SPEAKER_06 32:25–34:07
Potentially, yes. So we have to talk about, it's the same conversation that we just had. It's like, how much force are we talking about here? Right? Like how much? So as I'm slamming the ball, as I'm slamming the ball, the ball pushes back on me. How fast is it pushing back on me? How much momentum is it creating? Right? So it's like, if you shoot a bullet out of a gun, there's a kickback, right? Because the bullet's pushing forward, or the bullet's pushing back on the gun. The gun's pushing the bullet forward, but the bullet pushes back on the gun. It's like, so based on relative size, so I have mass, the ball has mass. It's like how much of that comes into play. The heavier the ball that I do it with, the more potential momentum that that ball has and the less likely I am to create a yielding action. Because I've increased the magnitude, I've increased the magnitude, right? So again, this is why we have different sized medicine balls is because I have to decide, I have to decide what I want the outcome to be. And so you're gonna have to observe right? So you use your coach's eye and you say, okay, I didn't like how that was behaving. I can see that they're, I'm getting them too close to max P. I'm trying to create the, if I'm trying to create a delay strategy in the forces or the velocity is too high, I can't create the delay strategy. Right? So I have to take that into consideration.
force applicationmedicine ball trainingmomentumcoaching observationyielding vs. delay strategies