Showing posts with label Olympic Athlete. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Olympic Athlete. Show all posts

Tuesday, 2 August 2016

Jessica Ennis-Hill's post-pregnancy fitness battle as she bids to become just the third new mum to retain an OIympic title

Jessica Ennis-Hill's post-pregnancy fitness battle as she bids to become just the third new mum to retain an OIympic title

  • Jessica Ennis-Hill is out to retain her heptathlon gold at the Rio Olympics
  • The 30-year-old athlete gave birth to her son, Reggie, in July 2014
  • She is bidding to become only the third new mum to retain Olympic title
  • Her coach, Toni Minichiello, documents her post-pregnancy fitness battle
Only two women in history have given birth and retained their titles in the same Olympic cycle. Jessica Ennis-Hill will be the third if she wins heptathlon gold in Rio.
Shirley Strickland, who won 80m hurdles gold in 1952 and 1956, had a boy in 1953. In 2006 Francoise Mbango Etone, who won triple jump gold in Athens 2004 and Beijing 2008 also had a boy, Niels.
But Ennis-Hill’s feat would be unprecedented because of the many challenges presented by seven disciplines.
Jessica Ennis-Hill is bidding to retain her Olympic heptathlon title at the Rio Olympics
Jessica Ennis-Hill is bidding to retain her Olympic heptathlon title at the Rio Olympics
The 30-year-old gave birth to son, Reggie, in July 2014 but has battled back to fitness
The 30-year-old gave birth to son, Reggie, in July 2014 but has battled back to fitness
Her coach, Toni Minichiello, has documented her post-pregnancy fitness battle
Her coach, Toni Minichiello, has documented her post-pregnancy fitness battle
I have coached Ennis-Hill, now 30, since she was 13, and I believe she is capable of winning in 12 days’ time on what could be Super Saturday 2 for Team GB, with Mo Farah and Greg Rutherford competing on the same day.
If she can, it will be down not only to bucket loads of determination, natural talent and powers of perseverance but also to the team around her. 
I have been documenting her build-up to the Olympics on the blog coachtorio.comand here I show how she has returned to the top after giving birth to Reggie in July 2014. 
And I predict the scores she will need to win and become Britain’s greatest ever track-and-field athlete.
 
Only two women have previously given birth and then retained their Olympic titles
Only two women have previously given birth and then retained their Olympic titles
Ennis-Hill has proved critics wrong by winning goal standing just 5ft 4in tall 
Ennis-Hill has proved critics wrong by winning goal standing just 5ft 4in tall 
HEIGHT 
Jess is 5ft 4in (1.65m) and at her best high-jumps 1.95m. To jump 30cm above your head height is pretty exceptional for someone who is diminutive.
Most of the great heptathletes have been 5ft 8in or more, so she’s a rarity. Other coaches said she wouldn’t make it because she’s too small. 
A lot of people judge the aesthetic rather than, like a stick of rock, cutting it and seeing what’s written through the middle. But her exceptional speed is Godgiven and like all great sportspeople — the likes of David Beckham, Andre Agassi, Rafael Nadal and Steve Redgrave, for example — she has a phenomenal work ethic which sometimes isn’t recognised. 
A large chunk of that comes from within, the philosophy of “I’m going to crash my body because I want to”. She is incredibly focused and hard working.
 
A lot of her season's best scores have been in a similar ballpark to her lifetime bests 
A lot of her season's best scores have been in a similar ballpark to her lifetime bests 
POST PREGNANCY PBs
I always tell Jess to compare her distances, times or scores with what happened after she came back from having Reggie because that is where she is now. 
But as adults we all look at what we used to be able to do and it can be frustrating for her. Having said that, a lot of her season’s bests are in a similar ballpark to her lifetime bests.
 
