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The Physical Preparation Of Elite Ballet Dancers - Adam Mattiussi

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Manage episode 296178821 series 2897713
Nội dung được cung cấp bởi The Progress Theory. Tất cả nội dung podcast bao gồm các tập, đồ họa và mô tả podcast đều được The Progress Theory hoặc đối tác nền tảng podcast của họ tải lên và cung cấp trực tiếp. Nếu bạn cho rằng ai đó đang sử dụng tác phẩm có bản quyền của bạn mà không có sự cho phép của bạn, bạn có thể làm theo quy trình được nêu ở đây https://vi.player.fm/legal.

Hello and welcome to The Progress Theory where we discuss how to implement scientific principles to optimise human performance.

On today’s episode, we have Adam Mattiussi, S&C coach and researcher for the Royal Ballet where we find out just how the greatest ballet dancers in the world physically prepare for their performances.

People don’t normally associate strength and conditioning and ballet. However, elite ballet dancers have an intense rehearsal and performance schedule, which can consist of 6-8 hours per day of training and practising. That is a serious number of jumps and landings, and if the dancers are not physically prepared, the risk of injury or poor performance increases. In this episode, Adam gives us an insight into how elite ballet dancers train, what the common injuries are, and how he physically prepares all the dancers to ensure peak performance.

1:08 - Introduction to the podcast

2:20 - An introduction to Adam Mattiussi and his journey to delivering S&C to the Royal Ballet

12:30 - A typical week of training and rehearsing for a ballet dancer (all depending on their role)

19:22 - How S&C support is structured at the royal ballet

24:23 - An individualised approach to Ballet S&C delivery

26:31 - Types of S&C training used at the Royal Ballet

32:34 - Common injuries in Ballet

35:17 - Does the artistic nature of jumping and landing in ballet derive specific injuries?

37:40 - Changing S&C support due to injury

40:22 - Career advice to those wishing to get into S&C delivery for Ballet

42:50 - Questions from the listeners.

(42:59- 46:09) - How do you optimise recovery when you have so little time for recovery?

(47:11 - 48:55) - Is there any targeted additional conditioning alongside performing?

Final Thoughts

It was great to truly understand the commitment and how much training an elite Ballet Dancer does for their art, and even more interesting to see how the set-up at the Royal Ballet works in order to provide them with the support they need to ensure peak performance.

I just wanted to provide some final thoughts on some key areas which really stood out to me.

Firstly, just how much training the elite ballet dancers do, especially if they are a principal dancer, often doing multiple rehearsals for multiple shows throughout the week. On top of that, the principal dancers may have performances that consist of sequences involving an intense number of technical jumps in a short space of time. This just makes you appreciate how elite these athletes are and how robust they need to be to tolerate that volume of jumping and landing.

Secondly, because of differences in the schedule between dancer rank, every dancer needs their own individualized approach to support coming from the staff. This seems like a difficult balancing act but I love how Adam has categorised the different approaches each dancer takes for S&C support. He clearly knows his athletes, knows when to provide support and when to try and help work with the team to change a dancer’s schedule to ensure they get enough recovery.

And finally, Adam’s research into an injury at the Royal Ballet has been incredible and I highly recommend checking out his research which I have linked in the show notes. I find it fascinating how certain injuries appear to be more common and can be influenced by the role of the performer and possibly due to the technical demand of the artistic style of jumping. This highlights how important it is to understand your sport and its culture if you provide rehab or S&C support as this knowledge is essential for bringing dancers back to full fitness after injury.

Anyways I hope you enjoyed this episode and if ballet performance is a career you wish to pursue, there is plenty of information here to help you head in that direction and achieve your goals. As always, please follow @theprogresstheory on Instagram and youtube and. It would be awesome if you could also leave us a review and share this episode on your insta story to help the show grow. Also, head to our website theprogresstheory.com and listen to our other episodes. We’ll see you at the next one.

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Mentioned in this episode:

The Science of Hybrid Training

It was originally thought that you could not effectively train for both strength and endurance at the same time because they required different adaptations which were not compatible with each other. It was claimed that ‘an interference effect’, blunted the adaptations for strength if you simultaneously trained for endurance. However, recent developments in sports which require both strength and endurance have really challenged this idea, with hybrid athletes producing impressive performances in both strength and endurance sports together. This had led scientists, coaches, and athletes to rethink what is humanly possible and suggests the interference effect is not as influential as originally thought. But what is a hybrid athlete? What is the ‘interference effect’? And how can we maximize our training to improve at the same time our strength and endurance performance? In this book, Dr Phil Price provides insight into the misconceptions surrounding strength and endurance training by distilling the past 50 years of research and drawing on the conversations he had with great scientists, coaches, and athletes on The Progress Theory podcast. This book is essential reading for hybrid athletes and coaches who are looking to understand the key training variables and their effect on the simultaneous development of strength and endurance performance.

