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Sports Science 

Post#1 » by Badgerlander » Tue Nov 11, 2014 2:31 pm

I don't know how many caught this but Gruden and Tirico were making a protein shake in the booth and talking about Chip Kelly's sport science nutrition program where each player has a protein shake specifically made for their bodies nutritional needs as they come off the practice field, and they went on to talk about how each player is required to get 10 hours of sleep a night and about how they go harder in practice earlier in the week and slow down to walkthroughs the two days before games.


Chip Kelly’s Mystery Man
To get the most out of his players, Kelly is turning camp into a performance laboratory—but who’s that at the controls?
Tucked in the back of Connor Barwin’s uniform, between his shoulder blades, was a small black-and-orange gadget about the size of a hockey puck. Weighing just 30 grams, it contained a GPS, magnetometer, accelerometer and gyroscope that had just recorded his every movement on the practice field. But the Eagles linebacker would rather not talk about it.

“I don’t know if I’m supposed to,” Barwin said, glancing around after an organized team activities session in May. “I don’t want to, like, give up secrets?”

On Chip Kelly’s Eagles this is the new normal. Science and technology are part of nearly everything the team does. But the why and the how are treated like classified information.

And so is the who—in this case, the man hired by Kelly to be the first “sports-science coordinator” an NFL team has ever had. His name is Shaun Huls, and his background—nearly five years as a performance coach for the U.S. Naval Special Warfare Group 2—is as intriguing as his current job title.

Heads turned in February when Huls was listed in the announcement of the new coaching staff, and since then Kelly has taken care to preserve the mystery surrounding this aspect of his program. As training camp was set to open Huls had not yet been permitted to speak to the media, and The MMQB’s request for interviews with Kelly and general manager Howie Roseman about the sports-science initiative was turned down through a team spokesperson. At a press conference in June, Kelly would go only so far as to say that sports science is important because “what you do with your players is ultimately important.” He added, “I’d tell you I’m not a trendsetter by how I dress… We’re just trying to make our team better.”

The Eagles are not the only NFL team to lean on science and technology in their training; the Giants, Jaguars and Falcons are also among the league’s leaders in this area. And similar practices are ingrained in international sports such as soccer, since the frontline for much of the sports-science research and technology development is overseas in Europe and Russia.

But there is an unmistakable curiosity about what is taking place in Philadelphia. Perhaps it’s because of Kelly’s reputation as an innovator, or the tie to the military’s most elite warriors, or the fact that the up-tempo offense Kelly became known for at Oregon is presumed to place special physical demands on his players.

Or perhaps it’s because we want to see if thinking beyond the X’s and O’s can really help turn around a team that went 4-12 last season. No matter the reason, there’s a story to be told about what’s going on inside the walls of the NovaCare Complex, even if it’s not one the Eagles are ready to tell.

***

Change is the order of the day in Philly after Andy Reid’s 14-year tenure. Some of what Kelly has wrought is obvious. His frenetic practices are set to deafening music of all genres—Kanye West and AC/DC and banquet-hall favorite “Cha Cha Slide”—that blares onto South Broad Street. And his staff introduced personalized protein shakes—center Jason Kelce’s contains blueberries, avocado, 2% milk and vanilla protein powder—that players grab on their way off the practice field.

Why not devote significant resources … to a cutting-edge approach that will help keep players on the field and maximize their performance?
But remaking a program through the application of sports science is a bigger and more multifaceted undertaking. The premise is simple: Teams invest millions in players; why not devote significant resources, including a dedicated position on the coaching staff, to a cutting-edge approach that will help keep players on the field and maximize their performance? In mid-March, the Eagles began developing something of a sports-science laboratory. Team president Don Smolenski told the Philadelphia Inquirer the team invested more than $1 million in equipment and technology upgrades this offseason. In keeping with the air of secrecy, the companies that provided the technology were reluctant to share specifics of how the Eagles are using their devices.

The array of technology creates a physiological dashboard for each player. Among the equipment: Catapult Sports’ OptimEye sensors, which Barwin was wearing; heart-rate monitors from Polar; an Omegawave system that measures an athlete’s readiness for training and competition; and weight-lifting technology from a company named EliteForm, with 3-D cameras that record not just how much an athlete is lifting but how quickly he is doing it. There is also the low-tech end: Players are asked to urinate in a cup before practice to check their hydration levels.

The result is a data-driven approach to training, which is compatible with and perhaps even necessary for the way Kelly coaches. In the up-tempo style he brought from Oregon—the Ducks averaged more than 81 offensive plays per game last season—players are perpetually on the move. Some sports scientists, like the University of Connecticut’s William Kraemer, say research does not support the perception that an up-tempo pace imposes extreme fitness and recovery demands. But even so, sports-science technology can play an important role in preventing overuse, overtraining and the often accompanying soft-tissue injuries.

“Everyone is saying that going at this pace, people are going to burn out,” says offensive tackle Dennis Kelly, “but they’re making sure we’re getting the rest we need to recover.”

The OptimEye trackers, of which the Eagles have about 55, record a player’s movements through the course of a practice, allowing coaches to quantify acceleration, agility and the percentage of time the player is running at max speed versus standing around. An incentive not to slack off? Sure. But this is also a way to determine how much stress a workout places on a player’s body.

