-May 10th, 2012-
I make my living as a Strength Coach, which means that I’m all for physical testing for lacrosse.
I think it’s important for athletes to know how much they can Hang Clean or how many Chin Ups they can do. Single Leg Strength: Test It! Bench Press, which is my least favorite test for athletes…Test It!
I don’t believe these numbers should be the criteria for picking a lacrosse team or deciding who starts in a game.
But every single player can be an even better player if they improve on their athleticism.
Give me someone who can score 2 goals a game and then increase their power, speed, and strength and you’ll have a better player the next season.
So while I’m all for testing and know the benefits of it (keeping players accountable for their workouts and commitment to the team) it still pains me to know that one of the main tests that most teams still do is the 2 Mile Run.
Absolutely Horrendous!
I know, in a game you will run over 2 miles.
So what?
Will you jog for 13 minutes straight at a steady pace? For your sake I hope not.
There is a saying in the Strength and Conditioning world: “Training Slow Will Make You Slow”
How do you train for the 2 Mile Test? By running slow for a prolonged period of time.
The test goes against what you want to be as a Lacrosse player.
You want to be fast. You want to be powerful.
Shouldn’t you train that way then? Shouldn’t you only be concerned about testing for that?
Hopefully soon teams start to realize not only the waste of time the actual 2 Mile Run test is but that they are also making their players train opposite to how a Lacrosse player should.
I mean, which one of the following would you rather look like as a lacrosse player?
I rest my case!
Do You Agree or Disagree?
Tags: 2 Mile Run, Chin Ups, Hang Cleans, Jogging, Lacrosse Testing, single leg strength
Leave A Reply (4 comments so far)
Paul Bowman
13 years ago
I have been preaching the same idea to my young guys. This just shows more support. Solid read *thumbs up*
Sean Holmes
13 years ago
Thanks Paul. I’ll keep trying to get the point across. Too often I hear “it’s because we’ve always used that test”. It’s frustrating.
Penn
12 years ago
I’ve found that running 2-3 miles a couple times a week has really improved my game as a midfielder. Not because its increased my anarobic ability tremenously, but because its conditioned my legs. My legs still feel completely fresh in the 3rd and 4th quarters when I need them most. That being said, I also run many 100-400 yard sprints as well for conditioning. By doing both, I think you get the best results.