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Jamie Smith on Beating “Over-Coaching” Through Natural Learning, Training Menus and Athlete Autonomy

Jamie Smith on Beating “Over-Coaching” Through Natural Learning, Training Menus and Athlete Autonomy

Released Thursday, 1st April 2021
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Jamie Smith on Beating “Over-Coaching” Through Natural Learning, Training Menus and Athlete Autonomy

Jamie Smith on Beating “Over-Coaching” Through Natural Learning, Training Menus and Athlete Autonomy

Jamie Smith on Beating “Over-Coaching” Through Natural Learning, Training Menus and Athlete Autonomy

Jamie Smith on Beating “Over-Coaching” Through Natural Learning, Training Menus and Athlete Autonomy

Thursday, 1st April 2021
Good episode? Give it some love!
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Today’s show brings on Jamie Smith, founder of the “U of Strength”.  Jamie Smith has coached a variety of athletes from the novice to elite skill levels, including several NHL, NBA and MLS athletes.  He has been a prior guest on the podcast, as well as having done an extensive webinar for Just Fly Sports, speaking on perception-action topics and building robust athletes in a manner that transcends simply getting them “stronger”.

As long as I’ve been in the sports performance profession, I’ve realized just how important it is to look at every way you can impact the performance of an athlete, on the levels of strength, speed, mentality, perception, decision-making, special-strength, and more.  Jamie is the epitome of a coach who is truly passionate about making athletes better at the sports they play through a comprehensive approach.

In the modern day, a comprehensive approach is truly important, since we relate athlete response to that of a machine.  Athletes are so heavily coached, scheduled and instructed, that they rarely get the autonomy and creative license they need to reach their own optimal performance.  Coaches also tend to mis-place their actual role in the process of working with athletes, and don’t allow athletes enough ownership and say in the training process to the point where they will struggle in achieving their ideal training result, overcoming stressful competition situations, and even in life beyond sport.

Last podcast, we went into the perception-action component of making a well-rounded athlete, and this episode we get info full-circle development by means of training variability, the use of nature and natural surfaces, menu systems and athlete autonomy, competition, long-term athletic development, and more.  Jamie takes the art of the coach as a guide seriously, and in the world of over-coached and robotic athletes, Jamie is a beacon of light for young athletes looking to reach high levels of not only performance, but also self-efficacy, confidence and life-preparedness.

Today’s episode is brought to you by SimpliFaster and Lost Empire Herbs.  For 15% off your Lost Empire Herbs order, head to www.lostempireherbs.com/justfly

View more podcast episodes at the podcast homepage.

Timestamps and Main Points

04:23 – The benefits of training in nature for young and older athletes

12:02 – The importance of conscious risk-taking in training

13:23 – Thinking about a child’s future in sport, and how training in nature will impact it

17:30 – Improving happiness in youth sports by incorporating fun and playfulness

24:11 – How to integrate nature into training athletes

28:37 – Thoughts on coaching as a dynamic partnership

33:51 – The role of observation in coaching and focusing on strengths instead of weaknesses + A big misconception of coaches

44:53 – What a training session looks like for Jamie’s athletes, and the art of using menu-systems

56:07 – Competition options in older athletes

57:45 – The role of athlete interest and collaboration in the results of a training program

“At the beginning of every day, me and my assistant, I brief him and we go over what the objective is, what we need to improve on as coaches or as a whole, as a program, and one of the things we talk about is who can say the least amount of words.”

“A lot of people, to wake up the feet, would roll with a sensory ball or spikey ball, shit we did isometrics, we did different gate patterns walking up and down, walking tall, walking in a tunnel… completely barefoot walking through the rocks.”

“The big thing I tell athletes is: we want you to become comfortable in uncomfortable situations.”

“[Barefoot training is] not great if you’re on a wood floor or a totally flat floor where there’s zero sensory information coming in. It’s really not a whole lot better than being in shoes, to be honest. You have to have these little sensations or irritations and you combine that with different w...

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