Wednesday, 30 May 2012

Oldskool training VS Nu-skool science


You listen to oldskool music and you love playing oldskool games and watching oldskool films, so what's wrong with oldskool training? Advancements in the field of sports science reveal that trading your morning jog for hill sprints and that bottle of water on the treadmill for a snorkel is what it takes to become a champion.

Having boxed myself, I was sceptical as to whether swapping chin ups and press-ups for this new science malarkey would pay off. But after experiencing firsthand the improvements these techniques make to performance and witnessing the transformation they make to the body – perhaps science is the way forward. The best would be to combine both.

To illustrate and explain the benefits some of these new methods boast, you the reader will become a boxer. At least until the end of this article - so lace up your gloves and let's get ready to rumble!
It's not long until your fight and you need to get into shape...

1.      Cardiovascular training: 

Cardiovascular training is the single most important factor when it comes to training for a fight. Traditionally, boxers decked out in grey rags (think Rocky Balboa), would take to the road early every morning with their hood up and their head down eating the turf with their feet as they jogged for miles on end. 

Enter ‘snorkel training’. Science says that attaching a snorkel to your face while running steps will better prepare a fighters anaerobic system. Whilst looking like a scuba-diver, the mask makes it harder for the combatant to breathe as less oxygen enters the body. The idea behind the mask is that if you can perform under this stress, when it’s fight time and you swap the snorkel for a gum-shield, your lungs will out-do Celine Dion’s – and more importantly be ready to go 12 rounds.


 
2.      Endurance training: 

Endurance is the ability to repeat a series of muscle contractions without getting tired. Like when you have to punch non-stop for an evening. Enter ‘wild snake training’.  Also known as thick rope this exercise is great because it utilises multiple muscles while stabilising the body during the routine. That’s right; it engages the arms, shoulders, upper/lower back, butt and legs. If it’s washboard abs you’re after, forget about sit-ups - look for a rope instead.

Anchor your rope around a fixed object so the rope folds in half and you have both ends in your hands. The easy instructions – whip it around for time. Details – make waves in the rope. You can make big waves, small waves, or alternating waves. Then take both and try to make circles in the rope. Complete this for a timed set. 

You might have seen the guys from Jersey Shore doing this workout in Season 4, Italy. Conventional weightlifting is not the only way to gain muscle mass and it certainly isn’t the best way to build muscle endurance. We need to leave the 80's and 90's and get into a new era of unconventional means.



3.      Strength training: 

How much do you bench? It doesn’t matter! In the fight game, it’s all about being explosive. With snorkels and snakes aside perhaps ‘hammer training’ sounds ordinary. Yet it’s anything but. As well as enhancing grip/forearm strength and improving work capacity, swinging a sledgehammer into a rubber tyre will do wonders for your core strength. You need to develop core strength if you want to punch like a mule. Introducing hammer training into your regime will improve your ability to maintain explosive power, round after round.


So there you have it, you’re almost there. Mix these nu-skool methods with hours of skipping, hitting mitts, working the heavy bag and sparing and you will be ready to take on Mike Tyson. (No seriously, he’s 45 and overweight now!)

Nobody said competing in combat sports was easy. Being in shape at the highest level is the difference between winning and losing. Perhaps change is good and in ‘moving with the cheese’ this should be the time to embrace advancements in sports science even if it goes against tradition.

Whether you fancy yourself as the next Georges St. Pierre or Carl Froch, or simply the casual gym goer – forget about what you know, mix it up and give this stuff a go.




Sunday, 13 May 2012

LET’S GO ESCO!

HERE COMES A NEW CHALLENGER!

I met up with singer Esco Williams a month ago whilst doing work at the Global Entrepreneurship Congress (GEC), and this is what i reported:

Enter, solo artist, Esco Williams. A self professed "Soul Powered Nerd” and the magical owner of a distinct voice that hits erogenous tones with skilful mastery and playful exuberance. 

Esco on the set of his acoustic video shoot - ''Hi Score''
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2DtAVoFLbag

Having already heard of and being a fan of the soulful maestro, when Your Business eZine (YBE) asked me to find out a little bit more about him I jumped at the chance. I didn’t see it as work, rewriting news versus chilling with an upcoming and fresh musical artist was a no contest. In fact, if there was to be a contest it would result in a first round stoppage win for Esco.

I’ve always wanted to speak with an up and comer in the music industry and whether I was prepared enough for him or not I wanted to meet this local and vocal genius. YBE is running a feature on Esco Williams as a follow up to the Global Entrepreneurship Congress (GEC). Monday marked the beginning of a week of celebrations that commend innovation and original thinkers. 

The most significant and appealing difference between Esco and other unsigned artist’s is that he is looking to effectively sell his album before it is released. Through donations on his Pledge Music website he aims to raise enough money to get in to the studio, record his album, have it printed on CD and get it as he puts it ‘’into your ears in no time!’’ 

If this idea isn’t ground breaking enough, he said that 25% of all funds raised afterwards will go to the Make-A-Wish Foundation charity. On his colourful Pledge Music website there is a countdown clock and a percentage number that represents how close he is to hitting the 100% donation target needed to make he’s dream come true. Currently, it is at 67% - I interviewed him yesterday and already this is up by ten! Esco has 23 days left before time runs out. Illuminati folk might think the number 23 is a bad omen, but after he informed us of the amount of support he’s been getting, it’s only a matter of time before he reaches his target.

I was prepared and waiting for Esco in a box shaped confinement that resembled more a music practice room than an office. The place is clean but a bit messy, the bin is full to the top with scrunched up paper but the black leather ‘thinking couch’ looks easy and inviting, the vibe feels right. I hear a ‘knock knock-knock-knock knock knock-knock’ on the door and I know he’s arrived. 

So in walks Esco Williams, fashionably late - only by five minutes, and dripping in swag! The talented vocals teacher as I later found out and Singer/Songwriter looked as if he walked in to a bar to greet his mates. Our embrace was natural; it looked like something from The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air! This was going to be interesting.

The irony is unreal when Esco tells us that this building was the first ever place he and his band practiced music in and more fantastically fitting when he discovers that this was the actual room he remembers doing it in. Esco is as real as it gets, I got the sense that without music things would turn very grey for him, very quickly. Supporting a comic strip tattoo on his right arm it was clear that Esco gave off a totally unique vibe. From his Nintendo belt buckle and fluffy hooded parka to he’s customized trainers, low worn trousers and bright pink and yellow boxers – this is what he was all about. Expressing yourself. 

He recalled that as a fat kid with an afro and a love for comics he would often get looks of bewilderment in the Forbidden Planet store. It’s only when quizzed did people realise this kid new his stuff. Esco emphasised that no matter what the trend is or how people tell you should live, you as an individual have the right to express yourself, be it through music, speech or the way you dress.

Esco's vocals dig deep into the souls of listeners providing a rich R’n’b/Soul experience from a different perspective. Since creeping into music at 17years old, the mild mannered Liverpool geek has made a lot of noise and it can only get louder.

In the modern world of business, it is useless to be a creative original thinker unless you can also sell what you create. Esco is living this out, he’s doing it and without doubt he is set in no time to be on the lips of every music fan in the know. 

He’s going to make it big and everybody should get behind him!

Fans and readers of this story will like to know that Esco has since reached his target and i am looking to do another interview and catch up with him soon, to find out what's next! Hold tite for ''Esco - it's only just begun!''

COMING SOON!