Mark Bell's Power Project - EP. 337 - Cal Dietz and Jesse Burdick

Episode Date: February 26, 2020

Cal Dietz has been the Head US Olympics Strength & Conditioning Coach for the University of Minnesota since 2000. He currently works with many different sports teams and athletes and has trained over ...16 different world and Olympic champions, 3 Big Ten Athletes of the Year, 11 NCAA Championship Teams, and a Hobey Baker Award Winner. Subscribe to the Podcast on on Platforms! ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast Visit our sponsors: ➢Icon Meals: http://iconmeals.com/ Use Code "POWERPROJECT" for 10% off ➢Piedmontese Beef: https://www.piedmontese.com/ Use Code "POWERPROJECT" at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $99 ➢Perfect Keto: http://perfectketo.com/powerproject Use Code "POWERPROJECT10" at checkout for $10 off $40 or more! ➢SHOP NOW: https://markbellslingshot.com/ Enter Discount code, "POWERPROJECT" at checkout and receive 15% off all Sling Shots Follow Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast ➢ Insta: https://www.instagram.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ https://www.facebook.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mbpowerproject ➢ LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/powerproject/ ➢ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/markbellspowerproject ➢TikTok: http://bit.ly/pptiktok FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell ➢ Snapchat: marksmellybell ➢Mark Bell's Daily Workouts, Nutrition and More: https://www.markbell.com/ Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/ Podcast Produced by Andrew Zaragoza ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iamandrewz

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Mark, don't you hate it when you're looking for really, really high quality meat? You're in the store and you have only a few dollars in the bank and you just don't see it. You know what? I've never looked at the price of anything before. I just don't even bother. But I do know some good meat and I know some bad meat. I'm looking for good tender meat, so I'm going to go with Certified Piedmontese. I know that much.
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Starting point is 00:00:39 This Jacked and Tan box contains 18 steaks full of sirloin fillets, flat iron, center cut ribeyes, and stir fry beef. Use promo code POWERPROJECT at checkout for 25% off your order. That's over at Certified Piedmontese. That's P-I-E-D-M-O-N-T-E-S-E dot com. Again, at checkout, use promo code POWERPROJECT for 25% off your order. And if your order is $99 or more, you get free two-day shipping. Damn, those cows are tan.
Starting point is 00:01:03 Jacked and tan. Andrew, did you hit the button? Not yet. The button? The baton. It's the one in the back. The back button? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:01:13 Try Control-Alt-Delete. See what that does. Or the TVVCR button. I can tell the tracking's off. I got to hit the tracking. Yeah, the contrast. Take the thing out, blow in it, put it back in. Oh, the old Nintendo.
Starting point is 00:01:32 Yeah, the old Nintendo style. I like that. Oh, boy. Anyways. Nobody knows what we're talking about. No one has any idea. You know, JL asked me the other day. He was like, Jesse, do you know the Contra cheat code?
Starting point is 00:01:45 Up, up, down, down, left, right, left, right. I was like, of course I do. That's a dying breed. Not everyone remembers that anymore. AV select start if you want two players. Just to get 99 lives. See, that's where I got lost because I said it in jail. I was like, no, you got to do that.
Starting point is 00:01:59 That's only for two players. I was like, well, yeah. And SEMA is still on minecraft you can't get caught you gotta look what's a contra i'm really wondering actually what that is it's a it's a game i know it's a game i just never played it never heard of it until this point so we gotta get that they have those little things you gotta get it for for everyone to play here so it's kind of game those kind of old school games it was so easy to die. You know, it really was. So you needed the 99 lives to be able to figure out how to get through that shit. That was too hard.
Starting point is 00:02:29 So talk about Contra. Check. Next thing. Nintendo. Nintendo. Are we good? We're going? We're going, but for some reason, the people live can't hear the audio.
Starting point is 00:02:41 So I'll work on that, but we're all good. Your wires are crossed over there. A little bit. Hey, well, we're here today with Cal Dietz, and it's been absolutely amazing. And then my fat friend, Jesse Burdick, I don't know why he showed up, but he's here. And he looks grosser than ever, so I'm pretty upset that he's here today. But anyway, we're going to talk to Cal, and we're just going to try to ignore Jesse. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:03:02 For the entire time that he's here. Perfect. Cal, thank you for coming out from the freezing cold area of Minnesota. You said it was like negative 17 degrees or something the other day? Yeah, the other day we were. I woke up, my truck registered 19 below. Did it work? Well, it started in the garage, you pull it out, and then, yeah, it was okay.
Starting point is 00:03:22 Even in the garage, it said it was that cold. No, once I pulled it out, in the garage it said it was that cold no once i pulled it out in the garage was actually still five yeah that was a tough one it's hot in the garage huh yeah set out there watch tv with my shorts does it uh make exercise a real bitch or like do you you know how do you guys because like there's a lot of places out here that don't have, you know, heat or air, but obviously out there, I mean, can you even have a gym that wouldn't have heat? No, not even. You can't. It's not possible.
Starting point is 00:03:51 You're going to die. No. Yeah. Yeah. You could die. Yeah. You could literally die. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:56 Good luck. I mean, if your car breaks down and you're a couple of miles away and it's 19 below and you don't have good clothes. Yeah. You got a problem. Yeah. How long you been a strength coach for uh been out the university of minnesota about 19 years probably 23 24 years total shit so you must have figured out some stuff because otherwise they'd fire you right
Starting point is 00:04:14 um i fooled a lot of people you've been tricking people yeah i've been tricking them um yeah i've been uh very fortunate minnesota to stay there that long and build a lot of good things there. I think I've helped change some of the profession. And it's where I want to stay, hopefully. You know, it's not my choice sometimes. At Division I Athletics, they tell you to just take a hike for no reason. Yeah. Right?
Starting point is 00:04:36 So I have been fortunate. So I keep working. I've worked a number of sports, 12 different teams my first year. I tell people I've coached over 200 seasons. Because each year like first year i was there i coached 12 teams right i got and i use that from the perspective of leadership to see different types of coaching styles right so i've been fortunate to have great coaches maybe not so great coaches or they were great in one area and week in another and i was able to assess that and see that so it was good for my was able to assess that and see that.
Starting point is 00:05:05 So it was good for my coaching experience to see that with all my coaching years, not even just there, but other, a couple other places I've seen over well over 200 seasons of coaching. So when you say that, like, uh, how it's influenced you, like who has influenced you, you don't necessarily say, you know, who they are, but the way that they coached or what they did, what, you know, how did it change or make you realize you needed to do something different with the kids or add something, subtract something from your program? Yeah, I mean, I've been fortunate to see like a Jay Robinson at the University of Minnesota wrestling coach that won a few national championships, Coach Brock Lesnar, obviously, in a number where he was an old ranger mentality, right? But the respect these kids had for him, it was, you know, even nowadays kids would, even
Starting point is 00:05:50 late in his career, he was pretty hardcore. And yet the respect that the kids knew he cared, you know what I mean? That was the thing. Like, sure, I've probably made mistakes and maybe haven't handled a kid probably the best in a situation where they maybe have been screwing up. But if the kid knew I cared about him, even though he was in the wrong and then maybe I said, hey, that's not right. We got to, you know, we're going to, this is the situation. You're not, I'm going to throw you out of the workout.
Starting point is 00:06:21 Maybe I shouldn't have. He understood, though, I cared about him, bottom line. You know what I mean? And I think that's where a lot of coaches, that's one thing I learned is, and I've you out of the workout. Maybe I shouldn't have. He understood, though, I cared about him, bottom line. You know what I mean? And I think that's where a lot of coaches, that's one thing I learned is, and I've always cared about the kids. That's why I'm in this profession. It wasn't about me. You know, it was about me helping people.
Starting point is 00:06:34 I like to walk into the arena and say, look at the other team and go, you're not good enough to beat us. You know what I mean? That's what I, I like that situation. It's unique to be in a position to help people and then – but to take it in the direction that you've taken it, I have a lot of respect for it because you are very open-minded to interjecting some of these things that you believe are true and that are going to help people. probably burst your own bubble over the years and probably have changed your own beliefs to arrive at some of these things that you have now, which is great because that's how we end up with knowledge is we end up kind of poking holes in some old concepts. Well, actually, I've stumbled upon a formula that helps me create stuff. So, you know, I may speak somewhere and I give three
Starting point is 00:07:20 things in a 40-minute presentation and people are like, how do you come up with this? They don't know the 100 failures, right? Before, I went through 100 things that got no response. And finally- Like I'm up here today because I sucked at a lot of things for a long time. A long time, right? Yeah. And then here's the one thing that I do I think that helps me create stuff. Let's say I came up with Triphasic or some other method.
Starting point is 00:07:43 I question everything about that method, right? Which then creates problems in, in falseness of that, the solution. I create a solution or it creates a problem. I find a problem that I didn't even know I had if I question everything I do. And then I try to create solutions to make it better. And that's my formula. So I, I question everything I do, which creates problems I didn't know I had. And then I try to create solutions to make it better. And that's my formula. So I, I question everything I do, which creates problems I didn't know I had. And then I just find a solution. And that's where the good stuff seems to come in. And this comes from great researchers and great science. And like the, a lot of people have utilized these methods, but we just don't
Starting point is 00:08:18 see it as much in strength and we don't see as much in the fitness community. Right. Um, I know with the sporting world, I'm more popular because it's very specific stuff, right? And even though, you know, we can get into triphasic, triphasic is not sports specific, but it helps you become sports specific later. Like when I was developing triphasic, one of my coaches, my track coach who helped me develop this whole thing was willing to say, hey, we're going through the isometric phase and our kids 20 yard dash or flying times, flying twenties are getting slower. And he was okay with it because we're training. This is a training period.
Starting point is 00:08:54 And he'd hopes they were super compensating later. And that's what happened is they got great levels of super compensation for weeks after we finished the, uh, ice heavy isometric phase that we're actually making them slower. Right. You know what I mean? So coaches that were willing to hang in there with me during this whole process and believe in, hey, it can't be that bad even if they're getting slower.
Starting point is 00:09:15 We'll get them faster some other time. You know what I mean? So to be able to measure all this stuff and things that I've created over the years is not just me. I mean, everything I create is a combination of my assistants, my friends, the poor athletes that I've trained, right? I mean, I look at a friend of mine, Hank Cranoff, a track coach out of Holland, a sprint coach. Every workout is a biological experiment is the way you have to look at it, right? So everything you learn from and then you build on the next thing.
Starting point is 00:09:47 And people like the way I undulate my weekly model in triphasic. But I stumbled upon it because there was a – with the baseball team, there was a Thursday night beer and wing night, right? And when they came in Friday, I couldn't go heavy. I just did high-volume lower loads that day and just worked the crap out out of them you know what i'm saying so it wasn't just all science like a beer and wing night dictated that that high volume day on fridays so it seemed to work the best then with their training but i think that really speaks to kind of who you are and kind of the fact that you don't let your ego get in the way of things where you're like no this is written on the piece of paper do this you're more reactive when kids kind of come to you and or not only when they start with you you're like okay well what do you have what do we need to add
Starting point is 00:10:29 subtract get better you know take care of and then it's also like hey man i know you're going out and getting hammered on thursday with wings if i try and hammer you and try and punish you it's it's not going to fix anything you deal with these kids as if you're like, hey, I know what you're doing. I'll adjust as long as you give me the effort and you do this today. When you come in hammered and hungover, I'll kind of understand and do this. I think that takes a real belief in what you have in your intelligence and then also understanding. And that also creates a ton of buy-in for the kids because they do see even more like, oh, Cal's cool, man. He cares. He doesn't care that we got hammered and ate 60 wings last night.
Starting point is 00:11:10 He actually let us not throw up in the morning. Like we're going to actually push when he actually asks us to push. Yeah. And that's basically a bodybuilding method, high-volume day, where I'd use to flush them out a little bit. But they were tired from the Monday-Tuesday workouts that were high-intense, heavy. And then Friday was a little bit. But they were tired from the Monday, Tuesday workouts that were high intense, heavy. And then Friday was a little bit lower load and higher volume. So they'd work, but it wasn't like it was that intensity because I wasn't going to get anything out of intensity at that point. Right.
Starting point is 00:11:35 Yeah, absolutely. For a lot of the listeners who probably haven't heard or don't know what triphasic training is, can you explain just some of the few concepts so that they'll be able to follow along with what you're talking about? So when we talk about triphasic, it's really three phases, right? And that's basically pretty simple. And the phases are essentially, the first phase was eccentric phase. So when you do your bench press, you're going to use a heavy weight and you're going to go slow and controlled down, maybe three to five, six seconds, whatever you want to do, just slower than normal, right? And what that does is it damages the muscle. It tears the small muscle heads apart, the actin myosin head, not that we
Starting point is 00:12:11 need to get into that, and it causes a huge immune system response in the blood. So the white blood cells go up. Sounds horrible, right? But what you're doing is destroying tissue that actually gets rebuilt in the next couple of weeks so that you make that tissue stronger and it remodels it. And that's done for two weeks. And really, if you train three, four times a week, if you're going to do bench press, you do two eccentric or four eccentric bench presses workouts in a matter of two weeks. And that's all it is really. And then the next two weeks we do the isometric phase of training. Okay. And that's where you bring the bar down just to off your chest. You need to hold it isometrically for roughly three to five seconds per rep. And then you press it up and these weights are heavy.
