BadMofoPimp wrote:89Magicfan wrote:BadMofoPimp wrote:
Have you ever trained an athlete that skinny? He isn't playing badmitton. He has to bang against NBA bigs for 30mpg for 60-82 games per season without twisting any ankles or blowing out a knee all while being conditioned to not be tired to commit too many fouls due to NBA pace.
Absolutely. Trained first responders, athletes, that skinny. Seen some serious transformations. Seen some turn into straight monsters.
I was pretty thin in high school myself. I’m never going to be 240 plus but at 6 feet I’m pretty impressive. Granted I’ve been training for 25+ years but I out perform people half my age and suffer very small of injuries if any.
The key to injury prevention is little more in depth and specific to individual.
So, you trained pro athletes who play in the NBA level? I mean there is one thing with being able to play, but to withstand the rigors pounding on a bone thin frame for so often and so long, I haven't seen many last long. The vast majority never live up to expectations or rarely hit the court. I mean, Chets legs are beyond skinny to be banging with NBA bigs over those teenagers he is against in those videos.
Again, it’s very specific to the player and his biomechanics. To his physiological makeup. JI didn’t suffer his injury because of just being skinny. He suffered it because of the way he moved on that knee. Strengthening, increase or decrease of muscle size, injury prevention aren’t all of the same variable. They are all separate, specific, variables to an equation.




























