Water Polo Strong

Water Polo Strong

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It is our duty to educate and promote Strength and Conditioning in the sport of Water Polo. We wish to create faster, stronger, and healthier athletes.

Photos from Water Polo Strong's post 01/29/2026

Throwback Thursday 🏊‍♂️🤽‍♂️

I’ll always be grateful for this chapter.
During COVID, I had the opportunity to help start a high school swimming and water polo program from the ground up — serving as the head coach for both. At a time when uncertainty was everywhere, this program became a space for structure, growth, and purpose.

It was the first environment where I was able to fully apply my training philosophy:
how to develop athletes physically, how to teach movement and resilience, how to build habits that transfer beyond sport, and how to create a culture rooted in accountability and effort.

But what made it truly special were the athletes.
They showed up when things were hard.
They bought into the process.
They trusted me to guide them through something new.

Watching them grow — not just as competitors, but as people — was one of the most meaningful experiences of my coaching career. The lessons from that season still shape how I coach, teach, and lead today.
Forever proud of that group.
Forever grateful for the opportunity.

To all my athletes, I will always be your coach. Thank you for trusting me with your development.

Photos from Water Polo Strong's post 01/29/2026

Workout Wednesday- Eggbeater Warm-Up

This isn’t “just warming up.”
This is building the engine that keeps you vertical, powerful, and efficient in the water.

🔹 Soft tissue → restore motion
🔹 Dynamic prep → open hips & ankles
🔹 Activation → wake up the stabilizers
🔹 Pool work → transfer to performance

Eggbeater isn’t about strength alone — it’s coordination, rhythm, and force transfer.
Train it intentionally and your legs will thank you in the 4th quarter.

💧Save this for your next pool session
🏊‍♂️ Tag a teammate who needs better legs
📈 Train smart. Move better. Perform longer.

01/20/2026

Technique Tuesday: Voodoo Flossing Knee Pain

This isn’t about “breaking up tissue” — it’s about improving blood flow, neural input, and movement quality.
Wrap → move → restore.

This is for general knee pain from overtraining.

2–5 minutes max. Then get back to training.

If the knee starts barking during practice:
• Voodoo floss the knee
• 10 squats
• Walk 10 yards
• Repeat as needed

Still tight?

Floss in the water and transition directly into an eggbeater or breaststroke kick.
Simple. Intentional. Effective.

Train the system — don’t just stretch the symptom.

01/20/2026

📊Case of the Mondays 📊
The Athlete Who Was “Always Tight”

This athlete stretched every single day…
and still felt tight.
Here’s the truth most people miss 👇

👉 Tight doesn’t always mean short.

It usually means the nervous system doesn’t feel safe.
That’s why I don’t chase stretching.
I use a simple system:

🔁 Release → Activate → Incorporate

1️⃣ Release
Reduce tone and threat in the tissue
• Soft tissue work
• Breathing
• Downregulation

2️⃣ Activate
Turn on the right muscles at the right time
• Low-level activation
• Position-specific control
• Restoring sequencing

3️⃣ Incorporate
Teach the body to use it under load
• Dynamic movement
• Sport patterns
• Progressive intensity

💡 Skip a step and the body compensates.

💡 Rush the process and tightness comes back.

This is why stretching alone doesn’t work.
You’re treating the symptom, not the system.

📌 Takeaway:
Mobility isn’t about getting looser.
It’s about teaching your nervous system it’s safe to move.

Photos from Water Polo Strong's post 01/17/2026

🔎Findings Friday: Warm-Ups Matter More Than You Think🔍

A recent study showed that longer warm-ups actually made athletes slower in a 100m swim.
The best performance came from a moderate warm-up, not the longest one.

Why?

Because the goal of a warm-up isn’t fatigue — it’s readiness.
✔ Better stroke efficiency
✔ Higher neuromuscular activation
✔ Improved hormonal response
❌ Less wasted energy before the race

Takeaway:

If your warm-up feels like a workout, it’s probably hurting your performance.
Warm up to perform, not to get tired.

01/16/2026

Throwback Thursday

Early days of WPS at Sacramento Sports Center.
Before the brand, before the systems—just athletes, space, and intent.
We didn’t overcomplicate things.

Warm-ups were Spikeball games, field-sport style dynamic movement, and a lot of problem-solving on the fly. Fun first. Movement first. Buy-in first.

What looks casual now was actually the foundation:
• Get athletes moving before loading them
• Build coordination and rhythm before intensity
• Create environments athletes want to show up for

Those sessions taught me something I still coach by today:
👉 Warm-ups aren’t filler—they set the tone for performance, culture, and longevity.