Starting point is 00:12:54 So you, you actually wouldn't be able to, most, most people can't press it up themselves. So they need a spotter to help them up. Right. And then, so that's the next two weeks and you can take a week off in between. It doesn't matter. And then you just work on the next two weeks and you can take a week off in between it doesn't matter and then you just work on the next week would be just the normal weights going heavy going fast going light do some power you can jump to bands chain training whatever you want it doesn't matter triphasic is not a program it's just concepts that people put in the any program it works i mean from high junior high coaches even it's triphasic really works when you use heavy weight but even junior high coaches have come to me and said cal i use triphasic i'm like
Starting point is 00:13:30 oh no you didn't not at junior high level but they're like no i just did lightweight but the kids seem to learn the squat pattern better by using that slow and controlled method you know what i'm saying so yeah i mean and look i have an open door policy and people come from all over the world to watch my gym. I had four coaches last year from all the country. And some people walk in and will never ask me why I do stuff. They just watch. And they'll see that single leg safety bar squat with a guy over there squatting on his toes on a single leg bar with 800 pounds and think I'm the craziest mother in the whole world.
Starting point is 00:14:03 Is that squatting on his toes? Single leg squat on his toes. On it. Yep. Yep. And we'll do with the floating heel. We should say floating heel. Yes.
Starting point is 00:14:11 Ooh. Yeah. Okay. And then they see my athletes jump on their toes. And the reason they jump on their toes is I watched sports for many years and couldn't see one athlete performing on their heels. Yeah. We did it today.
Starting point is 00:14:23 He showed me the exercise today. one athlete performing on their heels yeah we did it today he showed me the exercise today and when he's showing me even with just the bar i'm like that is gonna crush my knees didn't hurt at all right i got up three plates moved it around very easy and obviously i could have gone a lot heavier yeah and he was moving at like 40 percent yeah so he when i said you could probably do 700 today he'd be like no way and then he started put three plates on and it was just boom, boom, boom, pinging off the ground. You're like, yeah, there's seven plates in you today. Single leg safety bar squat. And it's really a good hack.
Starting point is 00:14:52 Your other leg is behind you. It's not like up on a bench. So your other leg is part of the exercise as well. Well, the point to that is when I actually put athletes' legs up on a bench with heavy loads, I actually found it kind of screwed up their hips a little bit. Yeah, that. So the first day I did that, and I'm not saying the rear foot. That it's bad, yeah. Yeah, I'm not saying that lifts bad.
Starting point is 00:15:12 I'm saying that lifts bad under super heavy loads with your foot up on the bench because a chiro came to me and said, Cal, everybody seemed to be out of place today. And I went, okay, we got a problem. So then I dropped my ego and I switched it. I put the foot on the floor. We haven't had a problem since. I liked what you were saying, though, about it gives you an opportunity to allow the athletes to overload. And then we talked about a lot of times when it comes to high-level athletes, people are so scared.
Starting point is 00:15:38 They, like, don't want to mess them up because it's like LeBron James is already a great athlete. So I don't want him going, you know, I'm going to have him squat 225. Right. And so I like what you said because you're like, this gives us an opportunity to still overload, still handle a big weight. And then you kept explaining why we were doing it that way and in that fashion. And you said some of the girls, they might only want to squat. When they do a regular squat, they only feel comfortable squatting about two plates. But on the exercise that you were showing me, once they adapt to it, once they get used to it, they might use 355.
Starting point is 00:16:08 Yeah. I mean, when you have a 135-pound girl, 130-pound, who doesn't want to squat more than 225, but she'll throw 365 on her single leg and do super maximal loading. And it's a hack. And then I tell people one of the huge benefits we've seen with some scientific stuff, not only did I see a sports performance transfer, but in the DEXA scans, my females had some of the highest bone density they've ever seen to date. Andrew, see if you can find a clip of it on Cal's – he has a YouTube channel. See if that way the listeners or people that are watching can see what the hell we're talking about here. Yeah, that safety bar. How much of a pushback do you normally get from, say, a visiting strength coach
Starting point is 00:16:48 or maybe someone who isn't necessarily – hasn't seen some of your stuff and they see you do this stuff? I mean how do you get those people who look at it and go like, oh, come on, man. Yeah. Like how do you get that buy-in? I don't care. Well, no. But you know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:17:05 I mean how do you – and I completely understand that you that you don't care you're like look it it works this is you know just look at what we have here this works but what's the what's your easiest way to try and get people to start to understand it is it just like hey you got to feel this hey you got to see this so yeah this is what we're talking about here in sema okay um are we gonna let this play or we do yeah let it play for a second yeah so you're trying to have the athlete shift forward onto the knee and the heel is raised a little bit yep i like that they even have so is that is that normally how you do it with the pad there so that way just in case yep they feel the leg hit the ground if they need to hit the ground yeah and or and then we have the spotters obviously on the side. So yeah, that lift is exactly what we would do.
Starting point is 00:17:46 And actually that one, we'd probably have him push his knee a little bit far forward. And then because he can, he can support that. I like the way he, I mean, he really exploded up. He's doing a good eccentric too. And with that eccentric, are you trying to have the athlete control it all the way down? Because at the last like fifth, he kind of like. It doesn't really matter. That's just a little drop to help him get it up.
Starting point is 00:18:06 Yeah, yeah. It's kind of a stretch reflex. The focus is that during the eccentric phase, we've done all the damage by having the muscle contracted. And then he lowers and he's stretching that muscle part. So that's where the damaging part comes in. Yeah, you were saying you want the athlete to be in such control that they can reverse at any time. Yeah, in that position for sure. Yeah, for sure.
Starting point is 00:18:23 And then the big thing is with that is that I've seen huge adaptations hormonally, like testosterone shoots to the roof because you're using super maximal loading on one leg. So when you have, if Mark did it today with 700 pounds on his back with one leg, like there's a lot of stress, the growth hormone gets released. It's pretty crazy, the stuff. And that's the thing that I think, as Mark mentioned, that most people are worried about hurting people. I've done this lift for seven years super maximally, and I've never had one injury from it, and yet it's a safe way to load our athletes. And I talk about bone density. Why is that important? That's just an overall general indicator of your overall general health
Starting point is 00:19:02 of all your tissues, let's be honest. Old people, what do they lose? They lose bone density and then they start losing everything. You know what I'm saying? So it's just a way like we're designed to handle stress and adapt to stress. And to me, like, that's the big thing. And, and to your point in regards to coaches walking in, yeah, I've, I've, I think I've had coaches walk in and like, you can't squat on your toes. Like nobody else does. I'm like, ah, it's okay. You know what I mean? And the hard part is, is that some of it, and look, none of, none of the training that we do is wrong. I'm just telling you, this is more optimal for athletes is what I found through my experiences. You know, not that you can't back squat with your weight
Starting point is 00:19:37 on your heels. You should back squat with your weight on your heels. Right. Some of, uh, some of what you were showing us, like when, when you were saying like, if you're on your toes and you're doing a single leg movement, I want people to be able to picture this. So for me, if I drive my knee forward and I try to keep my heel on the ground, especially in a split squat, my heel is going to come off the ground because I have a limited range of motion through my ankle, calf, Achilles tendon, or whatever. Then that puts a crazy amount of stress on my knee and my knee will hurt. But with what you showed me today, I was able to drive my knee forward because my heel was slightly off the ground. The calf and all that stuff didn't have to stretch nearly as much. And so it worked great, you know, and I want people to understand when they're listening
Starting point is 00:20:21 to this because they're probably like, that's going to hurt really bad. That's what I thought. I thought it was going to kill. But you also have athletes when they do a regular squat, a back squat, they keep their heels on the ground. Yes, of course. Yeah, of course. And the thing I switched that over with, honestly, it started about 14 years ago. I was walking through the gym.
Starting point is 00:20:40 I was watching basketball practice. And one of the top rebounders in the Big Ten, they were doing a rebounding jump. And I watched the whole time when that ball went up hit the rim came was coming back down he was never on his heels ever and i'm teaching people how how various organizations show them to push your butt back and land on your heels and then they shift forward and get to their toes and jump up i'm like why why are we ever going to our heels that's not what he does on the nobody was was rebounding these basketballs on their heels i'm like i'm gonna pull i'm gonna pull uh landing on my heels or getting on my heels when we jump out of all my training programs we did no knee
Starting point is 00:21:17 pain seven years later which was seven years ago i started squatting doing lunges everything was on my balls of my feet plyos and plyos everything on Everything was on my balls of my feet. Plyos and stuff. Plyos, everything. On both feet? On the balls of both feet? Yeah. Either or. Or whether you're doing a one-legged or two-legged, it doesn't matter.
Starting point is 00:21:32 Yeah. Okay. Most of my stuff is done on the balls of your feet because when we run, we only run on our toes. Okay? I watch sports. Your heel may hit, but that's only because that you haven't completely stopped the force, but you don't perform on your heels in any way. The only,
Starting point is 00:21:51 I used to say the only animals in the world that run on their heels is our elephants. And if you want to run like an elephant, if you want to run like an elephant, go ahead. Right. But then an elephant person got ahold of me and said, Cal,
Starting point is 00:21:59 that's not right. I'm like, I stand to be corrected. The elephants were very offended. Well, yeah. Right. So, so then, and then you're like, I stand to be corrected. The elephants were very offended. Well, yeah, right? So then you're like, okay, but it's just the fat pad touching the ground of the hill. So elephants still run on their toes, people, right?
Starting point is 00:22:14 And that's just for sports specificity. So you don't have to do sports specificity. Actually, I don't even recommend it year round because you'll start to get over training patterns. You know what i mean and that's the thing with coaches getting back to your point is that when they walk in like sometimes everything that they see me do i'm not saying theirs is wrong but they'll think man if he's right they think everything that i'm doing is wrong right so then they have this like and you're going okay no it's not wrong it might be less than optimal because brother i, I've been there. You know, I met a really smart guy that one day and he, I mean, molecular biologist and PhD. Okay.
Starting point is 00:22:53 And we're sitting at a bar. It just happened to be at a bar. Just the first one I ever went into. When this guy walks in, I start listening to him and you could tell his dialect in the bar was different than everybody else. So I said, all right, I got to figure this guy out. So I started talking to him and I'm like, all right, what's your degree? And he's like, oh, molecular biology. Well, I'm like probably a PhD, right?
Starting point is 00:23:12 He's like, yeah. And then he tells me a story how he quit medical school after the first day because he realized there wasn't very many smart people in there. So I went, oh, this guy's yeah. And he's a genius. So, well, the point with him is, is that, and I can go on and on about him, but he told me six words that he says can change people's life. And I'm like, really? And he used them all the time. He says, I'd like to change my answer. So if you got some information now that you think your whole world's correct, but then somebody gave you a piece of information that might change your whole world and you accept that everything you know may be wrong, then if, and it's actually pretty humbling because if you're arguing with somebody
Starting point is 00:23:56 and they give you a piece of information, you go, oh, I'd like to change my answer. And you're willing to accept that they're okay with it. The argument usually stops right there at that point. So, I mean, the hard part is people's egos to say hey me maybe i've been doing this for 15 years and i wasn't right it's the best i got though i'm going to change it though now that i know it's it's it's not you know not correct and we'll try to find the most optimal way to do something and i mean and since the inception of triphasic there has been a lot of different changes and advances and everything. So it's not just a piece of paper and this is that and it's set in stone. It's always a morphing program changing due to introductions of things like RPR and all sorts of other stuff that have come along and pushed things forward.
Starting point is 00:24:42 So I think that's really important for people to kind of know and understand that it should always be changing. If you're not, you're left behind, especially in any sort of an athletic situation. If you're stuck in 10 years ago, you're not winning usually. No, not even close. And that's kind of – I like to say I like to do it for the kids, but I want the kids to win. Right. Right? And know that's why i'm here and look i've never won
Starting point is 00:25:09 a gold medal i've had i've had athletes that won gold medals you know what i mean but i've never won a gold medal myself and i don't care to win a gold medal i want i'd rather right now do you want a gold medal like i don't know what i could win a gold medal in to be honest with you some drinking game maybe but ultimately you know it's it's about I'd rather just be in the background and help them win. You know what I mean? Jesse just mentioned RPR. What is RPR?
Starting point is 00:25:32 RPR is basically a self-care system that causes, it's used as a series of reflexes in the body to make instant changes in you so that you start to reduce your injuries, recovery time. And, um, we saw guys today, athleticism could improve because they're functioning at a higher level now. Uh, instant chain, instantaneous change. Uh, the story for me, RPR, I found it a number of years ago. I kept it quiet. I kept it a secret. When you said you found it, like you found some literature? So I found the inventor of the B-activated system, which is Douglas Hill, a South African PT.
