Sign Up for FREE for 7 Days of our Athlete Strength Training App - Peak Strength 💪 👉 www.peakstrength.app/?YT&Video&APP&TAEKWONDOstrengthps
@ximenesbr Жыл бұрын
I´m taekwondo coach and P.E. graduated and I have to say, I miss this in taekwondo. It's rare to see a training designed so specifically for taekwondo, even for coming from taekwondo coaches. You really looked through the lens of taekwondo. Congratulations for the fine job!
@yang_yin Жыл бұрын
Wao, I'm from martial arts and always follow this channel, but this video blowed my mind 🤯 this guy really knows how to adapt strength development to any sport! Amazing.
@vukvuk8996 Жыл бұрын
Great video, definition of good strength program for martial art. Next one should be for distance running😉
@saddiqstevens7200 Жыл бұрын
Can you do one for kickboxing, muay thai and catch wrestling and karate? Great videos
@DGJ510 Жыл бұрын
Super excited about this but I can’t find TKD focused training in the app? Did this programming get removed from the combat sports section?
@francgio8783 Жыл бұрын
Can you also do a video for k1/kickboxing?
@essen3829 Жыл бұрын
Awesome video, thanks for the advice. With best wishes.
@mrsbootsworkouts Жыл бұрын
Great information, thank you!
@olindblo Жыл бұрын
THIS is the episode I’ve been waiting for! However, it has me scratching my head a bit: is there really a need to recreate the unilateral of taekwondo in the weight room? Wouldn’t it be simpler to let the sport specific training itself (in this case taekwondo) take care of that, and focus on just putting more horse power into the athlete via normal bilateral moves like squats, power cleans, box jumps, bench press, and so on that develop absolute strength and power much more reliably? I assume the argument is that unilateral movements have greater “carryover” to the unilateral nature of the sport, but if that is the case, then wouldn’t training the sport itself be more efficient? And if the purpose is for training to develop strength, wouldn’t achieving greater absolute strength (with easier programming to boot) via standard squat, clean etc. just be easier for the average taekwondo athlete? Then, even if we were to grant that the unilateral aspect aids in the carryover of strength gains better than bilateral, wouldn’t the marginal strength advantage you’d hypothetically gain from unilateral movements be offset by the difficulty in programming and progression when compared to standard bilateral movements? I’m sure there’s a separate argument to be made for dynamic trunk control, which I’m a fan of, but it just seems to me (as someone who does taekwondo and has decent squat numbers) that the most *reliable* strength carryover for a taekwondo athlete who doesn’t pay for an s&c coach and has to do their own programming-like most of your viewer base-comes from progressing your back squats, power cleans and bench press, and letting sport specific training do the rest. It feels to me like reliably and cheaply putting more horse powers into the race car is more important than fussing over the model of the engine. Or perhaps I’m wrong? Perhaps I really would have been better off progressing my single leg squats over the years rather than normal back squats five pounds per workout?
@Linhuahua-n4d Жыл бұрын
i think you sure.你是对的
@OverweightBusiness Жыл бұрын
I would argue you are right for beginners. I do think the single leg squat probably would have benefitted you over a longer period of time. Also, there is no discounting of back squats or power cleans. It would come back to each individual scenario.
I just created an account for the app and can’t seem to find the option for taekwondo
@YoraliesRodriguez5 ай бұрын
There is jo teakwondo option on the app which one do you suggest?
@capthappy345 Жыл бұрын
What's with the background! U working out of the econo lodge now?
@OverweightBusiness Жыл бұрын
Traveling for an international competition. Content can't stop!
@user-fn6bs7nz4l20 күн бұрын
I can't find the Taekwondo training in the app.
@vynty3422 Жыл бұрын
can you do MMA?
@shabnam.mokhtarАй бұрын
Oh wowww this is fantastic! I’ve not come across a detailed analysis of conditioning for martial arts. I do silat, an Asian martial arts like kungfu. Our competition is similar to taekwondo but we cannot kick heads. We get the biggest points (3) if we are able to take down our opponents. This is an example of silat competition. kzbin.info/www/bejne/rmLLfZtpj8hjis0si=E9u_FJLNT6Eu91gH Would you kindly review training needed for silat please? I wanna say it’s like a combo of taekwondo & judo training 🤓 Really love this thank you so much❤
@Linhuahua-n4d Жыл бұрын
我觉得你是错的,单边训练对于双边来说,收益太小。
@破音王子 Жыл бұрын
仁兄,何以见得?想听听你的解释😊
@williamoconnell1233 Жыл бұрын
actually Dane, taekowondo is an art not a sport. trust me I am a red1 in taekowondo, and am soon to be a red2.
@Scion3496 Жыл бұрын
sparring is a sport.
@pedohammad Жыл бұрын
It's a sport
@oneinchpunched3661 Жыл бұрын
I would say that if it’s in the Olympics, the sport of all sport events, it’s considered a sport even if it originated as a combat martial art for the Korean army.
@elise.adamenko Жыл бұрын
it’s 100% a sport. you may not feel it’s a sport because you’re a low red, even though it’s a sport at every level. maybe you’ll understand once you’re advanced.
@puppy77146 ай бұрын
I am not against ur point but my coach tell it an official Olympic sport
@QUEIJOATÔMICO7 ай бұрын
JESUS CHRIST THE LORD IS COMING REPENT 💞 KADOSH ADONAI