? • Psychological readiness (why?) • Physiological readiness (size) • Neural adaptations pre-puberty (quick and dramatic gains) • Testosterone secretion by sex • Benefits Page 203
Mythology • Stunt children's growth • Girls will get BIG • Guidelines for youth • Ready? • Program design • Technique • Spotting • Equipment safety • Equipment fit • Balanced program • Growth plate damage
Youth Program Design • Beginners • Body weight first • Light weights • Partner exercise • Athletes • Supervised • 3 x week for 30-60 minutes • NSCA POSITION STAND ON PAGE 208 • Periodized program onpage 211
Age and Strength • Genetic and cultural • Magnitude of training with age? • Decline in strength with age • Andropause and menopause • Sarcopenia of type II • Great decline at 6th decade and worse in women • Loss of CSA • Power loss with age (correlated with function) • Physiological loss bottom of page 217
Training for Seniors • Dramatic strength gains in seniors? • Neural changes • Increase in CSA primarily type II (heavy resistance) • Reduced testosterone • Increase power with explosive exercise (F=ma) Page 222 • Proper nutrition page 222
Recovery and Guidelines • Longer time for rest (frequency) • Interset? • Greater muscle damage • Joint stress with compression • Increased bone health • Program design is the same at any age • Injury risk with weak bones and tissues
Next Class • Periodization 12-week chart