70 min listen
Soccer Specific RTP with Tyler Knight
ratings:
Length:
38 minutes
Released:
Aug 16, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Tyler Knight shares some Soccer Specific Return To Play or RTP tips and tricks. With nearly a decade of soccer experience, he has seen a lot of growth in sport-specific rehab plans.
What is the least soccer specific rehab exercise you have seen?
Almost everything we do…discuss the importance of understanding the ‘why’ of what we do, as well as never forgetting components of movement.
Isometrics because the patient can’t perform much more
Eccentrics once able
Stretch-shortening cycle
Unloaded → supported → unsupported
“Train movement not muscles”
What do we need to consider in on-field RTP?
In order to get to the field, you have to get out of the Athletic Training room first.
Treat the person, not the athlete or the injury (reference all that people have going on in their lives). Ron Corson-ism
Good communication, setting expectations, and appropriate planning are MUSTs.
Individualization (based on person, position, and injury)
Consider our two biggest protective capacities and build upon those early: strength and endurance
Programming based upon working zones (importance of ESD)
Quantifying internal vs. external load
To do that, we have a few basic rules at Charlotte FC:
1. Create a safe environment.
2. Don’t hurt the person.
3. Be aggressive without breaking rules 1 and 2.
KPIs to provide direction and accountability to the process
Additional principles of rehab to accelerate and enhance what we do on the field:
Move early, move often.
Highlight BFR and isometrics.
Don’t mess it up.
Consider tissue healing times.
Periodize manual therapies, incorporate things the person believes in
Break down the phases of healing (acute, subacute, remodeling), as well as the places of healing: table, Athletic Training room, gym, field, and everything in between.
Create time for mental or psychological recovery
KPIs
Mobility
Stability
Function
Power
On-Field
Consider position, individual needs, team tactics, and demands of the sport…and MAKE IT FUN
Players have the ball only 3% of the time, a good reason to emphasize the incorporation of the ball and fitness/drill exercises that place focus on getting into the right spaces
In 2019/2020 EPL season, the highest average number of passes per game was 688 (Man City; approx 62. per player) and the least was Burnley at 333 (approx. 30 per player).
Paul Bradley research
Consider control - chaos continuum
Reverse engineer and use the prospective loading document
When we have elevated AC ratios, did the majority of that come from a more controlled environment or chaotic environment
By using fatigue, you can increase chaos (for those athletes limited in what they can perform)
How are you going to account for one of the most unique facts of the game: limited substitutions and, potentially like many other sports, the pace of the game is only increasing
Actual loading
Link load with the context of how it happens in a session/match
TD, HSR, sprint, ACC/DEC, HMLD or explosive efforts
Intensive vs. extensive days (can you match what the player is doing with you to what the team is doing; team schedule, RPExduration)
Density of high intensity actions (repeated sprint ability and repeated high intensity efforts in 1, 3, and 5 min blocks)
In the secondary setting, we may not be out on the field for practice. How can we help coordinate RTPs?
“It takes a village.” Educate, incorporate, and empower those around you. If we all understand the why, we will know how to do it, and what we need to use to get there. Trust is a major factor here.
Create a PowerPoint document, have illustrations, don’t be afraid to do the math ahead of time, use a stopwatch.
Let's talk through a RTP plan you use and why:
The war is won and lost in the mind
Briefly recap where we are and where we’re going
What can we do to prepare, potentiate, desensitize,
What is the least soccer specific rehab exercise you have seen?
Almost everything we do…discuss the importance of understanding the ‘why’ of what we do, as well as never forgetting components of movement.
Isometrics because the patient can’t perform much more
Eccentrics once able
Stretch-shortening cycle
Unloaded → supported → unsupported
“Train movement not muscles”
What do we need to consider in on-field RTP?
In order to get to the field, you have to get out of the Athletic Training room first.
Treat the person, not the athlete or the injury (reference all that people have going on in their lives). Ron Corson-ism
Good communication, setting expectations, and appropriate planning are MUSTs.
Individualization (based on person, position, and injury)
Consider our two biggest protective capacities and build upon those early: strength and endurance
Programming based upon working zones (importance of ESD)
Quantifying internal vs. external load
To do that, we have a few basic rules at Charlotte FC:
1. Create a safe environment.
2. Don’t hurt the person.
3. Be aggressive without breaking rules 1 and 2.
KPIs to provide direction and accountability to the process
Additional principles of rehab to accelerate and enhance what we do on the field:
Move early, move often.
Highlight BFR and isometrics.
Don’t mess it up.
Consider tissue healing times.
Periodize manual therapies, incorporate things the person believes in
Break down the phases of healing (acute, subacute, remodeling), as well as the places of healing: table, Athletic Training room, gym, field, and everything in between.
Create time for mental or psychological recovery
KPIs
Mobility
Stability
Function
Power
On-Field
Consider position, individual needs, team tactics, and demands of the sport…and MAKE IT FUN
Players have the ball only 3% of the time, a good reason to emphasize the incorporation of the ball and fitness/drill exercises that place focus on getting into the right spaces
In 2019/2020 EPL season, the highest average number of passes per game was 688 (Man City; approx 62. per player) and the least was Burnley at 333 (approx. 30 per player).
Paul Bradley research
Consider control - chaos continuum
Reverse engineer and use the prospective loading document
When we have elevated AC ratios, did the majority of that come from a more controlled environment or chaotic environment
By using fatigue, you can increase chaos (for those athletes limited in what they can perform)
How are you going to account for one of the most unique facts of the game: limited substitutions and, potentially like many other sports, the pace of the game is only increasing
Actual loading
Link load with the context of how it happens in a session/match
TD, HSR, sprint, ACC/DEC, HMLD or explosive efforts
Intensive vs. extensive days (can you match what the player is doing with you to what the team is doing; team schedule, RPExduration)
Density of high intensity actions (repeated sprint ability and repeated high intensity efforts in 1, 3, and 5 min blocks)
In the secondary setting, we may not be out on the field for practice. How can we help coordinate RTPs?
“It takes a village.” Educate, incorporate, and empower those around you. If we all understand the why, we will know how to do it, and what we need to use to get there. Trust is a major factor here.
Create a PowerPoint document, have illustrations, don’t be afraid to do the math ahead of time, use a stopwatch.
Let's talk through a RTP plan you use and why:
The war is won and lost in the mind
Briefly recap where we are and where we’re going
What can we do to prepare, potentiate, desensitize,
Released:
Aug 16, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (98)
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