Monitoring heart rate is another way to gauge training load, as well as how close a player is at any given point of his workout to maximum exertion. The Polar system generates post-workout recovery reports, with a timestamp for when an athlete can next handle more training. Mike Valentino, Polar’s national sales manager for team sports, says a Big East women’s soccer team saw a 75% decrease in soft-tissue injuries during its first season using the technology. And the Omegawave system uses an electrocardiogram transmitter and a pair of electrodes that tap into the central nervous system to measure stress, fatigue and capacity for aerobic or anaerobic exercise. Players can log into their personal computers to check their own fitness profiles.

But data means the most when there’s an expert there to understand and apply it, and that’s where Huls comes in. Says Barwin, “If you’re suddenly more sore than usual, or you start to feel an injury pop up, you can go check with him and see what your numbers look like for that practice, and see why.”

Teams are not permitted to use tracking devices on players during games, but an NFL spokesman said there have been discussions with “several companies” about a possible league-wide initiative for in-game tracking, something the CBA would allow for if the players union consented. Forbes reported in May that Catapult, whose NFL clients also include the Giants and Cowboys, is in those discussions.

Still, there are ways to mine data to analyze game performance. Last season Catapult helped one of its NFL clients compare practice data off the OptimEye sensors in weeks when the team won compared to those when it lost. A trend emerged: During Thursday practices before losses, offensive skill players were running a lot but not very quickly. “They were training them to be slow,” says Gary McCoy, Catapult’s U.S. sales manager. “When they saw that, what we were hearing on the phone was, ‘S—, we really messed this up.’ You get those ‘Wow’ moments.”

***

The roots of the Eagles’ sports-science program reach back to Lincoln, Neb., in the late 1990s. This was the golden era of Husker Power, the Nebraska strength and conditioning program that powered three national championships between 1994 and ’97. During that time three ambitious college students began working with the school’s athletic department.

One of the students was Shaun Huls. At Nebraska, his philosophies on training (a reliance on free weights and explosive work) and nutrition (the cafeteria line was reorganized to have healthy vegetables first and meats last) were honed. Huls’s first chance to run his own strength and conditioning program was at Hampton (Va.) University in the mid-2000s. Joe Taylor, Hampton’s football coach at the time, considers Huls one of the best hires in his 40-year coaching career because of the way he transformed their training.

Huls timed players during their lifts, used diagnostic tests such as vertical jumps and shuttle runs to objectively track his players’ fitness, and reorganized the cafeteria line as at Nebraska—all practices he uses today in Philadelphia. Huls won the trust of the players, who gave him standing ovations at their athletic banquets.

Then came the really intriguing stuff: the nearly five years he spent training Navy SEALs at a military base in Virginia Beach. In August 2007 Huls, a civilian, became the first strength coach hired to work in the human performance program at Special Warfare Group 2. A practitioner of Brazilian jiu-jitsu, he’s the type of trainer who wants to experience the demands on his athletes, so he would do seven-mile ocean swims or carry around the SEALs’ 70-pound backpacks to feel the strain on his body. His hiring was part of a push by the Navy to train SEALs smarter, so his most important challenge was to reduce the non-combat-related injuries that were taking highly trained operatives away from their units during wartime.

In early 2009 Huls and one of his colleagues at the Little Creek base spent about a week in Finland on a fact-finding mission. They logged some 1,500 miles driving from one sports-science institute to the next, picking the brains of some of the world’s top human-performance experts. Their guide was a man named John Underwood, a former international-level distance runner and Olympic coach who now runs a sport consulting firm called Life of an Athlete.

Huls met Underwood, who had studied in Finland for three years, at the U.S. Olympic Training Center in Lake Placid, N.Y., and asked for his help in changing the way SEALs trained. “It was like a testosterone contest up until then,” Underwood says of the special forces training. “So we said, ‘OK, we’re going to find and set up a training regimen that’s all based on science and biofeedback.’ That was the beginning of it. Now, they’re changing the way they train pro football players.” Indeed, Underwood was invited by Kelly to speak to the team during June minicamp.

Such a quest for knowledge is typical for Huls, those who know him say. He makes regular trips to the Postural Restoration Institute in Lincoln, Neb., studying a progressive approach for handling injuries based on the idea that the body is asymmetrical. He also missed part of Eagles minicamp away at a science conference. Huls has made a strong impression on people he has worked with for being humble, open-minded and going to great lengths to help others achieve their goals.

Very few people out there really want to help, and [Shaun Huls] is definitely one of them.
That has been the experience of Kelce, who worked with Huls nearly every day this offseason to rehab from last October’s knee surgery and was pleasantly surprised to be able to participate in some team reps during minicamp. But perhaps the most remarkable account of Huls’ impact is told by Robbie Stock, a retired SEAL.

Stock was deployed to Afghanistan in 2010 when a grenade exploded inches from the left side of his body. After nearly a dozen surgeries he had no motor function in his left arm or hand, and surgeons recommended amputation. But Stock had other ideas and sought out Huls back on the Virginia Beach base. For several months Huls worked with Stock, using the Omegawave to determine when his battered body could handle exercise and inventing ways for Stock to train while his arm was mostly lifeless … and then when he regained movement in his biceps … and then when some function returned to his hand. Within a year of the explosion, Stock says, he could bench press 275 pounds, as much weight as he could before his injury; today he says he has 70% function in his arm and hand.

