Network Magazine Winter 2018 | Page 14

UPSKILL: WINTER 2018 INTENSE INTERVALS: PART 2 This quarter we continue our focus on interval training in its many guises. Following on from last season’s intervals, here is part 2 in which our incredible presenters have created training ideas to help you deliver an interval workout that is time or rep accurate but that also enables you to pay attention to coaching good form and delivering appropriate motivational cues. PT Presenter Dan Henderson shares a brilliant interval training workout using the trusty Kettlebells, but don’t call this one HIIT! As Dan says, much interval training is actually high in volume, not intensity. Highlighting a common problem of this type of training, he then proffers the remedy. Queen of the group fitness studio, the truly fantastic Kirsty Neild, teaches us a very high intensity workout for your freestyle classes and suggests some good alternatives to clock watching. When it comes to measuring intervals in a manner that doesn’t compromise form by distracting you from your participants’ movements, Kirsty suggests using an audio-based app that can be placed non-intrusively to the side; asking the class to count reps as an interval rather than using time; or using the phrase in KETTLEBELLS with Dan Henderson There’s a misconception among many in the fitness industry that all interval training is HIIT – it isn’t! HIIT is focused upon higher intensities and movement quality, with no change in intensity between bouts. What most people label as HIIT is actually HVIT (high volume interval training), which usually incorporates a greater volume of exercises. The problem is, these workouts often have inappropriate rest periods for the anaerobic energy systems to sustain quality of work, so technique can be compromised. It needn’t be like this. Our HVIT workout challenges the whole body with a series of upper and lower body exercises that use lower loads and ample rest to facilitate correct execution. the music as the timer (a 32-count phrase of music at 155bpm is 10 seconds long, so 3 phrases is around 30 seconds). All great ideas, and if they can help you stay focused on participants’ technique, then surely worth experimenting with. BodyART’s Janni Giannikakis joins the program’s creator Robert Steinbacher to introduce us to BAX, an extension of bodyART that combines athletic deep connective tissue strengthening with myofascial release. I would like to thank our friends at Elixr Health Club Bondi, TRX Training Sydney and Primal NRG Fitness in Sydney for their support in our filming. As always, I invite and welcome feedback, so please get in touch to let me know what you’d like to see in future instalments of Upskill. Until next time! Stephen Parker, Upskill Coordinator [email protected] FREESTYLE with Kirsty Nield When instructors obsess about clock-watching their interval classes get boring and their attention to technique gets diluted. My advice? Use an app, count 3 x 32-count phrases in the music, or get participants to count reps as an interval rather than using time. In this sequence I use pyramid training and an add-on teaching method to build intensity. Participants need to perform 10 repetitions. Because I’m adding a new move to the sequence each time, the intervals get progressively longer, making them both physically and mentally challenging. The ideas and combinations possible for this style of interval training are limitless. Be creative with your intervals, challenge your classes and, most of all, make interval training interactive and fun! Click HERE to access these – and the whole library of Upskill videos – in your Member Portal! 14 | NETWORK WINTER 2018