Starting point is 00:26:12 And he's involved in RPR. And what transpired was I saw this and I called a guy named Chris Corfas, who is now, he's also involved in RPR. And Chris was using Triphasic at the time. So I called him up. He's like, hey, I'm like, hey, Chris, this is Caldeets. And he was using Triphasic at the time. So I called him up. He's like, hey, I'm like, hey, Chris, this is Cal Dietz. And he's like, who? And I was like, Cal Dietz. He's like, hey, man, I use Triphasic.
Starting point is 00:26:31 And I went, okay. And, you know, I've heard that before, obviously. And he says, well, I'm a high school coach and I do this. And I'm like, all right. And he's like, yeah, I got some pretty crazy results. He's like, I have six kids over 36-inch vertical with triphasic and RPR and some other things I'm doing. I'm like, what? I'm like, send me a video.
Starting point is 00:26:48 Cause I didn't know Chris at the time. Now, whatever he says, I believe. Right. But like, I didn't know a guy at the time and I'm going, okay. So he sent me a video and he had, he had a kid jump 36 inches with his hands on the hips. You know how many different ways of vertical jump can be. And he had six of those and he had 30 kids over like uh 32 or 31 inches so i was like all right i'm gonna get in my car and i'm gonna see what this guy does i don't care if you're a high school coach if you got that kind
Starting point is 00:27:15 of results i'm and look these weren't 240 pound middle linebackers in the nfl these were 170 180 pound kids but they're still jumping 36 inches and he a, and then you go and he's got pictures of a Chicago bear running down his driveway and Olympic bronze medalist. So he's not just a high school coach. Like I'm not going to fool you. You know what I mean? Like he's not fooling me, but anyway, so, um, I went to the RPR seminar with Chris and, uh, I kept it secret. I didn't tell anybody what I was doing for years. Cause I, I, I was just an advantage of mine. And then at one point, Chris and I got together and said, hey, we need to make this something well-known in the RPR.
Starting point is 00:27:50 So basically two to three minutes before you work out, it resets your body. It makes you feel like a kid again. It's kind of what we – because you saw with Mark how when he came in, I wouldn't say lumbering, but he had a pretty good gait. But when he walked after he did it, it was like he had spring in his step. You could tell there was some athleticism there. You know what I'm saying? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:12 And not that he didn't have it, but it's just that wiredness. You know what I'm saying? It wakes it up. It wakes you up. And that's what we- And it just looks like you're scrubbing a bar of soap on yourself.
Starting point is 00:28:20 Yeah. Because you're like hitting your chest or hitting your shoulder, your inner thighs, your knees, all the different, you got a lot of different spots. You're using like a tool. Just your chest or hitting your shoulder, your inner thighs, your knees, all the different spots. You're using like a tool. Just your hand. Just your hand. You can use tools, but yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:32 I mean, we find that, hey, just do it every day before you work out. And what it does is the reason we felt we had to get into our coach's hands is, so for example, Steve Jones, he was an eight-time state champion football, undefeated, had the longest winning streak in high school football in the country. And he has no physiology background. And we felt that he came to my clinic on a Sunday, went back to his school on the Super Bowl Sunday to get better. He had a clinic on a Super Bowl Sunday, drove through a snowstorm to get there, drove through a snowstorm back, Monday morning implemented it with his school, a few hundred kids the next day. And he showed it to his coaches.
Starting point is 00:29:09 And now that school was doing it, right, after one clinic of an eight-hour deal. And you're going, we can help a lot of coaches. And my big thing is with RPRs, there's a lot of compensation patterns. So as we've talked, I squat in Minnesota when I was overseeing like 500 athletes and we had five kids with knee pains and they're trying to blame the squats for it. I'm like, well, the other 499 doesn't, they don't have knee pain. Like it's not my problem. These kids walked in the weight room with these compensation patterns. And when just squatting was part of the, the problem that was added on. Right. But with RPR, we find that we get rid of these compensation
Starting point is 00:29:43 patterns and we, we have less and less problems. So even though you're a good coach and you've got some problems, you don't get blamed for as many of them. You know what I'm saying? Because you get blamed. Like, it's crazy. Like, anybody's going to deflect it. Hey, I've seen it.
Starting point is 00:29:57 Like, hey, our guys are a little sore. We're done squatting. I'm like, holy buckets. That's not a reason to stop squatting. Would you maybe say that RPR maybe just gives the body access to what it should normally have anyway? Yeah. Something along those lines. Well, and the reason is, is I think we're so stressed nowadays, Mark, right?
Starting point is 00:30:13 Kids are stressed. I mean, even like 10-year-old kids that have a mega weight with heart rate variability and you're going, why is this kid so sympathetic? Right? But it's a self-brought on stress and parents pressure social media nowadays. I mean, we think we have to be perfect all the time. And I think that's a big part of it. There's no doubt about that, right? So it just gets worse and worse and just builds on the compensation patterns, just build and
Starting point is 00:30:39 build and build. And I mean, especially if it's directed or, you know, brought on by one person or one event and then it just kind of just keeps rolling and just keeps getting worse and keeps getting further and further hidden underneath, you know, compensation patterns and, you know, just movement that they're trying to do. And a lot of times they're trying to and they just keep running into the same wall. into the same wall and then to kind of remove that wall for them and just show them that you know there's an easy way to you know access the door that's right next to it is you know it just it just opens up a lot of people's uh eyes really really quickly and they have some amazing results not only in the movement but also just some some crazy emotional stuff and you know even at the seminar that you know the first seminar that i was at four years ago whenever that was there are some people who would do these wake-up drills and they're just like, bro, my eye is – like I'm seeing light for the first time.
Starting point is 00:31:32 It's super-duper bright. We're like we didn't turn any – there's no difference in the lights. There's no difference going on. So it's pretty powerful how little you actually do and what you can kind of get from it over and over again. Can you like explain one? Because I'm still trying to like – you said like rubbing. I'm still trying to put my – how how little you actually do and what you can kind of get from it over and over again explain one because i'm still trying to like you said like rubbing like i'm yeah i'm still trying to put my we can just do them right here yeah so no seriously yeah like basically you can just take your thumb and what you'll do is you just run down let's say the middle of your sternum right there
Starting point is 00:31:58 you feel those bands in there yeah yeah and and those are some part of this but you're going to go yeah go a little higher go all the way down and basically are some part of this. But you're going to go, yeah, go a little higher, go all the way down. And basically, this is part of the breathing one. Just go up and like. Yep. Yep. Just like that. Try to nasal breathe while you do it as well.
Starting point is 00:32:12 Big belly breaths. And there's a series of about 13. And what it stands for is reflexive performance reset. to release the diaphragm and open up the tissue in your breathing mechanism so that with each breath you get a little bit more oxygen. Right underneath the ribs. So right here as your ribs come down, just get on the edge of your ribs. Come into the center. Here, find there, start there.
Starting point is 00:32:39 And then kind of rub underneath the ribs all the way around. Okay. Probably more up and down. Yeah, dig in there. Where it feels uncomfortable is probably right where it makes you okay and and the the thing is we've seen people so the benefits like one of my olympians i had she was a three-time olympian doing a bike workout she always had 160 on the bike workout that was her heart rate with the set watts and if she was tired to go to 163 she knew she was a little fatigued if she felt really good it might drop down to 158, 157.
Starting point is 00:33:06 She did her RPR for the first time, jumped on the bike workout, and the same bike workout with the same watts, she was at 140. And it didn't change. She dropped 20 beats. Why? Because it just put her whole body, it opened up, especially it opened up a lot of blood vessels because she was a sympathetic type of athlete. So she was really stressed and her nervous system was always active and hot. I would say in a stress state, this calmed her down,
Starting point is 00:33:30 opened her breathing up so much that she became so much more efficient that her workout dropped to 140 and that's where it stayed. And then she started climbing up a couple of weeks later, did another RPR session, went right back down the way. And you said it stayed that way for a few weeks. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:44 It stayed right. So one session did that way for a few weeks. Yeah, yeah. It stayed. Right? So one session did that. Now, we recommend to do it to yourself daily all the time. But that was just one of my examples, especially when I first started using it. And it's a full body type thing. You'd like to do a lot. He had like 12 points or so. Yeah, 12 points that you hit.
Starting point is 00:33:59 So it's a pretty, and I did it really fast, but I did it in the gym in a minute and 40 seconds. Was Charles Poliquin messing around with some of this stuff, or was that different with some of the stuff he was messing with? It's all along the same guidelines, I think, a little bit. But this is, like, when I first saw this, it was more of a complete system and an explanation. Like, this explains so many reasons why people got injured. You know what I mean? So, for example, your tendonitis in your elbow, right? In your brachialis. Well, when I saw you walk, the way that you were walking with your hands kind of rotated inward towards me. So I saw your palms as you were walking. I knew that
Starting point is 00:34:36 your lats were off. And then when you have to do back work, your arm will actually do more work. So I knew you had either bicep tendonitis or tendonitis. Bicep tears. Yeah, bicep tears. This is how your body compensates, right? So in order for you to train hard, even though you had compensation patterns, well, something was turned off. So then you compensated, right? And here's the beauty of this. Many people don't understand. They think, oh, you know, you got an Olympic gold medal there, Cal. She's got to be perfect. Like, no, and you know you got an olympic gold medalist there cow she's got to be perfect like no they're the best cheaters in the world with their body that's why they can do what they do
Starting point is 00:35:10 okay so you were a great compensator you just had that compensation pattern eventually that's what broke on you you know what i mean but you were able to perform with it so there's yeah there i've had olympic gold medalists have compensation patterns and still win golds. It's okay. It's going to happen. But eventually at some point, there's going to be a breaking point, right? And the beauty of RPR is that you can help get them out of those compensation patterns so they can perform the way they're supposed to. And they can perform and keep repeating effort, effort.
Starting point is 00:35:43 And like for, so, so you know they're saying okay fitness levels go up but i'm a power lifter well here's the beauty of it i use the example of one of my elite wrestlers he'd do one of my french contrast sets right his heart rate would be 200 and like 50 seconds later he was down to 65 so french contrast is a heavy set of yeah heavy set followed by an explosive set. So it would be a heavy back squat followed by a broad jump or something. Basically for me, it was a heavy back squat set. And then you do four hurdle hops.
Starting point is 00:36:13 And you might grab a 60-pound weight and do squat jumps, four of them again. And then you do maybe four hurdle hops again. So that's a whole complex. And when he was done, it was 200 beats. And then he was 60. I'm like, all right, you can go when your heart rate gets 90. That was like 45 seconds. He's like, I'm a 63, so I can go.
Starting point is 00:36:32 After 45 seconds? Yeah. Jesus Christ. But that is just, now, this tells us why. And I've had a number of coaches agree with me on this. They're best athletes. This is an overall general statement. If they get up to 200, the best athletes can drop their heart rate to extremely low, faster than everybody else. And then they go back in the squat rack, they get jacked up,
Starting point is 00:36:56 ready to go, and then they drop it again. Now, here's what transpires over time. That high heart rate in the squat rack's fine. It's when you get out, if your heart rate doesn't drop it down, guess what you're not doing? You're not recovering for the next set. So as Mark and I chatted, if you're doing eight sets and you have an athlete whose heart rate gets to 200 or 180, and then in between it never gets below 120, by your eighth set, you're going to be fatigued no matter what. But you have an athlete that can go from 200 or 180 to 80 and 60 or 65 in between those eight sets. The eighth set on that person is going to be much superior in each set of training
Starting point is 00:37:32 becomes greater quality, right? That's one of my secrets. People kind of look at my training, say, well, how'd you come up with this? I'm like, like potentiation clusters are using clusters. You're just increasing each quality of each rep if you're trying to get strong you better have a lot of good quality reps to get strong because you can't train when you're fatigued i mean that that goes without saying it seemed i would maybe say it's a little bit similar to like when you were in here power lifting how in between your sets a lot of times you would like meditate and most of the other people in here they don't have that ability like they are maybe they don't have some of the genetics maybe they don't have some of the experience and some of the other people in here, they don't have that ability. Like they are, maybe they don't have some of the genetics. Maybe they don't have some of the experience and some of the knowledge that you have.
Starting point is 00:38:08 And so therefore, they're just thinking about the next crazy song they're going to put on. And if they might need another dose of their pre-workout and they're getting hyped and they're staying tense and tight. Meanwhile, someone like Nsema is probably getting more efficiency, bringing that heart rate back down, calming himself down, thinking about what needs to be done. And then on top of that, every single set, every single rep, every single workout, and you start adding that up over a period of time, that's when you start to really see the distance between the athletes.
Starting point is 00:38:42 I used to – here's one of my mistakes i used to get my athletes like in some of my uh programs so i run a high volume program like you're the five days a week and it's high volume lots of sets and i would get them amped up but the problem is you couldn't sustain it right because you would eventually burn out this is what the omega wave was telling me Where if you just did your work unexcited, in my type of program, a high volume,
Starting point is 00:39:12 you had to do that program unexcited. You went in, you destroyed your set, but you didn't get excited. We used to call it like death ground. Where, hey, you got to move this way because your little sister's caught under the bar. You can't do that all the time.