“Shaun was one of the very few people—and when I say few, I mean few—who actually believed I would not be a one-armed man for the rest of my life,” says Stock, whose new business, The Human Performance Initiative in Virginia Beach, uses many of the lessons he learned from Huls. “There are very few people out there who really want to help, and he is definitely one of them.”

The secrecy Kelly maintains is a bit ironic considering Huls came from a realm in which information actually is classified. When Huls would take groups of SEALs to train at the Colorado headquarters of the National Strength and Conditioning Association, led by Husker Power godfather Boyd Epley, there were clear guidelines. The SEALs could not be photographed, Epley recalls, and they had to remain anonymous. By extension, there are few pictures of Huls and little information online, other than the news of his hire by the Eagles and a snapshot and brief bio on the team’s website.

How did Kelly find his sports-science coordinator? The answer goes back to those three college friends at Nebraska. The second was Josh Hingst, now the Eagles’ head strength and conditioning coach. The third was James Harris, Kelly’s chief of staff at Oregon, who is now one of the coach’s top advisers in Philadelphia.
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Re: Sports Science 

Post#2 » by Badgerlander » Tue Nov 11, 2014 2:33 pm

http://igglesblitz.com/2014/06/sports-s ... ign=buffer

Eagles players are tested and monitored more than most teams, if not all teams. Remember that Kelly is Mr. Why. He loves to know why things happen, why things work a certain way. You can’t deal with those questions if you don’t have specific answers. Kelly has studied the way his players react to various activities and situations. This is not anecdotal research.

Kelly wants to know how to train his players in the offseason. How should they weight-train? What is the best way to practice in the spring and summer? His thoughts on nutrition and rest may differ during the season or that could be areas where he believes you should do the same thing year round.

During the season, the Eagles have a different weekly set-up than the other 31 teams. They get Monday off and practice Tuesday. They also have a “run-through” on Saturday, when most teams do an extremely casual walk-through. Kelly knows when and how to push muscles, but also how to let them recover for the best results. That is hugely important for players being able to stay fresh during the grind of a long season.

Kelly’s ideas also apply to the players the Eagles acquire. Go to the Combine or Senior Bowl and you’ll see Eagles personnel walking around and measuring the wrists and ankles of prospects. The Eagles are trying to study the frame of the individual players. A 255-pound LB should have wrists of a certain size. If not, maybe he’s carrying too much weight. Or maybe he’s simply maximized how much he will grow. The Eagles gather a tremendous amount of data on players and then use that to help them identify the players they want.

Bennie Logan seemed small for a NT at 6-2, 309. The Eagles studied his frame and felt he could bulk up to 320 pounds, but retain his athleticism. Any player can add weight (except Todd Pinkston, of course), but you want the right kind of weight. It needs to help the player and not slow him down in a noticeable way.

The Sports Science program gives the Eagles an advantage. How much of one is yet to be determined. First, we don’t know a lot about the long term effects. This is the first time these specific ideas have been applied to the NFL that I know of. In 3 or 4 years, the Eagles will have more data to study and they will adjust what they do for maximum results.

This doesn’t mean that the Eagles are going to have the biggest, strongest or fastest players simply due to Sports Science. I wish it worked like that. This is about the Eagles ability to maximize the health, strength and conditioning of the players they do have. Jordan Matthews will never be as fast as DeSean Jackson. That’s okay. The Eagles need Matthews to be the fastest version of Matthews possible. They want to get the most out of him. By having players get into the right shape, the player should have an increased chance to succeed in the NFL. Some players need more weight. Some less. Some need to be stronger. Others might need increased flexibility. Players need to adjust their bodies to their particular position and the skill set it requires.

I do think Sports Science is going to help players extend their careers. This is just an opinion for now. We need time so we can see some results and study what happened. Sports Science gets players to really take care of their bodies. Obviously that is a good thing. But beyond just being in good shape, the emphasis on recovery should help players for the long haul. This has the players pushing their bodies, but in a smart, healthy way.
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Re: Sports Science 

Post#3 » by Badgerlander » Tue Nov 11, 2014 2:35 pm

When Chip Kelly first announced his staff back in February, he drew attention for appointing the league’s first sports science coordinator, Shaun Huls.

While Huls has not yet been made available to the media, there have been noticeable changes at the NovaCare Complex, from nutrition to sleep to training.

Kelly brought many of the ideas with him from Oregon, and a recent Grantland article sheds more light on the sports science angle.

Over the last 37 years, Australia has become the leader in the field, writes Noah Davis. After a poor showing in the 1976 Olympics, the government created the Australian Institute of Sport (AIS) to advance the country athletically. The initiative worked, as the country improved greatly by the 1984 Olympics, and now 190 employees work for the organization, including 50 focused specifically on sports science.

The Australian Football League picked up on the sports science angle, and a man by the name of James Hanisch spent time as the head of sports science with the Brisbane Lions.