Book

  continue reading

74 tập

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iconChia sẻ
 
Manage episode 296178821 series 2897713
Nội dung được cung cấp bởi The Progress Theory. Tất cả nội dung podcast bao gồm các tập, đồ họa và mô tả podcast đều được The Progress Theory hoặc đối tác nền tảng podcast của họ tải lên và cung cấp trực tiếp. Nếu bạn cho rằng ai đó đang sử dụng tác phẩm có bản quyền của bạn mà không có sự cho phép của bạn, bạn có thể làm theo quy trình được nêu ở đây https://vi.player.fm/legal.

Hello and welcome to The Progress Theory where we discuss how to implement scientific principles to optimise human performance.

On today’s episode, we have Adam Mattiussi, S&C coach and researcher for the Royal Ballet where we find out just how the greatest ballet dancers in the world physically prepare for their performances.

People don’t normally associate strength and conditioning and ballet. However, elite ballet dancers have an intense rehearsal and performance schedule, which can consist of 6-8 hours per day of training and practising. That is a serious number of jumps and landings, and if the dancers are not physically prepared, the risk of injury or poor performance increases. In this episode, Adam gives us an insight into how elite ballet dancers train, what the common injuries are, and how he physically prepares all the dancers to ensure peak performance.

1:08 - Introduction to the podcast

2:20 - An introduction to Adam Mattiussi and his journey to delivering S&C to the Royal Ballet

12:30 - A typical week of training and rehearsing for a ballet dancer (all depending on their role)

19:22 - How S&C support is structured at the royal ballet

24:23 - An individualised approach to Ballet S&C delivery

26:31 - Types of S&C training used at the Royal Ballet

32:34 - Common injuries in Ballet

35:17 - Does the artistic nature of jumping and landing in ballet derive specific injuries?

37:40 - Changing S&C support due to injury

40:22 - Career advice to those wishing to get into S&C delivery for Ballet

42:50 - Questions from the listeners.

(42:59- 46:09) - How do you optimise recovery when you have so little time for recovery?

(47:11 - 48:55) - Is there any targeted additional conditioning alongside performing?

Final Thoughts

It was great to truly understand the commitment and how much training an elite Ballet Dancer does for their art, and even more interesting to see how the set-up at the Royal Ballet works in order to provide them with the support they need to ensure peak performance.

I just wanted to provide some final thoughts on some key areas which really stood out to me.

Firstly, just how much training the elite ballet dancers do, especially if they are a principal dancer, often doing multiple rehearsals for multiple shows throughout the week. On top of that, the principal dancers may have performances that consist of sequences involving an intense number of technical jumps in a short space of time. This just makes you appreciate how elite these athletes are and how robust they need to be to tolerate that volume of jumping and landing.

Secondly, because of differences in the schedule between dancer rank, every dancer needs their own individualized approach to support coming from the staff. This seems like a difficult balancing act but I love how Adam has categorised the different approaches each dancer takes for S&C support. He clearly knows his athletes, knows when to provide support and when to try and help work with the team to change a dancer’s schedule to ensure they get enough recovery.

And finally, Adam’s research into an injury at the Royal Ballet has been incredible and I highly recommend checking out his research which I have linked in the show notes. I find it fascinating how certain injuries appear to be more common and can be influenced by the role of the performer and possibly due to the technical demand of the artistic style of jumping. This highlights how important it is to understand your sport and its culture if you provide rehab or S&C support as this knowledge is essential for bringing dancers back to full fitness after injury.

Anyways I hope you enjoyed this episode and if ballet performance is a career you wish to pursue, there is plenty of information here to help you head in that direction and achieve your goals. As always, please follow @theprogresstheory on Instagram and youtube and. It would be awesome if you could also leave us a review and share this episode on your insta story to help the show grow. Also, head to our website theprogresstheory.com and listen to our other episodes. We’ll see you at the next one.

FOLLOW OUR PODCAST

Follow our Host / Guest


Explore these Resources or Items Mentioned in the Show

Organisations


Academics and academic work


Mentioned in this episode:

The Science of Hybrid Training

It was originally thought that you could not effectively train for both strength and endurance at the same time because they required different adaptations which were not compatible with each other. It was claimed that ‘an interference effect’, blunted the adaptations for strength if you simultaneously trained for endurance. However, recent developments in sports which require both strength and endurance have really challenged this idea, with hybrid athletes producing impressive performances in both strength and endurance sports together. This had led scientists, coaches, and athletes to rethink what is humanly possible and suggests the interference effect is not as influential as originally thought. But what is a hybrid athlete? What is the ‘interference effect’? And how can we maximize our training to improve at the same time our strength and endurance performance? In this book, Dr Phil Price provides insight into the misconceptions surrounding strength and endurance training by distilling the past 50 years of research and drawing on the conversations he had with great scientists, coaches, and athletes on The Progress Theory podcast. This book is essential reading for hybrid athletes and coaches who are looking to understand the key training variables and their effect on the simultaneous development of strength and endurance performance.

Book

  continue reading

74 tập

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