Starting point is 00:39:26 Now, you might have to do that in a powerlifting meet going up, but you're not running a high-volume program at that time, not for athletics. And the reason Mark and I chatted about the high-volume program, the reason I like it is I feel in the weight room I can do a high-volume program, and I have to do less conditioning then because of the volume. And when I say high-vol volume, we're talking all my – even my little exercises and my big exercises, we're talking I'll do 70 sets sometimes.
Starting point is 00:39:51 Now, we're talking about a rotator cuff is one set, right? So it is – or neck, right? So it is what it is. You could be squatting, as you were pointing out. You could be working a neck in between, rotator cuff in between, right? Yeah, all that stuff. So that's when I say 70 sets. That's where we're at.
Starting point is 00:40:04 But to me, I'm able to work conditioning levels in the gym and not have to condition and beat people up. Because if I got a condition, then it takes away from their strength training benefits. It's another stress, too. It's another different stressor. And that's the one thing, like, people may not pick this up in my book, but I switch to training for time. So when you come to my gym, I don't train sets and reps. I train for time. And it helps me manage your stress. So for example, if I'm going to do a heavy bench for three reps, may take me six, eight seconds. That's the alactic system. But then I go run
Starting point is 00:40:39 in a football program. I might go run 200s or let's say 400s. And that takes me 45 to a minute or even 35 seconds. You're in the alactic system. So what happens is now you're adapting to two different energy systems and you don't reap the full benefits of each of them. Okay. So then let's say I'd say today, guys, we're training for five or let's say 10 seconds. That's the short sprint, the alactic system. Okay.
Starting point is 00:41:08 People say, okay, so I'll train for 10 seconds in the gym. Then what do you do for conditioning? I run for 10 seconds. I push a sled for 10 seconds. That's it. The theory is, is do you think you could get optimal results if you, if you as a person decide to train for powerlifting meet and a triathlon at the same time? It's not possible because you're pulling the organism in too many different directions.
Starting point is 00:41:32 And I saw that out of Europe. Yeah, bulking and cutting at the same time. How do I get bigger and stronger and leaner? You're like, uh. It's not possible, right? And I saw it out of Europe. Like articles from 50 years ago, they were training more time. And I talked to my track coach. I was like, Phil, like, why are they doing this? And
Starting point is 00:41:47 he's like, well, the theory is that you match up the track with your sets in the weight room. So they could not like overlap. So if they were doing short sprints in the track, they did short stuff in the weight room. And I'll be honest with you. I found that people think I got greater results, but I could also do more stress because you could actually do more specific stress than if you do just general stress all over your body, doesn't know where to send its energy. But if you have a very specific stress, and when I say that,
Starting point is 00:42:16 let's say the sets are for seven seconds today, everything in your body adapts to seven seconds, your brain, your heart, your lungs, your vascular system, your blood, everything adapts to sex seconds your brain your heart your lungs your vascular system your blood everything adapts to sex yeah i'm sorry that's a little long yeah i know that is a little long so um but you can go twice so but but you see that you see the theory is that
Starting point is 00:42:41 you you actually don't pull the organism in too many different directions. In each workout. In each workout. Yeah. Yeah. So you can do – but here's the thing. Like my pros, I actually – so hockey athletes, people think, oh, you must do a lot of lactate sets. I actually don't because I found that most of those guys came back from their season and they had cortisol issues because they're in lactate all the time. So we trained only, I switched over
Starting point is 00:43:05 probably about eight, nine years ago to train him for time, maybe 10 now. And I only had my hockey guys do lactate or a lactic set. So short sprints under 10 seconds, some of them went back and got greater results on their lactate threshold because I think we got them stronger and more powerful in their lactate. So they didn't switch over to the lactate as soon. So their lactate testing improved and they didn't do lactate all summer because they got better at the alactic system that's underneath it. Does that make sense? You get stronger. So the intensity is just less of that exercise and their VO2 max went up. It was pretty crazy. And I didn't know why.
Starting point is 00:43:46 I was thinking, but I still don't know truly why, but I just know that I got greater results where we trained under 10 seconds. Because if you go in after 10 seconds, you start to release a lot more cortisol. Okay. And then when it falls, cortisol, insulin levels go up, store fat. And that's why these guys after the season, these hockey guys, they're skinny fat. Like they're skinny through their face, but they got all this fat down here by their belly. You're going, yep, they're skinny fat. And they had that problem, and that actually helped training.
Starting point is 00:44:13 So I don't really train many sets unless it's sports specific for a particular reason near a competition for anything more than 10 seconds. Also, I want to see if we can touch on this for athletes that want to start applying certain things. We talked a little bit about RPR so people can Google that or do you have something in like your triphasic system explaining more about RPR? Is that a whole certification? That's a whole certification that we have right now. We have a, like a, a, a coach's certification and we're coming out with a user model where it's, it's a like $50 model I think think, so that you can take the course in like 30 or 45, 50 minutes.
Starting point is 00:44:48 Yeah. Right. Versus the, the online model. We had coaches. We, uh, we, I think we did a really good job of that. Um, and I, I think it's better to be honest with you because you can replay the information and you have access to it where you go to the course and it's a fire hose of information and you hear it one time, you go to the course and it's a fire hose of information. It is. And you hear it one time.
Starting point is 00:45:05 You know what I'm saying? So, and that's 300 bucks. But I think, you know, for, for the general person, like a dad who maybe, or somebody just wants to take care of themselves, find the individual model. And that's where, that's probably where you would go and, and take that. So it's nothing too crazy. Now, when Jesse was like telling me to do it, he was telling me in a nasal breathing, we were talking a lot about this in the break room. Um, I found massive benefits of that. And
Starting point is 00:45:27 I wish I knew about nasal breathing while in college, cause I think I would have been a much better athlete, but you were talking about all the benefits. So what have you seen, um, when you fix athletes breathing? Cause I think breathing is one of the simple things that can help a lot of power lifters, martial artists, just general athletes that don't pay attention to it. I know it's a big topic, but. Yeah. Well, like hold your breath for five minutes and let's see how that goes. If you don't think it's important, right?
Starting point is 00:45:51 Let's be honest. Yeah. Yeah. Give it a shot. I dare you. Yeah. We'll watch it. We film this.
Starting point is 00:45:57 That'll be great. Right. But like, so powerlifter, well, yeah, but I don't have to breathe in powerlifting, but you breathe the rest of the day that helps you recover. And if you're, if you're mouth breathing, it's a sympathetic breath. It's a stressful breath. Okay? So you never get into that parasympathetic state as deep as you could go.
Starting point is 00:46:17 Okay? So when I say the parasympathetic, the calming state. So you're either getting chased by a lion or you're resting under a tree. Right? So the stress state is that sympathetic state that you're getting chased by a lion or you're resting under a tree, right? So the stress state is that sympathetic state that you're getting chased by a lion. You might run through a briar patch getting chased by a lion and there's a bunch of roses in the middle of it. You will never smell those things. You'll never know they existed.
Starting point is 00:46:37 Why? You just won't pick up that information because you're so stressed. Now you get away from the lion, you calm down, you get in that parasympathetic state. You may smell the roses that you ran by and they still may be on your skin. You know what I'm saying? But that's the point is that there's many times where we don't realize how stressed we are because we're just trying to survive with all the stress that's in our life.
Starting point is 00:46:59 From the lights, the lighting, driving a car, the whole thing. So breathing through your mouth, if you're a mouth breather, like you're in a stress state. A lot of people with PTSD, I've monitored heart rate variability. They're always in a stress state. I find a lot of them are mouth breathers too. You know what I'm saying? That's not, I don't think, I think the PTSD is causing the mouth breathing
Starting point is 00:47:23 because they're in a stress state. I remember at one of the Summer Strong events, you were working with a SEAL who had said that he hasn't been able to breathe out of his nose for like 10 years. He'd fallen down a mountain in Afghanistan or something along those lines. And you actually did deactivate an RPR on him and slapped some tape on his mouth and told him to go for a run. And he almost like, he almost had a panic attack, but while it was, while it was over his mouth, he started to breathe through his nose and he started to cry and then he took off for a run. And then he came back and he's like,
Starting point is 00:47:54 that's the first time I've literally breathed out of my nose in over 10 years. And I mean, that just shows how much stress a, that he was under and B that he was never, never able to recover from now. I mean, he saw some really awful stuff and some awful stuff happened to him. So we're not going to go ahead and say, you know, how dare you be stressed about it, but it just shows, you know, how much your body will react to that stress, even though you may not know about it. And this guy was, this guy was jacked. He looked awesome. He was very, you know, he could, he could do a lot of
Starting point is 00:48:22 stuff in normal. He was a very successful dude as well, but he could, he, he hadn't breathed out of his nose in 10 years. And the problem is that, so, so look, he goes in trains, it takes him longer to recover because his body's in a stressed state breathing incorrectly. So, and then breathing through your nose. Um, I mean, there's bacteria in there that causes a basal dilation in your blood vessels. So your tissue can recover better yeah i tell my athletes to tape their mouth when they sleep if they sleep with their mouth open if you don't wake up with a wet mouth you're breathing through your mouth okay and then you should breathe through your nose majority of time and people want to drink more water because
Starting point is 00:48:56 they're dehydrated but yet if you breathe into a mirror with your mouth you can see all the moisture coming out but you breathe through your nose and there's a lot less moisture. So you don't get as dehydrated during the day. Okay. Um, the, the, you know, athletes who, who breathe through their nose can control their breath and their heart rate much, much better. It's, that's the first thing is I get out of the squat rack, remind them to hit a big breath and walk to their next station. I mean, that's a big deal. They have to, most of my athletes do it all the time. When you say a big breath, you mean a big breath through the nose? Through the nose, into the belly. Yeah. Okay. And I'm a firm believer in breathing through your nose all the time, unless you have to go into your mouth. Okay. Would you, so kind of off topic a little bit,
Starting point is 00:49:36 and this is something that I've always wondered about with the advent and the popularity of CPAPs coming in to that everyone's using, would you attribute, is it, you know, I mean, I know it's not good to stop breathing while you're, while you're sleeping, but I mean,
Starting point is 00:49:50 would you attribute most of the magic that people kind of have from actually the actual nasal breaths and that sort of being able to kind of drop you into parasympathetic tone, therefore be able to get better REM sleep, et cetera. That's going to probably be more of the mechanism than the actual, you know, the CPAP. Well, I mean, I know, I know we to probably be more of the mechanism than the actual, you know, the CPAP. Well, I mean, I know, I know we can, we can, we can just kind of, you know, theorize about
Starting point is 00:50:10 it, but I mean, it was always something that I wondered because I used to use a CPAP for a long time and I hated it. I hated it. But like whenever I could do it and I would have to like knock myself out and I would be able to go ahead and get sleep, I would always feel better. But then I started putting, then I started using the tape and people are like, don't do that. You're going to die in your sleep.
Starting point is 00:50:29 Not only was I able to get better sleep, I lost about 12 pounds in about, you know, a week and a half or two weeks. What? Yeah. And I mean, and it was almost,
Starting point is 00:50:37 it was such a violent swing of a change. I was like, holy shit. Better sleep, right? Oh, a ton better sleep. I feel way,
Starting point is 00:50:44 way better. And your cortisol throughout the, yeah, absolutely. And I mean, this was, this was a really crappy time. This was right when I was, when holy shit. Probably better sleep, right? Oh, a ton better sleep. I feel way, way better. And your cortisol throughout the- Yeah, absolutely. And I mean, this was a really crappy time. This was right when I wasn't able to get a hip surgery that I needed to and I was in a really bad spot. So it was probably the worst time to try and change something, but it made such a huge difference. It bridged that gap for me until I was able to get the surgery and it made life livable for that moment. I haven't slept literally a night without it on since.
Starting point is 00:51:08 So I've always wondered like, really, what is the magic? Is it the CPAP? And, you know, with all, I had the fancy machine, everything. And then I just slapped them duct tape on my, on my mouth and I'm all good. Right. Well, the, one of the big things with athletes too, is they drink so much water that a number of my athletes reported, my pros were like, yeah, I drink a lot of water. And then I get up like two or three times and it ruins my sleep during the night, right? But when you tape your mouth shut and you breathe through your nose, there's a bacteria in there that releases an actual anti-diuretic hormone.
Starting point is 00:51:38 So then you don't get up and pee as much at the night or at all. So we had a three, I had a couple, three, two to three times a night peer that then went to zero and they got better sleep. When you wake up in the morning, bladder's full, but you go. Yeah, it helps block, I think it's called hypoxia. Yeah. I think that's what it's called. Yeah. So it's crazy.