Writes Davis:

Hanisch knows a thing or two about excellent facilities. He left the AFL team after Chip Kelly recruited him to help with the football program at the University of Oregon. Kelly left for the Philadelphia Eagles, but Hanisch stayed and now runs the school’s sports science program. He is one of the first wave of Aussies to move to the U.S. to work in the discipline, and he believes more will follow as their services are increasingly in demand.

In other words, Kelly wooed the sports science expert from Australia to Oregon. Now, Hanisch is looking to help the Ducks maintain their competitive edge, asking players to not reveal the school’s secrets when they leave Eugene.

Meanwhile, according to a Forbes article last month, the Eagles recently became one of six NFL teams to sign on with Catapult Sports, a leader in athlete tracking technology.

How does it work?

During the NBA preseason, Jason Kidd wore a GPS sensor from Catapult that measured acceleration, agility and force, providing baseline numbers. During the season, when Kidd was recovering from injury, the trainers had him again wear the device to measure how close he was to 100 percent.

So far this spring, Eagles players seem to be on board with the changes – healthier food options in the cafeteria, sleep monitors, a new training regimen, etc. Kelly seemed to be at the forefront of the sports science movement in college, and that appears likely to continue now that he’s in the NFL.


Read more at http://www.phillymag.com/birds247/2013/ ... P1uq788.99
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Re: Sports Science 

Post#4 » by Badgerlander » Tue Nov 11, 2014 2:36 pm

http://grantland.com/the-triangle/how-a ... g-america/
How Australian Sports Science Is Changing America
For a country of just more than 20 million people, Australia boasts an impressive sporting legacy. Individuals frequently top international podiums in cycling, swimming, and track and field, while its national teams challenge for titles as well. The nation’s basketball squads are perennial overachievers and the men’s soccer team looks set to reach a third straight World Cup. On the all-time Summer Olympic medal count, Australia sits 10th, sandwiched between China, which is enormous, and East Germany, which was cheating.

The success leads to the impression that all Australians are massive monoliths of muscle and might, physical specimens engineered from before birth to dominate whatever sport they choose to adopt. And that’s not an entirely inaccurate portrait. Walk the streets of Melbourne or hit up Bondi Beach just outside of Sydney, and you’ll find athletic bodies everywhere. Sport is in their blood.

But there’s another, more subtle reason for the Australian success: the country’s focus on sports science. The men and women in the Land Down Under have become world leaders in maximizing performance through the use of trackable, sortable, actionable data. The development is very intentional, a move that has its roots in one of the country’s biggest sporting failures. Over the past 15 years, it has changed the face of athletics in Australia, and it’s starting to have the same effect in the United States.

At the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal, Australia won just five medals and failed to bring home a gold for the first time since Berlin in 1936. The embarrassment prompted the creation of the Australian Institute of Sport, a government-funded organization dedicated to assisting and advancing the elite Australian athlete. The influx of cash provided scholarships and training for the country’s best and brightest. It worked. In 1984, just three years after the AIS debuted, Australian athletes won four gold medals and 24 overall at the Los Angeles Games.

Today the organization has a staff of 190, including a massive sports science program with more than 50 scientists working on everything from sports nutrition and performance analysis to physiology, recovery, and biomechanics. There are also huge sports science programs at many of the institutions of higher education, a result of the country’s focus on the discipline and a coordinated effort to improve. “There’s been a little shift. The AIS is working with athletes on a day-to-day basis, while the universities are doing research,” says Kevin Netto, a lecturer in physiotherapy at Curtin University in Perth.

Sports science is in the professional ranks as well, with every Australian Football League team having an affiliation with a practitioner, a university, or both. (The sport also has its own PED scandal resulting from one of these men.) “It grew out of trying to get a competitive edge. In Australia, most of the money is relatively even so teams don’t have the facilities, which are a competitive advantage in some ways,” says James Hanisch, the former head of sports science with the Brisbane Lions. “The question became ‘What can we spend the money on and how can we utilize it the most?'”

Hanisch knows a thing or two about excellent facilities. He left the AFL team after Chip Kelly recruited him to help with the football program at the University of Oregon. Kelly left for the Philadelphia Eagles, but Hanisch stayed and now runs the school’s sports science program. He is one of the first wave of Aussies to move to the U.S. to work in the discipline, and he believes more will follow as their services are increasingly in demand.

People and brainpower are not the only Australian sport science assets finding their way to the U.S. Catapult is one of the companies making a major push into America, and it features clients including the Eagles, Dallas Cowboys, New York Giants, Boston Celtics, Houston Rockets, New York Knicks, and Detroit Tigers. Forbes recently highlighted the company’s OptimEye system technology, which includes wearable sensors that report speed, distance, and other information, and costs an average of $100,000 per year. The sensors are currently banned during games — talks to allow this are ongoing — but coaches and scientists can learn from data gathered during practice.

New technology, of course, breeds resistance, and there’s a bit of a Moneyball narrative developing. Some organizations or specific actors within an organization are reluctant to trust that sports science can have any value. “It’s a challenge to change minds from one mind-set to the other,” Hanisch says. “But if they want it, I reckon they will jump pretty quickly.”

Michael Regan, a product development manager for Catapult, had similar experiences when trying to sell Catapult’s services in the U.S. “We found two schools of thought: (1) I’m not interested, or (2) let’s hear what you do and let’s go for it. There wasn’t much middle ground,” he says.

