Dry Rot
10-12-2013, 10:56 PM
Last year, Port surprised everyone (especially Collingwood :D ) and in particular with their fitness and the way they finished off games.
Turns out their fitness guru believes in heat training, rather than altitude training.
PORT Adelaide fitness coach Darren Burgess says the Power players were "flogged" during their recent 10-day training camp in Dubai.
The players were put through intensive training workouts in the United Arab Emirates as the club searches for ways to improve on its fifth-place finish in 2013.
Burgess is a champion of heat-based training, with his research suggesting it has improved training benefits compared to altitude training.
Carlton, Essendon and St Kilda are three clubs that have adopted the use of altitude training, journeying to Arizona and Colorado in recent times, while Hawthorn have ventured to South Africa for heat-based training.
"We just think the heat offers a similar training environment to altitude, in that it stresses the body a lot further than what it would in normal conditions," Burgess told SEN radio on Tuesday morning.
"Therefore you can adapt to training physiologically better; also the mental benefits of training a lot in heat are pretty substantial.
"Physiologically, heat and altitude, it's probably reasonably similar. But my belief, and through my research, is that heat might just have the edge."
http://www.afl.com.au/news/2013-12-10/some-like-it-hot
Is he right? Do either of them actually work?
Turns out their fitness guru believes in heat training, rather than altitude training.
PORT Adelaide fitness coach Darren Burgess says the Power players were "flogged" during their recent 10-day training camp in Dubai.
The players were put through intensive training workouts in the United Arab Emirates as the club searches for ways to improve on its fifth-place finish in 2013.
Burgess is a champion of heat-based training, with his research suggesting it has improved training benefits compared to altitude training.
Carlton, Essendon and St Kilda are three clubs that have adopted the use of altitude training, journeying to Arizona and Colorado in recent times, while Hawthorn have ventured to South Africa for heat-based training.
"We just think the heat offers a similar training environment to altitude, in that it stresses the body a lot further than what it would in normal conditions," Burgess told SEN radio on Tuesday morning.
"Therefore you can adapt to training physiologically better; also the mental benefits of training a lot in heat are pretty substantial.
"Physiologically, heat and altitude, it's probably reasonably similar. But my belief, and through my research, is that heat might just have the edge."
http://www.afl.com.au/news/2013-12-10/some-like-it-hot
Is he right? Do either of them actually work?