The tools have evolved. The principles haven’t.
Good days then. Still building better ones now.

Photos from Water Polo Strong's post 01/15/2026

WORKOUT WED: Throwing Warm-Up 🎯

Most shoulder issues don’t come from throwing — they come from poor preparation.

This warm-up follows a simple flow:
✔️ Raise tissue temperature
✔️ Activate the right muscles
✔️ Mobilize key ranges
✔️ Potentiate power before throwing

Jump rope → bands → tissue prep → dynamic mobility → med ball throws.
Nothing fancy. Just intentional.

If you want to throw harder, longer, and pain-free, this is non-negotiable.

01/13/2026

Technique Tuesday: Voodoo Floss (Done Right)

Voodoo floss isn’t stretching.
It’s compression + movement.

How to use it 👇
✔️ Wrap the area with moderate tension (not numb)
✔️ 10 reps through range
✔️ Walk it out
✔️ 10 more reps
✔️ Remove and let blood flow return

⏱ 2–5 minutes MAX
This is a low-grade tourniquet, derived from ancient Kaatsu principles. Longer is not better.
Used correctly, flossing can improve short-term mobility, tissue glide, and joint awareness.
Used wrong, it’s just unnecessary compression.

Compress → Move → Walk → Move → Release
Warm-up tool. Not a fix.
Coach it with intention.

If you want the full warm-up sequence by joint, comment FLOSS 👇

01/12/2026

📊CASE OF THE MONDAYS: Why the First Quarter Is Everyone’s Worst📊

Ever notice how the first quarter is almost always the worst quarter teams play?

Passes are off.
Legs feel heavy.
Shots are flat.

Then by the second or third quarter… everything looks better.
That’s not “settling in.”
That’s your body finally being warm.

For most teams, the game becomes the warm-up.
Swimming gets you tired.
Stretching gets you loose.

But neither prepares the nervous system to move fast, jump high, or react under pressure.
By the time your CNS is actually ready, you’ve already given up position, missed a block, or spotted a goal.

A real warm-up has to prime:
• Short acceleration
• Vertical force 
• Intentional speed & reaction

If your best quarter is the third…
you didn’t peak — you finally warmed up.

Make sure your athletes:
* Are breathing heavy.
* Get on their legs.
* Warm up the skills from the game.

Photos from Water Polo Strong's post 01/10/2026

🔎Findings Friday | Warm-Ups & Performance🔎

Most warm-ups don’t fail.
They’re just poorly designed.

A large systematic review and meta-analysis (Fradkin et al., 2010) looked at 32 high-quality studies and 92 performance outcomes.

79% of warm-ups improved performance.
The rest? Performance dropped—not because warming up is bad, but because the warm-up violated basic training principles.

Here’s when warm-ups hurt performance:
• No task specificity
• Too short to raise muscle temperature
• Too intense → fatigue before expression
• Poor timing between warm-up and performance
• Misapplied loading
When warm-ups worked, they did one thing well:

👉 They prepared the athlete to express the exact qualities needed next.

Warm-ups are not stretching.
They’re not injury insurance.
They’re not filler.
They are performance interventions.

If your warm-up doesn’t respect specificity, intensity, duration, and recovery, don’t be surprised when output drops.
Warm-ups don’t fail. Poorly programmed warm-ups do.

🎥 I’m breaking this down in long form and cutting it into practical clips—follow along if you care about performance, not just tradition.

Photos from Water Polo Strong's post 01/08/2026

Throwback Thursday

In 2020, when the world shut down, training didn’t stop—it adapted.

I was trusted to design the warm-up for the entire ODP pipeline, lead 8 virtual training sessions, and build a full at-home program so athletes could keep moving, learning, and staying connected.

What started as a pivot became a mission:
Take Water Polo Strong online and give kids a safe, structured outlet during a chaotic time.

No pool. No gym.

Still development. Still standards. Still community.

This moment shaped how I coach today—meet athletes where they are, and never let circumstances limit growth.

📌 Consistency > conditions
📌 Education > equipment
📌 Leadership shows up when it’s needed most

Photos from Water Polo Strong's post 01/08/2026

WORKOUT WED | RAMP WARM-UP

This isn’t “just a warm-up.”
It’s a performance primer.

✔️ Raise body temp
✔️ Activate key stabilizers
✔️ Mobilize the joints that matter
✔️ Potentiate power before lifting

Most athletes either rush this…
or skip it entirely — and then wonder why they’re tight, slow, or hurt.

Warm-ups are where quality training starts.

👇
Comment “WARM UP” and I’ll send you my a WPS warm-up for you to use.

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