Hey boys I just found this article about what Richie McCaw does for fitness
in the off season. I figured if it's good enough for the loose forward god
incarnate to do it it's good enough for us.
Get back in the weight room, put your road work in because if you don't the
guy who will will get your spot.
--
Love
Matt "Tweak" Piele DHRFC
It took me a couple of days to recover after our win over Australia at Eden
Park. It was a hard physical test match – what you would literally call a
bruising encounter – and without a high fitness level it would have taken
me much longer to recover from the knocks.
Some people may think that I spend my life pumping iron in the gym and
loading pasta into the body, but I am not like the Franks brothers. I am a
meat and three veg sort of guy who does a lot of aerobic and anaerobic
running in order to get the fitness levels that I need.
There is not much of an off season these days – four weeks if we are lucky
– and so I spend the first fortnight giving my body a rest. I then spend
the next two weeks putting a few miles into the legs. Every other day I
will run for between 40 minutes and an hour. In the off season I will also
put in one gym session a week. You have to do it, but I can’t say that I
enjoy it.
During the season I will take my running distances down and do a more
explosive series of reps. I might do ten times 50 metres with a 30 second
turn around between each. I will also do a series of 100 metre and 200
metre runs, one a minute. I won’t be running flat out all the time, but
maybe at 80%. These sessions last about 40 minutes.
Nearer game time I will work on getting off the ground quickly. I will do a
20 metre sprint, go to ground and spring back up again. Simulating what you
do in matches is a pretty good way of working on those specific fitness
levels.
People can get carried away with working on their body to an extent where
they almost become muscle bound. I think a lot of people overlook the core
muscles. I need to be supple in the back and abdomen with all the bridging
that I do in a match. I have borrowed exercises from pilates to help in my
core flexibility.
There is a lot of talk about sport and diet but I don’t think you need to
get hung up on it as long as you eat well. As I said, I am a meat and three
veg guy, but there’s nothing wrong with that as long as you are getting the
right balance of proteins, carbs and vitamins. Get your portions right, eat
regularly and don’t gorge on sugar and fatty stuff.
Leading into a game we will fuel up in order to have plenty of energy, but
it is just as important to eat well afterwards. Sorry, but don’t head
straight to the bar if you can find time. You need the right proteins and
vitamins to help repair the muscles that are now crying out for help.
Then you can have a beer or two. Cheers.
On Oct 28, 2014 8:57 AM, "Matt Piele" goaway20k@gmail.com wrote:
Hey boys I just found this article about what Richie McCaw does for
fitness in the off season. I figured if it's good enough for the loose
forward god incarnate to do it it's good enough for us.
Get back in the weight room, put your road work in because if you don't
the guy who will will get your spot.
--
Love
Matt "Tweak" Piele DHRFC