She has had to battle changes to her muscles after giving birth to her son 
She has had to battle changes to her muscles after giving birth to her son 
MUSCLES
The abdominal muscles can become stretched and the tendon in between the two sides can split during pregnancy. 
It has less impact if you’re doing middle or long distance straight line jogging events because you’re just moving in one direction. That said, it should be addressed in all athletes because long term it will have an effect.
But if you look at the nature of the heptathlon, there’s twisting, turning, jumping, so it really was a case of specifically strengthening and waiting for the abdominal muscles to function as a unit which draws the central split together. 
This can take six months. For the first three months this meant a very limited range of activities and especially those requiring rotational control, for example javelin.
Abdominal training started at six weeks and at the very lowest level. Initially this meant lying on the floor with her knees bent, contracting the correct muscles and monitoring the split in the middle of the abdominals with the fingers to make sure it did not widen. 
As she was able to correctly recruit the right muscles we could progress exercises to involve limb movements, rotational control and other specific, functional movements that she would require returning to sport. 
At that point high level exercises like planks and abdominal crunches were completely out of the question. 
 
Almost as soon as Ennis-Hill returned to the gym it was evident she was committed 
Almost as soon as Ennis-Hill returned to the gym it was evident she was committed 
MIND
A huge part of Jess’ comeback was being in the right state of mind. Priorities change during pregnancy and again after having the baby. Did she genuinely want to come back or did she prefer to concentrate solely on being a mother? 
Was she organised enough to balance home and work life?
I looked at it with scepticism until Reggie was born. Jess had three months off, bar some work with her physiotherapist Alison Rose, bonding with Reggie until that bond was strong enough for her to come back to training.
Until that three months was over I still wasn’t sure.
Once the mind is willing you can train the body. The day Jess stepped back into the gym in November I knew she was committed.
 
She now only has one javelin session a week when previously she took two
She now only has one javelin session a week when previously she took two
THROWING
Both the javelin and shot put require a lot of twisting and turning. What you saw last season, when Jess struggled with her throwing, was someone who hadn’t been able to do as much work on twisting and turning.
After coming back to training, up to January was spent doing lots of aerobic work and that was very positive because women have increased blood volume, and therefore powers of endurance, after pregnancy. 
In the next three months she started throwing but just in straight lines, so by the time the season started we hadn’t done a lot of specific training. Before pregnancy Jess used to do javelin twice a week and now we’re down to one session.
 
Hormones during her pregnancy have caused changes to her tendon structure
Hormones during her pregnancy have caused changes to her tendon structure
LEGS
During pregnancy the body releases a hormone called relaxin and your ligaments and tendons loosen so the baby can come out. It can take a year for the body to return to being close to normal even though we started seeing progress earlier.
Some of the increased joint mobility that occurred with pregnancy have remained. For example, her hips and feet are more mobile. This will require greater strength in the muscles around those joints to support the extra mobility.
In some areas this can be positive as she had very stiff ankles whereas now she has greater range which is better for performance. 
 
Ennis-Hill has also dealt with stress fractures in her foot and Achilles issues 
Ennis-Hill has also dealt with stress fractures in her foot and Achilles issues 
FEET
In 2008 Jess had three stress fractures in her right foot, which was the one she took off from in the high jump AND long jump. We made a conscious decision in order to lengthen her career to switch to a left foot take-off in the long jump to halve the amount of jumping. 
After four years and the success of London I suggested switching back to the right foot.
Jess wasn’t keen on the idea but came round to it and it was incredibly successful.
But in 2013 she had Achilles problems so couldn’t jump and we never saw it in full effect. 
The fact she’s jumped a personal best of 6.63m in Ratingen during a heptathlon in June wasn’t a surprise, we’re just starting to see the result of what was put in place four years ago.
 
Toni Minichiello believes a score of 6,800 is needed to win the gold medal
Toni Minichiello believes a score of 6,800 is needed to win the gold medal
WHAT IS NEEDED TO WIN GOLD?
I think 6,600 points or above will get on the podium and 6,800 will probably be what is needed for gold.
There could be up to eight contenders.
It’s an incredibly compressed field and there aren’t any particularly stand-out athletes.
The question is who can put seven events together without a major hiccup.

