Tuesday, October 2, 2018

Basketball: Explosion, Athletic Explosion

"Go hard or go home." - Every coach ever




Fun look at raw athleticism, Jordan versus Jackson...

Burst. Exceptional players have explosive action. Rarely, a natural like Bo Jackson is a born great freak of nature. Jackson has the All-time NFL Combine 40 yard sprint record, 4.12 seconds...at 227 pounds. 

In a "separation game", burst informs separationAthleticism, size, skill, and mental inputs (vision, decision-making) are game changers.  

How can we measure athletic explosion? 




The three cone drill is a popular metric at the NFL Combine. But what about "playing speed versus timed speed?" Playing speed separates performance from potential. 



Rebounding imperfectly relates to heightHeight helps rebounding but the correlation is nonlinear. Wilt Chamberlain and Bill Russell are at the top, yet Abdul-Jabbar is at the far right. Anticipation, positioning, toughness, desire, and power all contribute. 

Training enhances athletic explosion.


The reality is that it takes several months of regular training to get results. There's no non-pharmacologic shortcut. Start the process early...

Practice reinforces explosiveness. We're constantly urging athletic explosion. "Don't cheat the drill." Volleyball coach Richard Barton preaches INTENT when teaching hitting. "Hit as hard as you can. We'll teach you better control." 




Games reward explosion under control. Russell Westbrook takes off with 5 Gs of force and slams home a tomohawk at 50 mph. 

Anson Dorrance's competitive fury only plays when accompanied by the requisite explosion and skill. 

Lagniappe:
Chris Oliver shares actions off of a "diamond" half-court set.  


Lagniappe 2: Diacope 



Diacope is a rhetorical convention in the form, A-B-A...go, team, go. Burn, baby, burn. Captain, my Captain. Sunday, bloody Sunday. Go, dog, go (Dr Seuss). But the most well-known, irreverent introduction came with diacope in the 1962 video above as Sean Connery introduces himself at 1:09.