Starting point is 00:51:58 But why are we breathing through our mouths? Because our mouths weren't developed. The theory is that in third world countries, right, that kids breastfeed for a long time and everything's developed in their mouth correctly, so then they don't have those problems. That's the thing, right? Yeah. With the athletes in the workout,
Starting point is 00:52:16 are you having them breathe in and out of their nose? Yes, when they can. As much as possible. Then what happens when they just need to break? They just switch to their mouth. Like if they're sprinting or something, yeah, they just switch to their mouth. But at that point, it's almost a natural switch. You just let that happen.
Starting point is 00:52:32 You don't try and say, okay, at the third time when you're starting to raise up in your sprint, I want you to start to breathe through your mouth. It's just like, hey, man, just go. Just go. And I think that's kind of the part of the magic of RPR. You're not going to say, okay, do all this stuff now. I need you to really think about this while you're squatting, while you're moving, et cetera. It just kind of happens. Happens, yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:51 And they all kind of – the domino effect. They just fall the way that they're naturally supposed to fall. Sure. Exactly. And we talked about overcoaching. People want to coach too much in my opinion and then people lose get you know people lose sight of what you need to do you need to destroy the bar you need to move that thing as fast you can but if you give them 15 coaching points remind them to do something that they
Starting point is 00:53:12 already do well right the bar slows up by 20 told me you studied that yeah well we did an experiment where literally 15 guys they all did the same thing one one one rack we said move the bar as fast you can the other rack they do singles They go from one rack to the other. It took like 30 minutes to do. And the other rack, we give them five coaching points with move the bar as fast as you can in the middle, the third coaching point. They were 20% to 30% slower on the rack with the five coaching points. And I'm like, we got to stop telling them because we're trying to be good coaches. And this was like 15 years ago.
Starting point is 00:53:42 We're trying to be good coaches, right? And I'm going, yeah, we'll remind them to do this, this, and this, and this. And it just doesn't. It would be interesting like an even one rack with no actual coaching cue other than just like some motivation. Right. Hey, let's go or you can do it. You're going to smash this, right? And I think with the one rack that was, hey, move the bar fast, that was our motivation, right?
Starting point is 00:54:02 Right. We said the same thing, but it was in the middle of two other things. It went right over their head, right? Because we were like, do this, do that, do this, do that. And we gave them all five coaching points. Knees out, chest up. Yeah. Right?
Starting point is 00:54:14 I mean, we could also just say that that's just stressing the athlete more than anything. Because now they're trying to overthink and they're trying to feel their way through it opposed to letting it actually naturally happen. Well, that's the big thing, you know, because if you start thinking about stuff. Yeah, you're fucked. Everything slows down. I always tell people the strongest people I know are the dumbest people. Well, it's like.
Starting point is 00:54:32 You know what I mean. No, yeah, I mean. They're not thinking while they're dead lifting 900 pounds. No, there's nothing. No. I mean, you could die theoretically. Absolutely. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:54:40 You know what I mean? But, you know, you sit there and you go, okay, when these people are overanalyzing stuff and you just get all these things on your mind, you know you can't perform. And it becomes automated. Like if I'm playing the piano, not that I can, but if I was, you know what I'm saying? It would be nice. But like each keystroke, I don't have to think about something like that. It just happens because it's automated. If you have to think about something all the time, then it moves to another area of the brain.
Starting point is 00:55:04 And I knew sports was played in the area of the brain that each word on my mouth, I don't have to think. The piano keys, throwing a baseball, you don't have to think about all these things, right? When you start thinking about it, then it goes to a different area of the brain as to my understanding. And I'm just rereading either Why Zebras Have Ulcers and also and Sapolsky actually talks about that that a ton and it really kind of hit with with sex it's a parasympathetic thing once you start thinking about it it goes sympathetic your dick goes soft like it's that's just your the way that you operate if it just it's just naturally there and you just go and you do what nature has told you to do forever you got it
Starting point is 00:55:39 you're cool once you start thinking about it, you're pushing rope. We got to get where you're pushing. There you go. That's a technical term. Yeah. Yeah. I've heard about, you know, but that, that aspect of not thinking, especially I found that, especially when I'm focused on not focusing on it anymore, but nasal breathing, when I
Starting point is 00:55:59 picked that up, I don't know, a while ago, um, it's much easier to not think when I'm doing jujitsu or whatever and in that not thinking everything else is everything's fluid everything's just second nature so if athletes can implement that that i think it just helps you get into that kind of flow state that people talk about it things slow down and you can kind of your the things just happen the way that you know you've been trained to happen like okay cool i know this guy's gonna roll here and he's gonna do this and i I'm just going to wait for him to do this. Sit back, right?
Starting point is 00:56:28 And just pull this collar and there we go. Exactly. And they're like, that guy didn't even – his face didn't even change. Nothing happened. You're a stone cold killer. Wellborn, when we were there two weeks ago, there was another football player he actually played against. And this guy would just like – he was LT slapping himself, getting nuts. He goes, I hated going against John because John looked like a serial killer. against and this this guy would just like he was lt slapping himself getting nuts he goes i hated
Starting point is 00:56:45 going against john because john looked like a serial killer he was just he was just like this he's like and john was a multi-year-old pro oh he was a yeah i mean he was a 12 years nfl guy and he you would just look at him and he would just yep oh yeah he'd just look at you and that's and it was really interesting because that really hit home with john and he was talking about he goes somehow early on he just figured it out. Like I couldn't maintain that sort of crazy state. People are smashing their heads into walls and just beating each other up. He goes, you can be a mass murderer or you can be a serial killer.
Starting point is 00:57:17 Like who's more successful? It's going to be that serial killer because every time you're just going to be a straight stone face. I'm here to do my job and this is what I do. You're just going to be a straight stone face. I'm here to do my job and this is what I do. And the other guy who was a football player, he was like, I hated it because I couldn't get him out of his kind of zen state where he would just look at me and just like. John's really intelligent. Everybody.
Starting point is 00:57:36 Cal Berkeley. Yeah, Berkeley guy. He's a really intelligent guy. But, I mean, this is something that he picked up long ago and he would always say that where he was just like, I'm just going to go murder people. Like, oh Oh my God, that is so much more frightening than somebody's jumping up and down. He's pretty calm until you mentioned Warren Sapp. Oh yeah. And LT.
Starting point is 00:57:52 Yeah. Yes. Yeah. Think about it. He gets emotional. He played with those guys. Yeah. I'm against them.
Starting point is 00:57:57 I should say. Yeah. His best story against LT. He was like, I was handing him his lunch just over and over and over again. Nothing, nothing, nothing.
Starting point is 00:58:03 He goes, and then I woke up on the sideline and I had no idea what happened. And then, you know, someone's waving a smelling salt in his face. He's like, wait, wait, where am I? What happened? He's like, oh, LT just knocked you the fuck out, man. I'm like, oh man, I have no idea. He's like, oh, it was, I was doing so good.
Starting point is 00:58:19 I thought like, oh man, I'm owning this guy. And then he said, I woke up, you know, a couple of places later on the sideline. Well, that's a, that's a hazard. Well, I'm owning this guy. And then he said, I woke up a couple of days later on the sideline. Well, that's a hazard. Well, I mean, yeah. I mean, he's a hazard. He's a hazard for sure. You're mentioning how you don't do that much direct conditioning, but it sounds like your actual training is the conditioning.
Starting point is 00:58:38 And you mentioned to me that you did mention briefly you did like 70 sets, but you do a lot of different exercises in a given workout and your workouts are no picnic, right? I mean, they're fucking hard. Yeah, they're high intensity, high volume. The intentions are pretty high. The heart rate gets up there and then it drops a lot. So, yeah, I mean, it was crazy that like one day I had a group of coaches get together and they called me and I chatted with them on a Wednesday and they're like, well, what'd you do today? And I'm like, okay.
Starting point is 00:59:05 So my kid did like 60 sets and he went out and ran 20s. And it was based upon how he, well, how many 20s you run? And I said, well, he ran until he dropped off. So if he ran a 2.7, he would run 20s at 2.7 or until he dropped off to like a 2.85. So just added three or 4%. But they were like, okay. And then, well, what was your conditioning? I'm like, wait a minute. We so just added uh three or four percent but they were like okay and then well what was your conditioning i'm like wait a minute we just did 70 some bouts at seven seconds in duration like that that that was all he needed his heart rate his his aerobic thing on his heart rate
Starting point is 00:59:38 reading was so high i'm like he doesn't need anymore and we do that five days a week and we we don't stop you know what i'm saying so um yeah and then if we did any too much conditioning any well they're like well why didn't you do any like 300s or something like because the the aerobic enzyme when you kick the 300s in will minimize his ability to recover like the mTOR enzyme right and it offsets it so you're pulling that organism now if i was going to condition him he would need to come actually he would need to come back either five or six hours later or do it in the morning so if you're trying to work on explosive stuff for the day and you try to do endurance stuff
Starting point is 01:00:14 as well in the same day you could be minimizing the results of both things really right and the only way i think that it works well is is for my athletes that need to do both. I've had a few athletes come to me like, I'm out of shape and I need to get going. So they'll do aerobic in the morning, fasted for two hours because that AMPK enzyme will activate for two hours. I mean, there's literature either way, but we would do that for two hours. And then they fuel up because during that timeframe, fasted with maybe some whatever, AMPK activation, some coffee. They go two hours without eating. Then they carb up.
Starting point is 01:00:48 They get some protein. A couple hours later, they hit their weights. And we've gotten some pretty good results out of that to get both in shape. That's the way you've got to sequence it. You can't do it the other way because the weightlifting enzyme, the activation of that mTOR enzyme lasts about 18 hours. So it will stay activated longer, but the fitness enzyme. And it's like with the vegetarians. I think one of the reasons is like you don't, you don't,
Starting point is 01:01:12 you actually don't activate the mTOR enzyme, which is the enzyme for building muscle and so forth, where I think being a vegetarian with that type of protein, it doesn't, you know, it doesn't activate that enzyme. And I do some fasting mimicking stuff. Have you guys ever seen those diets? Yeah. Yeah. So I think that really, it shuts down the mTOR enzyme and that's the one thing for muscle building you need, but, um, to do both be in shape and have muscle, like to mix it up, uh, you got to do your cardio in the morning facet. In my opinion, it doesn't have to be hard, but to burn fat or get in shape. Yeah. Corey Schlesinger, when he was here, he mentioned these fasting mimicking diets. And
Starting point is 01:01:50 just so everybody knows, a ketogenic diet mimics fasting. But this is a little bit more specific where you don't eat that much food, but it's a way to eat something while still mimicking some of the benefits of fasting, correct? Yeah, for five days. And actually eating what they prescribe, you actually got better results than the group, correct? For five days. And actually eating what they prescribe, you actually got better results than the group that fasted for five days. So you get better results. And we're talking about insulin sensitivity.
Starting point is 01:02:12 It kind of resets a number of these things with your body. And I actually, when do I recommend it for my athletes? I only recommend it post-season. So let's say- What's the name of the company that's specific? I'm sure there's more than one.
Starting point is 01:02:23 Yeah. If you search the mimicking fasting diet, Prolon, P-R-O-L-O-N. And what happens- Just keep in mind the studies I think are by them. So- Yeah, yeah. Right. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:02:35 It's always good to keep in mind. But with regards, fasting works well. Right. We know that. Absolutely. And I just know I wasn't going to go five days with fasting right now because it's not that important to me. So I tried that diet.
Starting point is 01:02:45 It worked a little better. But the only time I recommend my athlete to do it because really we're training the rest of the year is like postseason. So they're going to drink for a week. And then the second week, I usually have them do that. And then it sets them up for their GPP, their fitness cycle, where I bring them back and they do their fitness model with the nasal breathing and all my circuits that I do. So I recommend that mimicking fasting diet. And you don't have to buy the kits. You can go to the store and buy all the food too.
Starting point is 01:03:13 I mean, it's on the internet on how to hack that so you don't have to actually buy their. Have you noticed any large differences in performance with athletes when they switch to certain diets? You know what? The low carbs are tough for hockey players because I used to mega wave a bunch of hockey players during the season.
Starting point is 01:03:30 Oh, and real quick, I don't want to interrupt you, but you mentioned a mega wave so many times and we did talk about that, but people are probably wondering what a mega wave is. A mega wave is a device that you put on and it measures your heart rate variability and your brain waves, so DC potential coming out of your brain,
Starting point is 01:03:43 so in millivolts. And it really just gives you an idea of where you're at and how much energy you have and how to train that day. So, um, an experienced athlete, once you teach him can probably feel how they are, you know, need to train that day. Hey, I feel a little crappy. Okay. We're, we're not, we're going to do more aerobic based stuff.
Starting point is 01:03:59 Right. So whatever bodybuilding, like bodybuilding, but then, so, um so to that point, I guess, well, where were we? The hockey players. The hockey players, yeah. And the carbs, yeah. Yeah, they would switch to, their wife switched to a keto diet. Their mega wave readings were horrible. And I'm like, and they're paying me to figure these problems out.