Monday, 6 July 2015

Olympian Natalie Coughlin, NBA's Kevin Love, and NFL's Odell Beckham, Jr. among six sports stars to pose naked for ESPN cover shoots

Athletes au naturel! Olympian Natalie Coughlin, NBA's Kevin Love, and NFL's Odell Beckham, Jr. among six sports stars to pose naked for ESPN cover shoots

  • The pro athletes all appear naked on their own covers of the publication's special Body Issue
  • Olympians Chantae McMillan, Amanda Bingson, and Natalie Coughlin also bare all as they star in the body-baring issue
  • The cover stars join Olympic gymnast Aly Raisman, WNBA's Brittney Griner, and French Open champ Stan Wawrinka, who also posed nude
What, no uniforms?
Six pro athletes have stripped down for a series of covers for ESPN The Magazine's Body Issue, which hits stands this Friday.
MLB player Bryce Harper, NBA player Kevin Love, NFL player Odell Beckham, Jr., Olympian heptathlete Chantae McMillan, USA Track & Field hammer thrower Amanda Bingson, and Olympic swimmer Natalie Coughlin all appear completely nude on different versions on the magazine, doing flips, flexing muscles - and even holding some balls, of both the 'foot' and 'basket' variety.
Scroll down for video  
Diving in: Olympic swimmer Natalie Coughlin talks about loving her body in an interview for the magazine
Diving in: Olympic swimmer Natalie Coughlin talks about loving her body in an interview for the magazine
Home run! Washington Nationals outfielder Bryce Harper gets dirty as he poses on one of six covers for ESPN The Magazines Body Issue
Home run! Washington Nationals outfielder Bryce Harper gets dirty as he poses on one of six covers for ESPN The Magazines Body Issue
Dropping trou in such a public way can be nerve-wracking - even for these super-fit stars. But Washington Nationals outfielder Bryce Harper, for one, is thrilled to have been offered the chance to show off the goods in such a public way.
'You’re growing up and you say: “I want to be on the front of a Wheaties box; I want to be on the front of a Topps card; I want to be on the Body Issue,”' he said.
For the issue's seventh annual addition, which hits newsstands on Friday, he poses with a baseball - and nothing else - while flaunting the muscles that help him maintain a .346 batting average.
The Cleveland Cavaliers' Kevin Love dribbles a basketball in his birthday suit for his own cover, while New York Giants wide receiver Odell Beckham, Jr. runs and jumps in the buff with a football.
He shoots, he scores! Kevin Love, who plays for The Cleveland Cavaliers, shows off his muscular physique
He shoots, he scores! Kevin Love, who plays for The Cleveland Cavaliers, shows off his muscular physique
Trim and toned: Each of the six cover athletes, including Kevin, has their own individual shoot inside the magazine
Trim and toned: Each of the six cover athletes, including Kevin, has their own individual shoot inside the magazine
Stepping out: The stars have all posed in a variety of locations, many of which are far removed from the arenas and stadiums that they are used to playing in
Stepping out: The stars have all posed in a variety of locations, many of which are far removed from the arenas and stadiums that they are used to playing in
Slam dunk: Although his shoot took place in what appears to be the desert, Kevin still managed to track down a basketball hoop
Slam dunk: Although his shoot took place in what appears to be the desert, Kevin still managed to track down a basketball hoop
In an issue that wonders more at the body's power to achieve incredible things that its sex appeal, the women who've ditched their clothes for the upcoming issue are totally focused on paying homage to their sports.
Natalie Coughlin, who has won twelve Olympic medals, including three golds, crouches in water for her cover, telling the magazine that she's worked too hard to retire at age 30, as people expected her to do.
'I've taken really good care of my body to allow me to still compete at a very high level,' she said. 'I lift four times a week. 
'I can bench 70-pound dumbbells in each hand. I love that sensation of feeling so strong and powerful.'
