For many people, boys and young men around the country are likely suiting up
for two separate football practices a day for a tradition known as
“two-a-days.” There are three primary reasons for the two-practice-a-day
tradition:
- Practicing in the early morning and late afternoon is a way to beat the worst of the heat.
- Two practices a day are required to get the athletes in game shape.
- Athletes need the extra time and practice to learn and commit complicated plays to memory.
Two-a-day training programs are typically divided
into two sessions, one focusing on technical training and the other
focusing on tactical training. The first type of training session is
referred to as technical training because it focuses on the technical
conditioning needed for a specific sport. Technical training can be high
intensity to improve overall fitness level and refine sport-specific
skills. The second type of training session is referred to as tactical
training because it is structured to teach the strategies and tactics
that all players need to know to function successfully as a team.
Tactical training is designed to be lower in intensity to allow players
to learn the movements so they are eventually able to execute plays
reflexively as a reaction without needing the time for conscious thought
or cognitive processing.
Are two-a-days beneficial for you?
For people with specific fitness goals, could
organizing your workouts into two training sessions a day provide any
benefit? The answer, of course, depends on a number of variables. To
determine whether two-a-day training might be right for your needs, ask
yourself the following questions:
What is your existing fitness level?
What is your specific outcome or training goal?
What do you need to improve to be successful and achieve your goal?
And, most importantly, how much time can you dedicate to your workouts?
If your reason for exercising is to improve your
general health or overall fitness level, then two-a-days might not be
necessary. If the goal is to achieve a specific outcome (whether
performance- or appearance-based), then working out twice a day might be
the most effective way to achieve that goal.
Here are a few examples where organizing two-a-day
workouts might be helpful for achieving a specific goal. Of course,
there are a number of variables that would determine the specific
training program, so keep in mind that this list is designed to simply
provide a few ideas.
The Olympic Weightlifting Lifts: The Snatch and the Clean and Jerk.
Both of these exercises require a high degree of mobility and technical
movement skill, as do a number of the kettlebell lifts. If you want to
improve your technical skill for specific lifts, consider training for
movement skill in the morning and the actual lifting, or specific
strength training, in the afternoon. The morning sessions should be
bodyweight only to focus on improving range of motion, mobility and
dynamic flexibility, while the afternoon workout should focus on the
high-intensity training required to improve strength and power.
Adding muscle mass or developing the definition
required for a figure or body-building competition requires a high
volume of training for both strength training to improve muscle size and
low-to-moderate cardio training to burn fat. A two-a-day training
schedule might feature body part-specific strength training in the
morning to increase lean muscle and definition, combined with an
afternoon session dedicated specifically to cardiovascular training for
burning excess calories and unwanted fat.
Specific Strength- and Power-based Competitions (e.g., Powerlifting, Strongman or CrossFit).
For people training for these types of competitions, two-a-day workouts
could be organized into a morning session using external weights to
focus on specific strength or power exercises that will be an integral
component of the competition. The afternoon session could be focused on
bodyweight exercises to improve core strength, mobility or explosive
jumping power to support the work being done with the external
resistance.
Obstacle Course Races (e.g., Spartan Race or Tough Mudder).
If your training goal is to participate in these races, you might want
to split your workouts into morning runs that alternate between distance
for aerobic endurance and sprinting for anaerobic strength and
afternoon strength-training sessions to improve the muscular strength
and coordination required for successfully overcoming the obstacles.
Marathons, Triathlons or Ultra-marathons.
If your fitness goals include training for pure endurance races, it
might be a good idea to split workouts into two sessions per day to
increase the volume of training required for success. For endurance
races, it might be necessary to focus on a specific cardiovascular
endurance session in the morning for volume training and an afternoon
weightlifting session to improve the strength endurance of the legs and
core muscles, which can help improve running efficiency and stride
rate.
Source Pete McCall MS Ace
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