Starting point is 01:04:19 And they didn't tell me they switched, right? Anybody that cuts the carbs out on a high performance sport, like for longer durations, not powerlifting, but let's say a hockey or you're running around. And this is during season. During season. I don't think you can, I just, they have a harder time recovering, right? And I like those. I actually recommend keto, especially during the base training phases, when you're trying to build an aerobic base, I think you get greater results. But once you get going into that glycolytic and you're in season, I think you have to have carbs to recover optimally.
Starting point is 01:04:55 I'd also say, too, that most of the time when anyone tries to do any diet, I mean, these hockey players are human. They're probably like, hey, I want to lose a little chub. And they hear that their wife's on a diet, so they jump on it with them. They're probably just eating less food too. Sure. So obviously the carbohydrate deficit probably isn't helping. But they're probably also just not able to get to the same amount of food,
Starting point is 01:05:14 especially because the team that they're traveling with might not have the nutrition that they are trying to seek in the first place. So they might not just eat and things like that. It might make it really more challenging. Yeah, nutrition's hard. I mean make it really more challenging. Yeah. Nutrition's hard. I mean, cause it's, it's,
Starting point is 01:05:26 it's tough for everybody. I mean, you gotta, in my opinion, you gotta do a series of tests and all kinds of things to make sure that you get it right for yourself. I think it's the one case where you might want to try to overeat, you know,
Starting point is 01:05:36 like if you're, if you're trying to perform on a high level, um, you would probably rather have more nutrients rather than less. You better, you better have more if it's, if it's your job to get a little fat. A while back, maybe two years ago, the last time we were chatting, you were talking about having different nutrient profiles for different parts of your triphasic method.
Starting point is 01:05:59 And I haven't seen anything that's come along. Have you kind of scrapped that because of just the individuality of everything or is there still more isometrics you need more i think it was you're just really load up on the fats and where yeah well no i have it i'll probably produce a book here later during the eccentric phase like i mean there's there's um like various amino acids that you need to recover like you people can look it up right now if you want to go through. And hey, recovery from eccentrics. You look up like prolon, glycine, various types of amino acids. You can look up all the nutrition. And then what's stressors in the isometric phase?
Starting point is 01:06:36 Yeah, I mean, the nervous system is really taxed. So like Rolora during that particular time will help you recover from an intense super maximal loading of isometrics, in my opinion. I've seen it work. So sodium loading at that time is probably pretty important too. Okay. Okay, because I've seen a lot of – I know – I think – who's made sodium loading a little bit more amazing? Stan Everson.
Starting point is 01:06:58 Stan, yeah, Stan. And I remember Derek Woodsky and I were talking in like 203 where he gave us an example of a buddy that did 80s for five because he was cutting. And then he sodium load the next day. And he did like – or like in two days later, he did like 140s for 12 on dumbbell. And he did – that's as good as he could get. It was like 80s for six or five, right? And I started playing with sodium loading back in 204. And I'm like, holy, there's something to this.
Starting point is 01:07:21 You know what I mean? Especially athletes that don't eat enough sodium. Oh, you just can't. Well, it's the signal coming out of the brain to tell the muscles to fire. It's all involved, potassium,
Starting point is 01:07:32 sodium, you know what I mean? So, yeah, but, so, so, and then different phases,
Starting point is 01:07:38 obviously like you can go into various energy system stuff, but yeah, I have a whole, whole thing about foods. Like I'll tell my athletes, because I can't give them those amino acids, so I tell them to eat chicken wings during the eccentric phase, right?
Starting point is 01:07:50 Because of the cartilage and yeah, right? There you go. So that has more of the- We just need it in reason to eat more chicken wings, Cal. That's all I was really asking. Do eccentrics. I wish I would have just got right to it. Yeah, right.
Starting point is 01:08:01 Sorry about that. Roundabout way. You were mentioning having a way of testing athletes to see whether they need to work more on speed or more on power. Can you elaborate on that? Yeah. So it's a free website. It's Performance Made Simple. And basically I took 20 years of various numbers of the 10 and 20-yard dash, which is the key indicator.
Starting point is 01:08:22 And I have timing gates that do that. 20-yard dash, which is the key indicator. And I have timing gates that do that. If you don't have those and you could film a side view and kind of do it with a particular video, you could download an app that tells you the time. And they run a 10 and 20. And I was able to match up, Mark, that two kids had the same time. One kid was strong, one kid was weak. And it told me that a kid, due to their 10 time based upon their 20 needed more strength so i took all these numbers and started comparing i mean we're talking kids from 15 years ago and he ran this 10 time which is still fast and i'm looking at him going and but his back squat was only 270 and then two years later he ran a 10 time or 20 time. It was a little faster, but his 10 time told me that he needed more speed and he back squat
Starting point is 01:09:08 three 80 now three 90. So he was strong enough at 180 pounds. So what I've done is, uh, I ran, I have a formula on that website performance made simple that you can plug in the 10 and the 20 time and see it'll prescribe to you whether an athlete needs strength, power, or speed. So here's the scary part with this whole thing is you track your athletes through, and I had coaches do this. So they'd say, okay, every two weeks they test the kids 20 to see what they're going
Starting point is 01:09:38 to train that week. So my kids run in on Monday morning, they'll run a 20. They'll have all these programs printed out. And whatever that formula tells me, that's the training they do that week. What it is, is it's a rate limiter indicator. So your weakest link in the state of your body right now, it tells me what it is. And that's what we train for the next two weeks. So with this being said, the typical periodization model, do you know how many? So this thing just told me what they need to do.
Starting point is 01:10:08 You keep track and then you watch what their plan was after the summer's over. The typical periodization model that we've all been taught for the last 60 years. Do you know how accurate it was? This was me, my athletes and other athletes, other coaches. It was good. 20%. Oh. 20%. Oh. 20%.
Starting point is 01:10:27 And that's what keeps me up at night. Like, am I doing the right thing? And after this summer, I'm 20-some years in the game and realized I was only right 20%. The typical periodization model that I use for everybody uses in Triphasic Follows was accurate 20% of the time. Guess what happened? I had 30% of our athletes and other coaches, athletes, roughly. If you would have flipped the model and did it reverse, it would have been a
Starting point is 01:10:52 better model. We would have been more accurate if we did what the experts told us to do reversed. So then there's another 50% in the middle. They were just a mixture. So they'd go strength and they'd go speed and they'd go power. And you may see some patterning in there over time but every two weeks we change your program based upon that and the beauty of it is i have two athletes that ran the same time but they had different programs and that's when they thought oh this is individual of course yeah it's individual i found it really interesting when you're on the glute ham raise you were like this is strength this is this is power, and this is speed. And strength was all the way on the outside and your foot placement was all the way on the inside for speed.
Starting point is 01:11:31 Why the different – what's that representing? Well, what happens is when you run and you accelerate, you have a wider stance. So coming out of the blocks, you have a wider stance. They take up almost the whole lane. Sometimes people get DQ'd for it with the bigger legs. But you're traveling slower at less speeds and you're trying to accelerate more weight. So in the glute ham when we do that, that's why we would do the glute ham at a wider stance during a strength phase. But then a speed phase, your foot's more underneath you.
Starting point is 01:11:58 And that's why we have a more narrow stance at that phase. And then the power phase would be in between those. So we split that difference. Yeah. So what I'll basically do for people at that phase. And then the power phase would be in between those. So we split that difference. Yeah. So that's, so what I'm, I'll basically do for people at some point. Now I've released all these training zones too. It's on that website, but I'll also match up the key exercises that I think are important for each zone.
Starting point is 01:12:17 So if you say, all right, I got to train in the speed zones. Here's the key exercises that have developed. Like, like for example, for hamstring and glutes if have you guys seen like people laying on bands they put them across the rack and they do that flutter kick i think there's one on barstool sports that said it was like a sperm or something to me i have about 400 of those exercises used but to me that's the speed one for the hamstring and glutes during my speed phase that That's exactly the exercise I do. I haven't seen the exercise.
Starting point is 01:12:46 I need to see it. I actually used to call them temper tantrums. Yeah. And it's something that I never, I did this a long, long time ago. I would lay on the ground and put a Swiss ball kind of at my butt and I would just kind of do this because I would just feel like, God, I just don't have any sort of like that extension is really, really gone. And I was a sumo deadlifter.
Starting point is 01:13:02 And then I would lay down on the ground, put a, have somebody hold aiss ball and i would just kind of kick it with my heels for as long as i could until i felt like i would um like the power would just kind of you know go down and then i'm trying to do three four five phases of that and or uh sets of it excuse me over a two week period i felt when i hit that third or fourth week i could really start to feel my speed on my on all my pulls start to come back yeah so it was really cool to kind of see that come out. And I mean, I think that was born via triphasic stuff. When that kind of came out, I was like, oh my God, I actually might know a little bit of what I'm doing here. This is actually kind of cool. So the key is that, and people are like, well, you know, this tool is kind of like cheating. I'm like, well, what do you mean?
Starting point is 01:13:45 They're like, yeah, well, it takes your weakest link and it tells you in the nutrient. I'm like, well, the goal is to win. It's not cheating, right? I don't know how it's cheating. I just identified what your weakest link is and then we fix it. So what you do is you actually progress athletes faster. So what we saw was that they got faster over the course of the summer than they've ever done before. And then we actually got that difference between where they started and ended was much more faster, larger gap because they're more complete now.
Starting point is 01:14:08 So it seems like it's taken us kind of many decades to get out of the dark ages of strength training and have people finally start to identify and realize that a lot of the old methods that we had were incorrect. And you showed us there with the 20% inaccuracy. But do you think that might might be something that has led us to kind of put our hands up and say hey bro like I don't think sports specific stuff matters at all like why are we you know why are we trying to worry about what position we're we're in on a field someone like louis simmons has been quoted as saying like don't really worry about that shit just make your athletes strong It sounds like you have a difference of opinion because you're still,
Starting point is 01:14:46 you're saying that it looked like the methods that were being utilized were maybe incorrect and not necessarily the exercises. Correct. Now, you still need to get strong, right? We know this. But you need to get as strong as fast as you possibly can and then do the more specific stuff and to me sports specificity doing a rdl with a one-arm dumbbell and like one leg i'm like that's not sports
Starting point is 01:15:13 specific like it's slow i like fast movements plyos is more sport specific to me right the way you were squatting with a lighter load um i know that my track athletes when i used heavy weights moved slower, especially when they were supposed to run fast. Now, people say, well, what's his name? So-and-so. He would do three heavy sets. Ben Johnson squatted 600 pounds.
Starting point is 01:15:33 Right. But it was one or two sets, which caused a huge hormone release, which helped him run faster. It wasn't the squat itself. You know what I'm saying? So, yeah. And not that Louie's wrong, but you need to get your athletes faster. But I'm just telling you, here's the hard part.
Starting point is 01:15:49 I see a guy who out there says, oh, I'm a sports, I'm a strength coach. And you need to come to me to learn strength coaching. I'm like, okay. But you've never trained one athlete. You squatted 1,000 pounds. And I have a whole team full of women that will beat your ass in a 20-yard dash. Because I see how you walk. You can't even walk. How are you going to in a 20-yard dash because i see how you walk you can't even walk how are you going to run a 20-yard dash brother my whole team of 20 women will smoke
Starting point is 01:16:09 you in a pro agility and a 20-yard dash so who like you know what i mean and it's it's crazy because they make this claim that i'm an expert strength coach like well you may be a good strength coach or expert for power lifting right but not for training olymp medalists. Like, I don't care. Yeah, and it's just like, okay, well, that's good. But if you want to put it on YouTube and we can run a 20-yard dash against any of my women, they'll smoke your ass in a 20-yard dash because they're running 2.8s. I don't think your chunk ass can run a dash. Well, I think a lot of times, too, people are training so hard toward one thing
Starting point is 01:16:42 as to the detriment of other things. Of course. You know, the detriment of other things. Of course. I love strength training. I love training the way that I train. But it's been to the detriment of other attributes that I may have been able to keep or improve upon. Or any athletic quality, right? You want to try to squat a grand. It's not going to help your golf swing.
Starting point is 01:17:00 There's nothing about it. You know what I mean? It's just two different spectrums. Andrew. Right? That's false news, right? Right. He's got a fake news about my golf swing.
Starting point is 01:17:09 It's not very pretty. Watching Mark, his golf swing, that was like the most. All right, all right. Is it reminiscent of like Charles Barkley when he swings? Yeah. Because that. Well, no, a little bit smoother. Look that up.
Starting point is 01:17:20 Yeah, that's really bad. That is. But yeah, you're right. So, and not that I'm lifting on like a coach, because I know a lot of great power lifting guys that are great strength coaches. Like I'm not getting there. But when you make that claim and you've never trained an athlete and you think you got all the answers and you want people to do it a certain way.
Starting point is 01:17:37 And Mark, when I say 20%, like that model was still good for 20% of the athletes. That was optimal. But we've messed up or we've been less than optimal the other 80% is what I'm saying. So we were right for 20% of them. But the other 80, we were less than optimal. Let's just optimize it all. And look, use that tool. And if you find a better way, just let me know.