Touchdown! No one would date tackle New York Giants wide receiver Odell Beckham, Jr. if he ran like this on the field
Touchdown! No one would date tackle New York Giants wide receiver Odell Beckham, Jr. if he ran like this on the field
Inked: The NFL star showed off his impressive body art during the shoot
Inked: The NFL star showed off his impressive body art during the shoot
Part of him: Odell is never pictured without a football in his hand
Part of him: Odell is never pictured without a football in his hand
Impressive: Heptathlete Chantae McMillan pays flaunts her athletic skills by flipping backwards on the cover of ESPN The Magazine
Impressive: Heptathlete Chantae McMillan pays flaunts her athletic skills by flipping backwards on the cover of ESPN The Magazine
She also discussed the body confidence that helped her escape some of the problems that plague other female swimmers, adding: 'Swimming is one of the sports where a lot of people suffer from body image issues. 
'There were a lot of girls around me growing up that suffered full-blown eating disorders, or just the body dysmorphia that every girl feels -- especially every girl in a swimsuit.
'There were times when I wasn't happy with my body, but I always knew that I was really fit and that it was what allowed me to be successful in the pool.'
Olympians Chantae McMillan and Amanda Bingson also star on their own covers, Chante baring her incredible abs while doing a backflip and Amanda demonstrates her hammer throwing prowess au nautral.
Tough lady: Amanda Bingson, who competes in the hammer throw, put her muscles on display
Tough lady: Amanda Bingson, who competes in the hammer throw, put her muscles on display
Tan lines: As well as a toned and trim figure, 2012 Olympian Amanda showed off some impressive strap marks during her shoot, no doubt the result of an intensive outdoor training schedule
Tan lines: As well as a toned and trim figure, 2012 Olympian Amanda showed off some impressive strap marks during her shoot, no doubt the result of an intensive outdoor training schedule
Up up and away: The Team USA athlete placed tenth in the hammer throw at the 2013 World Championships
Up up and away: The Team USA athlete placed tenth in the hammer throw at the 2013 World Championships
These cover stars join a list of athletes whose nude photos appear throughout the magazine, including the WNBA's Brittney Griner, soccer stars Ali Krieger and Jermaine Jones, and French Open champion Stan Wawrinka.
Last week, pictures of Olympic gymnast Aly Raisman, 21, hit the internet. The three-time medalist for Team USA at the 2012 Games shows off her incredibly muscular form while taking on tough gymanstic poses - all while completely naked.
'Instead of being insecure about my muscles, I've learned to love them,' Aly told the magazine. 'I don't even think of it as a flaw anymore because it's made me into the athlete that I am. 
'You can always spot the gymnast,' Aly, who competed in the 16th season of Dancing with the Stars after she returned from London, added. 'They are so ripped and so strong. Even if I was just wearing a T-shirt, my arms would just be more muscular than other girls'. If we were playing sports, I would just crush them.'
In their element: When they're not posing naked for magazine covers, NFL star Odell Beckham, Jr. (pictured) and NBA player Kevin Love are at the top of their respective sports
In their element: When they're not posing naked for magazine covers, NFL star Odell Beckham, Jr. and NBA player Kevin Love (pictured) are at the top of their respective sports
In their element: When they're not posing naked for magazine covers, NFL star Odell (left) and NBA player Kevin (right) are at the top of their respective sports
Step up to the plate: Washington Nationals player Bryce Harper (pictured) and Team USA athlete Amanda Bingson each have their own ESPN covers
Step up to the plate: Washington Nationals player Bryce Harper and Team USA athlete Amanda Bingson (pictured) each have their own ESPN covers
Step up to the plate: Washington Nationals player Bryce (left) and Team USA athlete Amanda (right) each have their own ESPN covers