Eventually, however, most teams find that the science and data provided by the products adds value. “It starts with heart rate because everyone understands that to a degree. As it evolves out, [coaches and management] realize that gives them a good picture, but it doesn’t give them the whole picture. They start to look for more ways to maximize athlete performance,” Regan says. “One of those is to be able to measure on-field performance and on-field workload. The obvious reason for that is to assess performance. The less obvious one is that by assessing what the guys do on the field, you get a better idea of their workload and stress levels. You can actually mediate your prescription of practice and game time to make sure you’re getting the most out of a player.”

(Another reason for the slower adoption in the U.S.: The sheer number of exceptional athletes in America. Regan again: “If one guy doesn’t cut it, teams can always find another. Down here in Australia, we don’t have LeBron Jameses popping up. We have skinny white guys, so we have to maximize each of our athletes.”)

In the end, the constant search for minuscule advantages wins. But it does mean that new research and breakthroughs will continue coming from Australia, where sports science is more of a collaborative effort, than from the U.S., where teams will attempt to make any breakthroughs proprietary.

“In Australia, it’s very cliquey. Everyone knows everyone in the industry. You hear about different approaches and research. Teams there don’t have a lot of money, so they can’t rely on doing their own testing and research,” Hanisch says. “Here [at Oregon], we’re trying a whole bunch of stuff. We don’t want to give that to our competitors. We want to keep it close-knit. We even tell players that when they go other places they can’t tell people what we are doing. It stems the flow of research.”
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Re: Sports Science 

Post#5 » by Badgerlander » Tue Nov 11, 2014 2:38 pm

The Australian Tech That's Improving The World's Best Athletes
When the New York Knicks’ 40-year-old point guard, Jason Kidd, returned from injury this season, the team used a little digital helper to verify that he was up to par. Trainers attached to his jersey a matchbook-size GPS device loaded with sensors to track his acceleration, agility and force. With a benchmark reading set in the preseason, the team got the numbers it needed to clear him to play.

Motion-tracking cameras and super slo-mo video analysis have become standard tech toys in the pro sports trainer’s toolbag . Now comes the OptimEye, a wearable sensor out of Australia that’s being sold as a way to squeeze even more performance out of expensive athletes. It’s made by a privately held firm called Catapult Sports that already has contracts with 250 programs in Australian and European pro soccer, national rowing programs, rugby and Aussie-rules football (proving it can take a hit). Catapult has deals now with 5 NBA teams and 6 in the NFL, recently signing the Philadelphia Eagles and Buffalo Bills, with another 12 expected to sign before football season starts in September. “I realized after spending a season in the NBA that there was no real analysis of what the players did in training, and I was quite shocked,” says Dave Hancock, former training coach for Chelsea FC, now with the Knicks. “GPS had been used in the Premier League for the last eight years.”

The OptimEye system works by fitting a small ‘bug’ sensor unit in a player’s jersey on their upper back around the T1 vertebra, which then tracks the athlete’s place in 3D space. Accelerometers, magnetometers and gyroscopes not so different from what you’d find in an iPhone track gravitational load, distance and direction data. Unlike your phone though, Catapult then isolates the data using filters to pinpoint an athlete’s exact direction for each acceleration or step. For indoor tracking, Catapult deploys internal stadium antennas to pick up frequencies from athletes in real time, giving an indoor GPS-type solution for hockey and basketball teams without satellite help.


Catapult charges teams an average of $100,000 per year, which gets them regular upgrades and analytical software. The sensors had to be designed to keep track of multiple athletes moving at once and to work indoors. The seven-year-old firm has been profitable for three years and expects to gross an estimated $20 million this year. With its current global push CEO Shaun Holthouse expects sales to cross the $100 million mark in three to four years and go even higher if Catapult can start selling its data to broadcasters eager to divulge fun facts such as which linebackers hit the hardest or which NBA scorers have the quickest first step. Wearable sensors are still banned in the U.S. during official game play. The NFL says it’s in talks with Catapult but declined to comment further.

In the meantime, teams will continue to use them in practice and rehab drills and compare the results with biomedical data to get a complete picture of athletic performance. The NFL’s Jacksonville Jaguars had their players answer questions about emotions and sleep habits and referenced the responses against OptimEye data to prove that players perform significantly better on more sleep–a warning to rookies not to hit the clubs at night.

Catapult’s competition will eventually include Adidas’ wearable devices, but the smaller firm is more immune from brand battles with teams getting paid to wear Nike. The company also faces some competition from the video technology offered by STATS SportVU, which is allowed to track regulation games. Catapult sees such systems as complementary: they provide some tactical information but have a harder time tracking motion that doesn’t result in visible movement, like the acceleration on a quick jab step, or the force exerted in a contact play.

Catapult cofounders Holthouse and Igor van de Griendt incubated their sensor idea with funds from Australia’s national sports science lab. The thin Aussie venture capital community showed little interest, so the founders bought the technology back and bootstrapped along with the help of a state grant. The production process is vertically integrated, with design and final assembly in Australia and some mid-stage manufacturing in Asia. Chairman Adir Shiffman has a software background and says the company manages all its analytics software in-house.