Starting point is 01:18:00 That's all I ask. Like I don't keep stuff secret. I think I share a lot of information. I just want to make sure that my athletes are getting the best results. And I think so many people need to keep in mind here that this is still a very young discipline that we're talking about. It's less than 200 years ago. We just – doctors figured out that they need to wash their hands before they deliver babies. And surprise, 100 percent of the time.
Starting point is 01:18:25 These kids didn't come out with these horrible diseases because back then to be a doctor, you played around with cadavers all day and you played around with, and you had a bunch of just dead cells in your hand. And then you go deliver a baby, all sorts of problems. Mother dies, baby dies. Yeah. Everyone's dying. They're like, man, someone goes in there and washes their hands.
Starting point is 01:18:41 They're looked at as a witch. Like, why are you doing that? That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard. And now you can't walk into a hospital without, you know, someone throwing some antibacterial stuff on you. So, I mean, the, the world of strength and conditioning, especially at a high level, you know, we're looking at 80 years old, maybe, maybe, maybe. Right. And it's really only, I think it's got a lot better in the last 20 to 30, but we're still in the neophyte stages, let's be honest. Right.
Starting point is 01:19:06 So there is a nutrition is the same way. There's no axioms that are going to be broad worldwide. We're still figuring these things out and it's still kind of moving. And if you're not moving along with it, you still haven't washed your hands yet. Or asking hard questions that you're going, man, when you ask hard questions, you may not have answers and you may realize that you're not doing something right. And my best coaches that I've ever realized they weren't doing something right,
Starting point is 01:19:30 so they look for something better that created stuff. I mean, even though they win a lot, but maybe it's just your best athletes walk in the door and that's why you won. They won in spite of you. I mean, I'm hoping that's not the case with me. That's what you do, right? That I was part of the process.
Starting point is 01:19:47 I helped direct them. I know I've done that. Like David Plummer, he won a gold in the one Olympics. And you were like, he knew. We knew what he had to do to peak in six weeks out from the gold medal race is what we had to do. We knew in the weight room we had to do the sperm kick thing. Or the tantrums. Yeah. And we started that whole program and he knew what it was to to in that finals race it was to the day that we started that program but we knew six weeks for him to peak other athletes might be
Starting point is 01:20:16 two you know what i mean but that's the part that's the art of coaching like everyone wants to make this a science there's still an art to this whole thing. So I wrote this down and, you know, how do you set kind of a tone and, you know, intentions when you're coaching coaches or telling people how to kind of take some of this stuff and use it? You know, what are your cues to coaches to help the other kids, you know, to help their athletes, et cetera? Because a lot of times there's so much buy-in with your program and the coaches are on board, which makes the athletes on board. a lot of times there's so much buy-in with your program and the coaches are on board, which makes the athletes on board. You know, how did you come to, you know, besides being, you know, being in this and realizing that you can be wrong and being open to it and having conversations, like, what do you tell someone who comes to visit and then heads off and was like, man, this is how we've done it. And this is what we've seen, you know, this is how I would apply
Starting point is 01:21:02 it. Or do you say just like, just, you know, try your best. Well, the hard part is, is like as deep as I am, you just can't, you can't do what I do. Well, right, right, right. I mean, from training with time, you can't walk in and see what Cal does and on Monday implement it. Like there's no, like it's not possible. Right. You know, like matter of fact, if let's say I left Minnesota and got a new job, I can't implement what I do right now. It would take me a year to get it all going. You know what I mean? Because it'd just be a complete change for everybody. So I tell them to take the basic stuff like, hey, here's the best exercise I have, like the split squat. Here's some other ones. What problems do you have? And I tell them what the, you know,
Starting point is 01:21:39 how I fix those problems. Try the triphasic, but make sure they got a good base going into it. Like you just don't jump off the couch and go do triphasic like it doesn't make sense um and then just here's the here's the basic concepts um i usually give them like my high school manual that i would recommend there's one there's a free one out there um but yeah you're just sitting there going so you can't be what i what i am after 23 years you can't do what i am after 23 years. You can't do what I do. Right. And we all know that. You can't get rid of my experience and how to make decisions.
Starting point is 01:22:09 And my interns are like, we've seen you change your whole philosophy on one exercise in a split second, and everybody changed it because I came up. Well, like the glued ham and the foot thing. Like, this is what we're going to do, people. And they're like, you're going to change everything? I'll change it right now. On a dime, i will throw every if you tell me there's triphasic is the worst thing ever and you find something that's better i'll throw it out right now we can be done with it right i'm not afraid to do that yeah in other coaches it's just hard uh if they want to try do it all and you can't so
Starting point is 01:22:40 just start it in parts and and just go from. I give them the most important stuff, you know what I mean? And then just have them go. So again, I have an open door, so people are allowed to come and see. I'm okay. So yeah, it's tough, right? Because you can't – and you don't know where they're at. So I don't even know where they're coming from. That's the hard part.
Starting point is 01:23:01 So what do I give them? Like obviously you walk in. I'd show you everything, tell you everything. But like I got a high school coach that walks in, there's only so much I can give him. Right. You know what I mean? So, yeah. You know, earlier before on the podcast, you were mentioning something about, I think the
Starting point is 01:23:18 best athletes you've ever seen have really strong feet and really big butts. Yeah. So I'm curious, like when it comes to the like when it comes to the feet side of things, what did that mean exactly? And how can athletes tell that that's an aspect that they need to improve? Because like an example is when you see people sumo deadlift, a lot of people just don't know how to root their feet into the ground from the bottom. So what can athletes pay attention to there to figure out that link?
Starting point is 01:23:44 Well, one of the biggest links is that the big toe needs to grab the ground and squeeze and press into the ground when you're walking, right? Or when you're doing exercise. So any extension exercise, when I say that, so on the way down, we actually, we tell our athletes to lift our toe up to work the extensor. On the way down. Arch, on the way way down and then when they go to reverse you squeeze that toe super hard into the ground and try to break it and that'll help that glute grow and we have a video of it with mark when he was on the table i pushed his glute down really easy when the glutes were dysfunctional and all he did was curl his toe up squeeze it hard and it turned
Starting point is 01:24:23 the glute on instantly he could hold me off the table with his glue yeah and i could probably push him down with really one hand pretty light before that so the big thing is it's just like one of my athletes he's a super freak he was like six five he's a thrower six four about 260 at the time he had a 44 inch vertical 14 inch or 14 size shoe and i'm telling you his feet were so thick and i saw that this was back in you know 204 205 i'm like he was just wired i mean he could do a three set if he was if he was a violent human being he could have played defensive in the nfl for sure right but super nice guy and loved throwing so So that's what he did. But you're going, and that's when I started noticing like these, he has super big feet, strong too.
Starting point is 01:25:09 It's not, it's not that they're big. It's just that they're strong. Right. And we, we have video of the spring ankle exercises that we did today. And those are the, one of the fastest ways in the five positions to strengthen the feet, to get rid of knee pain problems a lot. Not all knee pain, but like many knee pain problems. Because as Mark identified, he's the first person ever in these conversations,
Starting point is 01:25:29 he's like, the only thing that touches the ground is the feet. So if your feet aren't touching the ground correctly. Unless you're doing jujitsu. Right? If your feet aren't touching the ground correctly, then you're not going to have the optimal patterns and everything happen. So a friend of mine had an uncoordinated daughter. He felt like she was 11, playing on some good soccer teams, but he was shocked how much she improved by increasing the strength of
Starting point is 01:25:55 her foot. But, and let me talk to you about process. Every time her foot, when I checked it, every time her foot hit the ground, her arch collapsed. So the entire feedback loop of her learning skills was affected by the fact that the arch was on her foot wasn't stable. He did that. And he felt by the end of the summer, she was a completely different kid, completely different in the far as athleticism, not her mind, obviously, but, but athleticism because now, and she can learn skill faster because every time she steps and runs, she's learning. And as you said, if you're running and trying to accelerate and you're short stepping, I find a lot of times it's a foot problem because your body doesn't want to let you extend out and get in a bad position with a bad foot. So it'll put that foot underneath you more. So there's many limitations that the body, and we talked about this in our,
Starting point is 01:26:50 in our videos today, that the body's wired to protect itself. And if your foot's bad and not strong enough, it'll actually down-regulate your glutes and legs to push into the ground less. So you can't injure yourself. So a lot of limits are your foot's not strong enough and your brain down regulates the muscles. You get this. So you fix the foot problem. There's a lot of things that can be transpired as far as athleticism. Got it. And I'm guessing in like your, the triphasic system, it goes into some stuff on that or. I have a speed manual.
Starting point is 01:27:19 Speed manual. My speed manual. Yeah. It's a, it's pretty impressive in regards to the results that we're getting from those five exercises. And I think if you look up like ankle rocker on YouTube, you have a lot of actual stuff about this like online. And I mean it goes through – My YouTube page.
Starting point is 01:27:33 Yeah. It goes through extensively about like not only the five positions but exercises, implementation, when, where, how, et cetera. So it's not like he's hiding it. It's out there. So it's really easy. Spring ankle is one. And then's really easy spring ankle is one and then the spring ankle is the exercise that i did with mark today and then this ankle rocker is another thing how people we need to push our knee over our toe when we do exercises
Starting point is 01:27:54 yeah most people like don't do that no i know but but i'm scared of it yeah in my extra in my youtube page there's a picture of barry sand a cut. And I'm telling you, man, his knee is about 12 inches in front of his foot and he is making a nasty cut. No one could move like him. No, right. He had an ankle rocker and, and the same thing with like the old story with Walter Payton running up that Hill in Chicago, how there were guys that couldn't even run up that Hill. And they're like, how is that possible? Because their ankles weren't mobile enough to support them at that angle. So their body would raise them up
Starting point is 01:28:28 and then they couldn't run up the hill because they would go straight up and down. They physically couldn't do it. But he could get his ankles going up the hill so deep into his position and still be strong enough to run up that hill. You'd say he ran up that hill every day until he threw up and they were like, well, eventually you get used to it, right?
Starting point is 01:28:46 He's like, yeah, when I get used to it, I just do more. I just keep going until I puke. Yeah. Every time. But that was an indicator. That's what made him such a savage. Right? He was a savage.
Starting point is 01:28:55 He was fucking savage. Greatness. That's why you have the name greatness, right? Or sweetness? Sweetness. Sweetness, yeah. Greatness, it doesn't matter. Same thing.
Starting point is 01:29:01 But the foot was, you look at those guys run and it's scary the positions they were in and able to hold it. Because like Barry Sanders and being in one of those positions, if his arch collapsed and his foot wasn't strong, it would instantly pull his knee back and he would have to run higher. But he could change directions because he had such strong feet. I'm sure today if you checked this, you would have checked everything. He's got big old quads too and hammies. And hammies. What you got over there,ads too and hammies. And hammies. What you got over there, Andrew? No quads.
Starting point is 01:29:28 No quads. Ouch. Earlier when you were here. Tough crowd. Yeah, I know, right? Earlier you were poking me and making weird random spots hurt. But then you did ask me, you were like, does it look brighter out here? And I'm like, I thought it was just because I had my eyes closed for a second and then I opened them.
Starting point is 01:29:47 And then all of a sudden I was like, what's happening? So can you explain why the hell that happened to me? So your vision system kind of opened up because you had a shift into the relaxed state. So your pupils were closed because you were in a stressed state just walking around. You may not have seen stress, but you were. And when we did the right breathing in the RPR exercises, you actually calmed your nervous system down, your pupils dilated, and you were actually taking in more light. Like the lights hadn't changed, but you were taking more light in because they were more open and you were in a relaxed state to take in more
Starting point is 01:30:25 information so that's the part where you you just ran through that patch of uh flowers in the middle of a briar patch where you were stressed from the lion and then you calm down and now you can smell the roses that you ran through but um yeah that's that's that was your body saying hey i'm in a stressed state and you know ultimately i've been able to shift myself with a few really high quality breaths. That was wild. And then, so you were helping me out with my back and I've had back issues. People have been listening to the podcast know that. Can you explain the whole, the part about like my ribs being a certain distance away from my hip?
Starting point is 01:31:03 Because I've never heard that from anybody either. So when you laid on the table and i i the lower your lowest rib if somebody's sitting in a car right now listen to this they can just feel the gap between their bottom rib and their hip bone i usually like we like to say about four fingers and i tell this story i had a six five uh professional athlete leave me with five finger gap and uh he uh, he went to a team where they're, they did, you know, and they don't train a whole lot in NHL just because it's so hard, um,
Starting point is 01:31:30 of a season 80 games and travel. But, um, they did a lot of core bracing and I saw him skating in January and I texted him cause I knew he had a problem. He said, yep, I'm in pain and I got some things going on.
Starting point is 01:31:42 I'm like, all right, we'll send somebody down cause I didn't have time. And within, uh, within two weeks of that text, he never got back to me. He blew a disc out. And when I checked that spot, so he left me with five fingers. He was actually, that rib had went down, touched the hip bone, and then slid inside it. So that was the difference.