Speedy: Chantae competed for Team USA at the 2012 Olympics in London (pictured)
Speedy: Amanda competed for Team USA at the 2012 Olympics in London (pictured)
Speedy: Chantae (left) and Amanda (right) both competed for Team USA at the 2012 Olympics in London
For her picture, the petite Olympian - who won the gold for Floor Exercise and the London 2012 Olympics - lost her ever-present leotard and posed on a balance beam - which is actually a bugbear piece of equipment for Aly.
Although she won the bronze in the individual event at the Games, a mistake on her Beam routine during the All-Around competition cost Aly, then 18, a medal.  
Speaking to the magazine, Aly revealed that this fact has somewhat taken away from her other Olympic triumphs thanks to her perfectionist nature.
'That kind of pisses me off - I always think that it's never good enough. I almost fell and put my hand down; it was stupid, I never make that mistake on the beam,' she said.
'I'll have a second chance at it, but I think about it all the time. I wish I didn't have to learn that valuable lesson at the Olympics.'
Joining in: Basketball player DeAndre Jordan also makes an appearance in the magazine
Joining in: Basketball player DeAndre Jordan also makes an appearance in the magazine
Aiming high: In this stunning shot, the 26-year-old can be seen showing off his slam dunking skills
Aiming high: In this stunning shot, the 26-year-old can be seen showing off his slam dunking skills
Not just for boys: WNBA star Britney Griner also flaunts some colorful tattoos in her shoot
Not just for boys: WNBA star Britney Griner also flaunts some colorful tattoos in her shoot
Sky high: The 24-year-old can be seen showing off her best shot in this image
Sky high: The 24-year-old can be seen showing off her best shot in this image
Aly also took home the Team gold along with teammates - the other members of the team, christened the 'Fierce Five' - Jordyn Wieber, Gabby Douglas, McKayla Maroney and Kyla Ross.
Unfortunately the Fierce Five will not be reuniting in 2016, as Jordyn decided to retire after withdrawing from competition following the 2012 Games. 
Even though she gained the Team gold, Jordyn suffered a grave disappointment at the Games when she failed to make the All-Around final after being beaten by two of her teammates, despite going into the competition as World Champion.
Coming back to competition after the Games did not come easy to Aly either, as she explained to the magazine. 
'After 2012, I took a full year off. Gabby and I did. We needed a break,' she said. 'It's just repetitions after repetitions. There's no offseason. 
'But at the same time, you always have to keep your goals in the back of your mind.' 
Husband and wife: Surfer Laird Hamilton and his wife, volleyball player Gabby Reece, also appear in the publication's special issue
Husband and wife: Surfer Laird Hamilton and his wife, volleyball player Gabby Reece, also appear in the publication's special issue
By the sea: The couple split their time between homes in California and Hawaii
By the sea: The couple split their time between homes in California and Hawaii
Showing off: 21-year-old gymnast Aly Raisman, who won two gold and one bronze medal at the London 2012 Olympics, posed nude inside the magazine
Showing off: 21-year-old gymnast Aly Raisman, who won two gold and one bronze medal at the London 2012 Olympics, posed nude inside the magazine
Joining the ranks: Aly is one of several top athletes posing in the buff for the magazine issue, which has previously included sport stars like Michael Phelps and Venus Williams
Joining the ranks: Aly is one of several top athletes posing in the buff for the magazine issue, which has previously included sport stars like Michael Phelps and Venus Williams
French Open champ Stan Wawrinka (pictured) also appears nude in the upcoming issue
French Open champ Stan Wawrinka (pictured) also appears nude in the upcoming issue


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-3151221/Olympian-Natalie-Coughlin-NBA-s-Kevin-Love-NFL-s-Odell-Beckham-Jr-six-sports-stars-pose-naked-ESPN-cover-shoots.html#ixzz3f8cRHFOM
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