How Tulane Baseball Conditions
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5/1/2007 | Views: 696
By Scott Mackar |
See the issue: May 2007
In a tight ballgame, sometimes the difference can be as simple as turning a stand-up double into a legged-out triple, or working an extra K out of your noodle arm to help the stretched-thin bullpen. Gavin Ozaki, strength and conditioning coach for the nationally ranked Tulane Green Wave, lays out some essential dos and don’ts on being conditioned enough to pull off such moves.
Do
Condition four days a week in the off-season
Train two of those days as speed work, performing short shuttles, and cone and change-of-direction drills
Perform longer shuttle runs and base-stealing drills on the other two days
Have pitchers run distance twice a week, incorporating some interval work
Keep your rest time to a 1:1.5 or 1:1 ratio
Don’t
Begin conditioning workouts without fully stretching
Work on conditioning more than once a week in-season
Eliminate change-of-direction conditioning in-season
Overtrain with running and lifting, and forget about hitting in the cage and throwing
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