Starting point is 01:32:02 And he was a 6'5 athlete, right? Yeah. So, and I feel that was the reason he blew his disc out. He just got like compacted. Compacted. And in my opinion, we got some video on this. It was a brace in the core caused that problem in that athlete. So.
Starting point is 01:32:19 Him actually trying to brace his core. And they told him to brace his core when he skates. That's what you should do. And I'm like, okay. Just my opinion. It's what you should do. And I'm like, okay. Just my opinion. It's not a great thing. Yeah. So for the people that are listening that did check, what can we do to help fix that?
Starting point is 01:32:34 I use RPR, Reflective Performance Reset, right? You can dig in there. There's a video of me putting you on the bench if you want to show that or maybe hook a link to it. Eventually we'll be able to show it. Hook a link to it where we had you extend and then just rub in between there and it loosens up that whole area. And then the biggest thing too is if you're breathing, like the breathing is so bad. I think the research came out where 80% of the people in this world, in this country
Starting point is 01:32:59 have dysfunctional breathing patterns where they chest breathe. And some of the worst people I've ever worked on was yoga instructors or, uh, Pilates instructors. Cause they, they brace their core all the time. And then dancers, females that have been dancers for like 40 years of their life,
Starting point is 01:33:14 they walk around with their stomach sucked in their whole, they were taught that as little girls. And it seems like they have back pain all the time. So that's, that was, those are some of the worst people i've ever seen as far as being locked up in that area in the ribs setting on top of that hip bone so it's pretty scary and then you lose lumbar flexion right your psoas isn't working it's pretty crazy this whole combination you've seen it just like yeah it's uh it's it's crazy how scary it is and my opinion, breathing can help start to release this.
Starting point is 01:33:46 But you were chest breathing when we were talking now, but you had just shifted to a belly breath and that's why the lights seemed like they got brighter. And if you keep breathing like that, then tissue starts to release. And that's the thing. If you just breathe correctly, tissue starts to open up across your whole body and things start to turn on. To show people how stressed they are, I would like for everybody that listens to this show in the next couple days keep track of when you're like holy shit i'm very very relaxed right now yeah i doubt it'll even happen once seriously right like if i go to the movie theater that's like a time where i can kind of think of like wow this is like what i'm supposed to feel like most of the time.
Starting point is 01:34:26 Like this is fucking cool. I'm with my kids. I'm hanging out. Not in your underwear. Yeah. Well, sometimes. Sometimes. If it's warm in there.
Starting point is 01:34:33 Yeah. But just, you know, very relaxed, not on my phone, not thinking about work, not trying to train, not trying to be better than anything, just trying to do something mindless and just fucking hang out for 10 seconds. 10 seconds. Seriously. Wow, two hours. No no but that's what we can't even get 10 seconds in is my point right right you're dead right on that we're so stressed um yeah it's a tough one and then a lot of people say well i can go right to sleep at night it's because you're extremely exhausted and it's our own doing too i mean we live in a great world you know where
Starting point is 01:35:03 most of the people i know have a refrigerator full of food they got a freezer full of food they got a pantry full of food and they should be pretty grateful for a lot of things and i'm including myself in this as well but um and we just put like there's a lot of undue stress like where we're just always trying to yeah which is cool it's good that we're trying to be better it's good that we're working on it but at the same time got to chill the fuck out. That's what we don't do. Well, I mean, I thought this was a pretty good day.
Starting point is 01:35:30 So, I mean, there's nothing stressful about this. Yeah, today was fun. Yeah, I had a good day here. And it was awesome. Yeah, we got to eat some meat with a side of meat today. There we go. That's it. What I want to ask you real quick is, because there's probably a few athletes listening.
Starting point is 01:35:43 When you mentioned that he blew his lumbar or blew a disc because of bracing his core, when most lifters hear about bracing their core, they're like, well, I have to do that when I squat and deadlift. So what should they be paying attention to about their overall movement when I guess lifting and outside of lifting for the dysfunction you're talking about? So let's say Mark goes to squat 900 pounds and he pulls it off. I don't think overemphasizing bracing the core. Like your core is going to stabilize itself if everything's functioning, right? And it's going to be tight anyway because if he had 900 pounds on his back,
Starting point is 01:36:14 his core, you feel his muscular down in the abdomen area, it's going to be tight. Don't overemphasize it. You see what I'm saying? And it also has to relax in order for you to hit a squat position. Exactly, right? And the thing about core, if order for you to hit a squat position. Exactly. Right?
Starting point is 01:36:26 And the thing about core, if you're actually overemphasizing bracing it, you're promoting flexion while you're holding weight on your back when you should be promoting extension. That is my big thing. And then you can just test some exercises. Well, how about this? Listeners, brace your core and do pushups to failure. And then wait 20 minutes and brace your glutes and do pushups to fire and then wait 20 minutes and do brace your glutes and do pushups to fire and see what happens.
Starting point is 01:36:49 You'll do more pullups. The same thing. Same thing. Yeah. Give it a shot. Okay. Yeah. It's crazy.
Starting point is 01:36:55 Well, and it's like the kipping movement in pullups. I know there's internet police out there that hate that, but I'm like, uh, if I was going to push Jesse right here, what I just do, I had to brace my glutes to push him. If I didn like, if I was going to push Jesse right here, what I just do, I had to brace my glutes
Starting point is 01:37:05 to push him. If I didn't, I would fall over. But then if I go to pull him, what I do, I brace the other glute. So, and if he's going to stop me, you have to brace your glutes in every movement, whether it's flexion, extension. In my opinion, I find the athletes do a much, they move the bar speed, even in bench press. Here's one of my things. You can check a hundred athletes do bench press. You bench press, brace your core, get the bar speed. You bench press, squeeze your glutes. The bar speed was
Starting point is 01:37:37 faster, only 100% of the time. Only? And I'm not, I'm not a mathematician right right but but i mean anybody can try it just get a tendo or a gym aware and put the bar speed and have somebody do something measure the speed with your core brace it slows them down got it yeah and i was like hey run a 40 run a 20 with your core brace it looked like hell so we're not doing that that's what i always and then i always mentioned that, Hey, when, when these core bracing books came out, sports hernias went through the roof in sports.
Starting point is 01:38:10 There's been research show that they didn't match the dates up, but I matched the dates up. You know, it's really funny. You were mentioning this the other day. I was doing some, uh, some good mornings and I was like messing around with the bracing.
Starting point is 01:38:21 And I noticed when I was bracing like really heavy, I was like, Ooh, that my back, that's not good. I have to relax a little bit. And then like the movement just felt like the way it should. So it's, it's really interesting.
Starting point is 01:38:30 Cause I didn't really pay much attention to that, but it makes sense. Like why are we over coaching and trying to put them in things and activate stuff that doesn't really need activated? Cause your body will activate it super fast. If it needs it, it'll protect itself. You know what i mean and does does his does his core need activate as much as somebody that's you know novice trainer not no because his muscle patterns are set yeah he's dialed in right so yeah it's it's i think we do
Starting point is 01:38:59 over coach too much it's certain things you know but but, um, and then, you know, I, I just let this out of the bag. Uh, I'll be honest with you. Like when people see my, my athletes run, like I, I truly believe I don't coach running. I watch it. But so for example, when Mark would run this morning with his, his, uh, lateral sling being off his arm and sneak out, I don't coach running because I don't run, I don't coach running sport now, but it's the greatest indicator of a problem that's going on in the body. So if you're running and you have an arm that's sticking out, if I turn on your lat and it puts it in, I know that was a problem. If that wasn't it, then I go to the hip. That wasn't the hip arm still out when you run. And
Starting point is 01:39:43 I'm not coaching to hold your arm in because most coaches say, Hey, hold your arm in. Well, you coach a world-class kid and you're going, Hey, you got to run down the track, run super fast,
Starting point is 01:39:50 but hold your arms in. No, no, no, no, no, no, no,
Starting point is 01:39:53 no, It doesn't work. I'm trying to figure out what's wrong with them by watching their running and seeing what's indicated and then see if I can fix that problem. Does that make sense? So I'd see an, you see an athlete run, and you'd see him internally rotate his leg instantly on impact.
Starting point is 01:40:09 And I'm going, hmm. And what's everybody think right now? They think, oh, the glute meds off. Actually, it's a protective mechanism to protect the groin from blowing up. So when I got the kid on the bench, I checked his groin. His groin was weak.
Starting point is 01:40:24 We work on his groin, get his groin activated. Guess what? Internal rotation never happened with the kneecap. So when he was running, it was an indicator that there was a groin problem and the brain internally rotated the leg to protect that from running
Starting point is 01:40:39 or tearing the groin when you run. Point of groin, basically. Does that make sense? I mean, I have a bunch of those, but I'll get those out in the next 10 years, maybe. In the next 10 years. Where can people find you?
Starting point is 01:40:51 Exoathlete.com. Caldeets at Gmail. I won't get to all of them. You know, I try. You're on Instagram. You're on YouTube. Yeah, Caldeets at Gmail. My YouTube page,
Starting point is 01:41:07 tryphasictraining.com is another website. So they can find me at those places. Got any seminars coming up or anything like that? I have a couple in Montana, one in Montana. And I'm trying to – we got a lot of stuff to develop with RPR content. So I'm trying not to speak as much right now. Chris and I are putting together a bunch of good stuff. We got level three, pretty much level four laid out of our PR. Like you guys saw some level one stuff today.
Starting point is 01:41:31 Yeah. You can see it. Maybe we should host one out here some weekend. That would be great. Yeah. I think people would love that. Yeah, yeah. That would be great.
Starting point is 01:41:37 So perfect. Mr. Jesse Burdick, where can people find you, buddy? jesseburdick at gmail.comcom. JesseBurdick on all socials. Google Maps shows him. Every time I look in his Instagram. What's up, Andrew? Where can people find you? The Google satellite can just see you.
Starting point is 01:41:58 You can always see me. You can always know our map. Just Google his name on Maps. It'll show up. What's so weird is if you actually type in my address, Just Google his name on maps. What's so weird is if you actually type in my address, I'm right in front of that camera. Are you really? Yes, I'm right in front of it.
Starting point is 01:42:16 So yeah, you can actually find me on Google Maps if you know my address. Can't miss him. You guys can hit me up on Instagram at IamAndrewZ. Please make sure you're following the podcast at Mark Viles Power Project. Huge shout out and thank you to Piedmontese Beef for sponsoring this podcast. The absolute best beef on the planet.
Starting point is 01:42:30 The only thing better is getting it at 25% off. Head over to Piedmontese.com That's P-I-E-D-M-O-N-T-E-S-E dot com at checkout. Enter promo code POWERPROJECT for 25% off your order and if your order is $99 or more you get free two-day shipping. Trent Sima, where are you at?
Starting point is 01:42:46 I'm at SimaYinYang on Instagram and YouTube. I'm at SimaYinYang on TikTok and Twitter. Yo, dude, what were you doing with those squats the other day? Yeah, what's that all about? 10 minutes squats? Yeah, just down there taking a shit. Yeah, pretty much I'm just holding 10 minutes or more in a squat position each day. Did that hurt?
Starting point is 01:43:02 It feels great. Feels great. My hips always feel good. I dig it. Do you think there's a problem with that by the way i'm just curious i think it's i just want to make sure right now that i'm not leading people down a dark hole so yeah speaking of a dark hole you mentioned being in a deep deep dark wet cave earlier what was the cave what was the pain cave yeah we talked going into an isometric squad oh that's what yeah yeah the pain caves it's uh dark cold wet and lonely brutal yeah nobody wants to be there i'm at mark smelly bell strength is never weakness weakness never strength catch y'all later what up poop cast i hope you guys enjoyed this episode
Starting point is 01:43:39 with cal deets uh cal is another one of those guests that we've been trying to get on the show for a long time because you guys were recommending him to us. And we're ecstatic that we finally got that episode to work out for us. Anyways, we wanted to give a huge shout out and thank you to everybody that's been rating and reviewing the podcast on iTunes. Specifically, our boy, big old Dave dude. Big Dave says, the spark that saved my life. Quote, if it weren't for this podcast to motivate me to make a huge change in my training and diet, then I wouldn't be where I'm at today. Since the start of the year, I've applied these ideas and lost over 30 pounds, stopped taking all meds for depression, GERD, and diverticulitis. For the first time in my life, my doctor said I was
Starting point is 01:44:22 healthy, so thank you all for pushing me to change my life. Uh, big old Dave, dude. Uh, thank you so much for sharing that with us, dude. That's, I mean, that's honestly like probably one of the best things that we could actually hear that, uh, you know, we were able to help somebody out. We'll take full credit for it by the way. Um, no, dude, that that's all you, man. Um, all we can do is just help you guys out. And the fact that like you actually took all these tools and implemented them in your life, that's all you man um all we can do is just help you guys out and the fact that like you actually took all these tools and implemented them in your life that's all on you man so so thank you for sharing that with us if you listening right now if you want to hear your name and your review read on air head over to itunes right now drop us a rating drop us a review and you could hear your
Starting point is 01:44:59 name and your review read on air just like big old dave dude we'll catch you guys on the next one peace

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