Tuesday, August 21, 2012
A Look Under P90X2’s Hood
Here’s a great article from P3 on their pre-draft camp that doubles as a deep dive into the science behind P90X2. As you probably know, Dr. Marcus Elliott is a major player in X2’s development. Today you get a look at the kind of analysis and logic we used to create the program in P3’s post:
P3 Pre-Draft: A Scientific Approach to Draft Prep and Career Development
As training becomes more scientific analysis and application become more important. A look back at this program’s history outlines the framework of X2’s development:
Power 90 – The goal to get people moving and eating better. This is the crux for most of us, changing our lifestyle.
P90X – Takes it a step further by applying athletic training principles and methods to create a solid base of fitness.
P90X2 – Uses the latest findings in applying exercise science to improve human movement patterns, which not only creates athletes but reduces injury potential and creates a body that will age slower and function at a high level.
Of course with X2 we can’t do individual analysis you see here. But we use this analysis to find commonalities across the broadest demographics in order to create specific workouts. This is where and how it begins, by looking at human potential with open eyes and using a broad scientific template to improve areas that were once thought impossible to fix. It’s fascinating to see this process unfold, from the technical aspects:
To help John get in better positions to create force and become a more efficient and elastic athlete, we prescribed exercise that improved hip mobility (loaded strength movements, aggressive soft tissue, daily stretching programs) and emphasized eccentric adaptation work (lengthening movements, movements that force relaxation prior to muscle contraction). We worked extensively on John’s stimulus response and nervous system to build quickness and agility.
To the more accessible factors:
The 6-foot-4 shooting guard and two-time SEC scoring champion is toting a chiseled 212 pounds and six-percent body fat – down from 10-percent body fat.
Those of you into techie details are going to dig this, but it’s also a reminder of why you should keep working on difficult balance movements or go 100% on your complexes in PAP. All in all, it should help you realize that when you do P90X2 you’re in the rare company of those who use their bodies to make a living. And since we at Beachbody feel that living means a lot more than making money, access to this information becomes invaluable.
Labels:
Beachbody,
instability,
p3,
P90X,
P90X2,
Post-activation Potentiation,
training
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3 comments:
More kudos for X2..
I wanted to get in the best shape of my life in preparation of becoming a first time dad (knowing I'd have little time for exercise once the little one was born). I finished an abbreviated round of X2 (9-10 weeks) on 7/19....just in time...our daughter Malia was born on 7/20.
I can't wait for another round. I woke up each morning craving complexes. The PAP workouts were fantastic.
Any chance of any additional PAP workouts? As a desk jockey by day, dad-fat fighting adventure racer by night, I fight low back and hip issues that X2 has helped with. I'm trying to figure out where to go from there, and the P3 stuff fascinates me.
When we get to X3, we will be invinsible. :D .. Maybe immortal.
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