Chris Gizzi is reportedly out
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Chris Gizzi is reportedly out
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- lupedafiasco
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Had to happen. It might not have been his fault but at least 3 players by my count took hamstring injuries and it happened to one of them twice and Jones said he could feel his about to pull in the 9er game on his big run.
At some point youve gotta be able to get players to recover.
At some point youve gotta be able to get players to recover.
Cancelled by the forum elites.
Right. Might not have been his fault, but he did little to solve the problem. Let us not forget he was the assistant during the end of Clay's career and that was super sad to see his abilities dwindle from first ballot HOF guy to just, a guy.lupedafiasco wrote: ↑24 Jan 2024 14:08Had to happen. It might not have been his fault but at least 3 players by my count took hamstring injuries and it happened to one of them twice and Jones said he could feel his about to pull in the 9er game on his big run.
At some point youve gotta be able to get players to recover.
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right, like whats happening, fixing whats broken, Players make so much money this is a all year job, remember Lacy ballooning weight, better off season monitoring, obviously thats not going to cure everything, but we need to do better then this.
Watson I read wants to get outside advice about his hamstrings.
I have been saying for years (on here) these non-contact soft tissue injuries could be helped (prevented?) by doing eccentric training.
This past summer one of the keynote speakers at a biomechanics conference i attended was a UW Madison faculty who works on hamstring injuries with athletics dept. The presentation focused on how they utiluze eccentric training as prevention and recovery from strains.
Now, Packers sending Watson and Stokes to Madison to see what the deal is with their hamstring problems.
Gizzi shoukd have known what to try. This is part of why he is gone.
This past summer one of the keynote speakers at a biomechanics conference i attended was a UW Madison faculty who works on hamstring injuries with athletics dept. The presentation focused on how they utiluze eccentric training as prevention and recovery from strains.
Now, Packers sending Watson and Stokes to Madison to see what the deal is with their hamstring problems.
Gizzi shoukd have known what to try. This is part of why he is gone.
- TheSkeptic
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Correct, this calls for a sports medicine specialist, not a strength and conditioning coach. And it should have been done years ago. Gizzi should have demanded it.wallyuwl wrote: ↑24 Jan 2024 17:03I have been saying for years (on here) these non-contact soft tissue injuries could be helped (prevented?) by doing eccentric training.
This past summer one of the keynote speakers at a biomechanics conference i attended was a UW Madison faculty who works on hamstring injuries with athletics dept. The presentation focused on how they utiluze eccentric training as prevention and recovery from strains.
Now, Packers sending Watson and Stokes to Madison to see what the deal is with their hamstring problems.
Gizzi shoukd have known what to try. This is part of why he is gone.
Kind of. A good S&C coach should know the importance of eccentric training for injury prevention. They should know how eccentric training can increase in-series sarcomere number, and the theory of how that can reduce muscle strains. He should have known at least enough to know what he didn't know and learn more ir seek out info from others.TheSkeptic wrote: ↑26 Jan 2024 16:33
Correct, this calls for a sports medicine specialist, not a strength and conditioning coach. And it should have been done years ago. Gizzi should have demanded it.
Most sports medicine people (ATs, PTs, even ortho physicians) have no idea about the above. But muscle biomechanists and muscle physiologists would.
- TheSkeptic
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Exactly. We all should learn what we don't know and never be afraid to ask for advice and help. He didn't and so he is gone. And I am glad that Watson has gone outside the Packers for help.wallyuwl wrote: ↑26 Jan 2024 17:14Kind of. A good S&C coach should know the importance of eccentric training for injury prevention. They should know how eccentric training can increase in-series sarcomere number, and the theory of how that can reduce muscle strains. He should have known at least enough to know what he didn't know and learn more ir seek out info from others.TheSkeptic wrote: ↑26 Jan 2024 16:33
Correct, this calls for a sports medicine specialist, not a strength and conditioning coach. And it should have been done years ago. Gizzi should have demanded it.
Most sports medicine people (ATs, PTs, even ortho physicians) have no idea about the above. But muscle biomechanists and muscle physiologists would.