With NFL teams flocking to the technology, the company can set its sights on hockey, baseball and even high school sports in the future. (Catapult already lists the Detroit Tigers as an early adopter client.) To fuel that expansion, the company is currently going for an estimated $10 million investment round.
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Re: Sports Science 

Post#6 » by Badgerlander » Tue Nov 11, 2014 2:42 pm

How Chip Kelly is using tech to make the Philadelphia Eagles fly
Kelly’s innovations extend beyond the field and into the training rooms beneath Lincoln Financial Field, too. As Sports Illustrated’s Jenny Vrentas recently wrote, Kelly applies all sorts of science and technology from Monday to Saturday (or Thursday, as the case may be), and he even has the NFL’s first “Sports Science Coordinator” in a man named Shaun Huls. If that title sounds ridiculous to you, express your opinion to Huls at your own peril – he’s schooled in Brazilian ju-jitsu and spent five years training Navy SEALS.
Kelly and Huls have deployed a boatload of gadgetry in their efforts to right the Eagles’ ship. And while Philly is hardly alone in implementing gizmos and data in their player assessments, Kelly’s track record of innovation makes his efforts particularly interesting. The team guards details about this stuff like schematics for a SEAL mission, but if they win Thursday – or, better yet, return to the playoffs for the first time since 2010 – here is some of the training tech likely to be at least partially responsible:
Catapult OptimEye
Image
Catapult OptimEyeWhat it does: Sophisticated motion tracking to generate data during workouts
How it works: A matchbox-sized tracking device that can be placed between an athlete’s shoulder blades using a compression shirt, a pocket sewn into a uniform, or attaching the device to shoulder pads. Utilizing GPS, accelerometers, inertial movement analysis, and heart rate monitoring compatibility, OptimEye records data 100 times per second and logs things like velocity, heart rate, distance, metabolic power, acceleration and deceleration, direction changes, and jumps. All of this is transmitted wirelessly via ANT and graphically displayed for coaches and trainers to make real-time assessments of their players’ training load levels, establish benchmarks for training performance, and monitor players recovering from injury.
“Put simply, our technology essentially forms a dashboard for elite athletes, no different to what a Formula 1 car has always used to show vital information to enhance performance,” says Catapult’s Boden Westover.
EliteForm Integrated System
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EliteForm Integrated SystemWhat it does: Measures form, velocity, and power during weight lifting
How it works: Elite Form’s specially-designed 3D cameras monitor a gym’s bench, incline bench, squat rack, and other weight-lifting stations and record an athlete’s form and speed. The system then generates “power numbers” in real time nad logs performance in a database, which allows for customized weight-lifting workouts based on an individual athlete’s established baselines and goals. Additionally, the cameras provide enhanced video of the exercises themselves, allowing athletes to improve form and technique through analysis.
As Elite Form’s Skip Cronin puts it, “At its optimum, you can create a paperless [weight] room with the ability to train to objective real time metrics.”
Omegawave
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OmegawaveWhat it does: Metabolic and cardiac system analysis
How it works: The Omegawave system includes a variety of sensor hardware and algorithm-powered software that work in concert to assess a broad range of an athlete’s biochemistry. A test administered prior to working out determines the athlete’s relative readiness in terms of heart rate, gas exchange in the circulatory system, central nervous system and hormonal system metrics, among others. This information is pushed to both the trainer and the athlete, as well as logged in the cloud to create a comprehensive database of overall preparedness that can track the effectiveness of different training regimens and identify when athletes can push themselves and when they should scale back their training loads. The end result is more efficient training and demonstrable mitigation of injuries.


Read more: http://www.digitaltrends.com/sports/how ... z3Ils54VZu
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Re: Sports Science 

Post#7 » by AussieBuck » Tue Nov 11, 2014 10:41 pm

See! I wasn't making stuff up when I've banged on about the Bucks being an amateur organisation compared to Australian sports teams. :D
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Re: Sports Science 

Post#8 » by Badgerlander » Thu Nov 13, 2014 3:17 pm

http://www.si.com/edge/2014/11/13/fridg ... kevin-love
Fridge Raider: Cleveland Cavaliers forward Kevin Love
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Already a prolific scorer and rebounder—Love once put up 31 points and 31 rebounds in a single outing—the three-time All-Star adds another dimension to his all-around game by closely monitoring his diet and overall health. Joining stars like LeBron and Carmelo Anthony, who also dabbled in offseason dieting to better suit their bodies to the grind of an 82-game schedule, Love talked about the weight change as a way to stall Father Time. “There’s always something you can refine and get better at, and it’s no different with your diet,” says the seven-year pro.

Lean, mean protein: Love often starts his morning off with a healthy dose of protein, cooking up organic eggs or egg whites. After that, he’ll delve into a piscatorial staple from his hometown or the ever-versatile grilled chicken. “I’m from the Northwest, so salmon’s kind of our thing,” says Love. “It’s easy for your body to absorb and [helps] you build muscle. Grilled chicken is very lean, you can eat it in salads, wraps, sandwiches, as is…”
​Fruits and vegetables: The Oregon-native is heavily disciplined in his diet—Love doesn’t indulge in sweets as much but rather replaces those temptations with things like healthy fruits and vegetables. “I’m a big berries guy,” says Love. “I try to mix in fruit [with my meals] two to three times a day. What I’ve learned is that my body doesn’t need much to get by.”

