Adarq.org
Sport Specific Training Discussion => Basketball => Topic started by: fast does lie on May 25, 2017, 06:37:28 pm
-
Obviously we don't know this, but if you were to guess. Here is my guess off the top of my head:
Squat: 1. Isaiah Thomas (he is short, so he needs explosiveness) 2. Blake Griffin 3. draymond 4. James H 5. Dwight Howard
Bench: 1. Kevin Love 2. Dwight Howard 3. David West 4. Nate Robinson (he is in dleague tho) 5. Bledsoe
-
Lebron, Westbrook, & Deandre Jordan have to be on there.. monsters.
-
i think shaq once said that yao was the only player he had a hard time moving in the low post. legs like tree trunks.
-
Here's a handy link : http://www.draftexpress.com/nba-pre-draft-measurements/all/all/all/all/1/bench_press/desc
It has data from 2000 and on i think, it is already sorted by bench performance.
Funny thing, i haven't even heard of any of those guys on top lol
From a quick look, i am impressed by Shelden Williams from the top 10. He is 6'7'' and his wingspan is... 7'4''. That's a huge disadvantage for bench, same body has to travel the bar a lot more. Yet he got 25 reps, beast!
-
Someone that is faster and more explosive has the edge during crunch time, because his fatigued state is still faster/higher than say someone less exposive's fatigued state.
See this is the problem with thinking that basketball players will be super strong. Someone that is less fatigued overall will be in a better position to make smarter decisions and less turnovers than someone stronger who is more fatigued.
Having said that I saw something recently where Steph Curry trap bar deadlifted 400. Not strong for an elite athlete but it certainly surprised me.
-
Someone that is faster and more explosive has the edge during crunch time, because his fatigued state is still faster/higher than say someone less exposive's fatigued state.
See this is the problem with thinking that basketball players will be super strong. Someone that is less fatigued overall will be in a better position to make smarter decisions and less turnovers than someone stronger who is more fatigued.
yup. conditioning & skills pay the bills in most team sports.
Having said that I saw something recently where Steph Curry trap bar deadlifted 400. Not strong for an elite athlete but it certainly surprised me.
very strong for an NBA player his height/weight, definitely. Relative to his BW, it's probably elite level among NBA players. NBA athletes also need some kind of height/bw relative measurement too.. You could be 240 lb with a 900 foot wingspan, making things like T-BAR DL and BENCH much more difficult.
All I know about Curry, is he can hit 3-pointers from ~15 ft behind the NBA 3-pt line with accuracy, in the 4th quarter. :ibsquatting: :ninja:
-
Someone that is faster and more explosive has the edge during crunch time, because his fatigued state is still faster/higher than say someone less exposive's fatigued state.
See this is the problem with thinking that basketball players will be super strong. Someone that is less fatigued overall will be in a better position to make smarter decisions and less turnovers than someone stronger who is more fatigued.
Having said that I saw something recently where Steph Curry trap bar deadlifted 400. Not strong for an elite athlete but it certainly surprised me.
Wow where did you get that info? That is impressive for a skinny nba player.... The funny thing is most big men's routine lil men should do in the NBA. They have big man doing some of the trap bar dl, 1/4 squats, and such.... because they think that helps their standing vj when grabbing rebounds/putbacks....
http://www.cbssports.com/nba/news/stephen-curry-can-deadlift-400-pounds/
I listened to this interview with Ryan Flaherty where he talks about his "force number" being based on the Trap bar DL and how improving that lift is a predictor of sprint times and vert. He has some interesting thoughts on training too and outlines pretty much the entire routine that he uses for people.
http://tim.blog/2017/05/07/ryan-flaherty/
Obviously taken with a grain of salt
https://bretcontreras.com/you-got-gurud-max-relative-trap-bar-deadlift-strength-perfectly-predicts-speed-power-and-endurance-performance/