BODYARMOR: Whether it’s plenty of bottled water or an unlimited supply of his favorite sports drink, there’s always an abundance of fluids on hand for the self-proclaimed heavy-sweater: “Naturally I like to be hydrated, so I’ll have water and BODYARMOR [in the fridge]. I have to refuel and get the proper electrolytes and vitamins,” says Love, a stakeholder in the sports drink company. “As athletes having such a regular schedule, there’s a lot of energy that gets expended.”
Pregame meal: Before hitting the hardwood, Love eats a concoction of shredded wheat topped with almond butter, jam and applesauce with a cup of coffee. The 6-foot-10 forward explained that he likes to "get his fuel pattern going" before tipoff and the mixture offers the right balance of protein, carbs and vitamins to accomplish that goal.
Postgame meal: After a game, Love opts for his go-to staple of a Salmon filet or white fish, veggies and protein shake. Though he didn't specify the reasons behind the post-game meal, a recurring theme for Love is recovery from the beating his body takes on the court. These high-protein foods will certainly assist with healthy muscle recovery.
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Re: Sports Science 

Post#9 » by Badgerlander » Thu Nov 13, 2014 3:19 pm

http://www.si.com/edge/2014/08/06/fridg ... vin-durant
Fridge Raider: Oklahoma City Thunder forward Kevin Durant
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Protein: Before he slips on his size 17 Nikes for a 48-minute showdown, Durant fuels himself with a light pregame meal, which usually consists of “fish and vegetables.” But after a grueling battle on the court, he’ll go for something more rewarding like “steak or chicken and rice.” When discussing his diet, the resounding theme is that protein plays a major role, in any form. “I eat protein bars before [and] in between workouts and games. I need the extra protein to keep my energy up, but I like to go for the most natural ones I can,” says Durant, explaining that his go-to selections are the all-natural STRONG & KIND bars, a brand he also endorses.
Natural Foods: Promoting the fastest recovery time after grueling workouts and taxing games is a top priority for the 25-year-old star, and his approach to nutrition is just as methodical as his game on the hardwood. Protein is a major factor for Durant, but other natural foods are just as important, “I eat a lot of oatmeal and fruit and drink a lot of water. I try to cleanse my body out because it gives me energy and makes me feel stronger.”
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Re: Sports Science 

Post#10 » by Badgerlander » Tue May 5, 2015 8:04 pm

http://www.cbssports.com/nba/writer/ken ... -superstar

How Clippers uber-talent Blake Griffin went from sideshow to superstar

After the loss to the Thunder, Griffin reported for duty at Davis' Gameshape Inc. training facility -- 17 miles from Staples Center, deep inside an angular, two-tone concrete warehouse surrounded by a mix of commercial and residential buildings. Griffin put on a breathing mask, strapped a heart-rate monitor around his chest and went to work.

Davis used the gadgets to do what is known as a metabolic assessment. Principally, he needed a baseline measurement of how Griffin's body used oxygen at maximal cardiovascular output -- and at what specific point oxygen consumption tailed off in response to training.

"It's the most efficient way of getting into basketball shape," Griffin said.

This figure, known as VO2 max, would dictate the type, intensity and length of Griffin's training bursts. The heart-rate monitor -- worn around his chest, like a high-tech belt -- would tell Davis when Griffin achieved his peak heart rate (for him, about 180 beats per minute), and more important, how long it would take Griffin's heartbeat to return to its resting rate after various bursts of activity.

"Basically what that data told me -- and if you watched the games, it made sense -- was that he was very good at really quick, explosive movements," Davis said. "Those things were very easy for him. So he was able to push his heart rate really high, really quickly and be very comfortable doing it.

"One of his weaknesses was how quickly he could recover from that," he said. "He could go really hard and be really comfortable doing it, but it would take him a little longer to catch his breath and recover."

Even with so much data available on NBA players' movements -- the league's SportVu technology captures every player's location on the floor 25 times per second -- Davis needed more. He tracked and timed Griffin's movements during games and found that the average, uninterrupted exertion time between dead balls was 2 minutes, 12 seconds. Most of the activity ranged between 40 seconds and a little more than a minute.

To the average person, this is techno-babble. To Davis, it's the Holy Grail. It means Griffin is performing most of the time in the first two of the body's three energy systems -- the ones fueled by stored energy in muscle tissue and a mixture of dietary and stored carbohydrate. So the demands on his body during an NBA game are mostly anaerobic -- short bursts of activity whose intensity outstrips the body's capacity to provide oxygen to fuel it.

"The data told us what he was burning and how he was using it," Davis said.

Davis, who left the Clippers in 2003 to start his own company, has trained Griffin for about five years; last summer was the first time he'd employed the heart-rate training method. During the offseason, they worked at his El Segundo facility. For in-season sessions, Griffin had a training center built in his home.

When Griffin missed 15 games during February and March after surgery to treat a staph infection in his right elbow, Davis' metabolic lab suffered a setback. For the first two weeks post-surgery, Griffin wasn't allowed to do anything that would make him sweat. When he and Davis picked things up again, they had to start over -- and the results illustrate how this training method has improved Griffin's ability to sustain energy during games.

When Griffin resumed training, it took 2 1/2 to 3 minutes for his heartbeat to return to its resting rate after maxing out at 180 beats per minute. After two weeks of training, Griffin's recovery time was down to 45-50 seconds.

"In a perfect world," Davis said, "we want him to get down to 30 seconds."

To achieve this, Davis ran Griffin through simulated games during which he was performing the same movements -- at the same intensities and time intervals -- he would experience in a real game. They started with a 12-minute quarter, with regulation timeouts, and quickly progressed to two-, three- and four-quarter simulations with halftime breaks.

"We'd warm up on the treadmill and then we'd go out to the court and do defensive slides, closing out, running full court, backpedaling," Griffin said. "And then maybe next time it would be offense -- sprinting into pick-and-rolls, rolling and getting a layup."

All the while, Griffin's monitor was transmitting to Davis' phone, so his trainer could see in real time when his heart rate reached its apex and how long it took to recover. Repeatedly training in and out of these specific cardiovascular zones caused Griffin's body to adapt to the stimulus, expanding his work capacity and reducing his recovery time.

And it made Davis' job easier, too. Any trainer can bark at his client to "keep pushing," but Davis actually knows when it's time to push and when it's time to back off.

"With my athletes, even if they tell me they're tired, I know," Davis said. "And I can say, 'I'm looking at your data right here, you have more in the tank. Let's go."

In watching the data, Davis said he was looking for "flexion points" in Griffin's heart rate that signal when he's no longer comfortable with the exertion level. The goal is to systematically push those flexion points farther and farther out, so Griffin can stay comfortable with longer bursts of activity and recover faster.
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Re: Sports Science 

Post#11 » by th87 » Wed May 6, 2015 5:45 am

Amazing stuff. I'm surprised it's taken so long for teams/leagues to start adopting this. It's not like this is a billion dollar industry or anything.

Some years ago, I encountered this article:

http://archive.wired.com/science/discoveries/magazine/15-06/ff_mindgames

Wayne Gretzky-Style 'Field Sense' May Be Teachable

In the otherwise unremarkable 1984 National Hockey League game between the Edmonton Oilers and the Minnesota North Stars, there are five seconds that Peter Vint will watch over and over. The star of this sequence is Wayne Gretzky, widely considered the greatest hockey player of all time. In the footage, Gretzky, barreling down the ice at full speed, draws the attention of two defenders. As they converge on what everyone assumes will be a shot on goal, Gretzky abruptly fires the puck backward, without looking, to a teammate racing up the opposite wing. The pass is timed so perfectly that the receiver doesn't even break stride.

"Magic," Vint says reverently. A researcher with the US Olympic Committee, he collects moments like this. Vint is a connoisseur of what coaches call field sense or "vision," and he makes a habit of deconstructing psychic plays: analyzing the steals of Larry Bird and parsing Joe Montana's uncanny ability to calculate the movements of every person on the field. "In any sport, you come across these players," Vint says. "They're not always the most physically talented, but they're by far the best. The way they see things that nobody else sees — it can seem almost supernatural. But I'm a scientist, so I want to know how the magic works."

Athleticism is impressive but essentially prosaic, a matter of muscle. But vision is something else, something more elusive. Opponents struggling to anticipate Gretzky's next move often became disoriented, like hunters who think they're tracking a leopard, only to hear a twig crack directly behind them. The experience was so unnerving that players who had to face Gretzky repeatedly exhibited a kind of automatic dread. Describing the feeling in a 1997 Cigar Aficionado interview, former St. Louis Blues goalie Mike Liut said woefully: "I'd see him come down the ice and immediately start thinking, 'What don't I see that Wayne's seeing right now?' "

Such talent has long been assumed to be innate. "Coaches tend to think you either have it or you don't," Vint says. Unlike a jump shot or a penalty kick, field sense — which mixes anticipation, timing, and an acute sense of spatial relations — is considered essentially untrainable, a gift. Gretzky himself once fuzzily described it as having "a feeling about where a teammate is going to be. A lot of times, I can just turn and pass without looking."

But Vint rejects the notion that Gretzky-style magic is unteachable. Before taking a job at the US Olympic Training Center in Colorado in 2005, he spent several years consulting for NASA and the Federal Aviation Administration, assessing the design of complex automated cockpits and looking for things that might cause pilot error. "In the cockpit, indicators will go off, and the pilot has to detect and interpret them depending on what mode the automation is in," he explains. That ability, Vint believes, has something in common with passing a puck. "They're both about taking in, processing, and reacting to complex information," he says.

Vint knows that the skill he calls "perceptual ability" develops, in part, to help a physical underdog against bigger, stronger players. If you can anticipate a throw, you don't need to be as fast. If you can intercept a pass by predicting its trajectory better than your opponent can, you don't need to be as big. Steve Nash, the point guard for the Phoenix Suns, famously never dunks but passes so brilliantly that he has been voted MVP two years in a row. Gretzky was always the runt of his team: small, slow, cursed by a soft shot, and so skinny one commentator cracked that "he could wear a fur coat on Halloween and go out disguised as a pipe cleaner."


So what if MCW sought this guy out? Could his vision and decision-making become strengths?

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