SPEAKER_01 40:00–40:33
So their center of gravity drops and it falls backwards, right? Okay. So they have to bring their center of gravity forward to come up over their base of support, right? So again, just start with a higher box and you reduce the compensation. And then you just say, okay, so you take your box and you put, you got Eric's pads and stuff. You put a couple of Eric's pads on there. You say, sit down on those pads for a second. Okay, stand up. And then you make the judgment. You're the coach. You go, oh, okay, still too low. Let's put another pad on there. Sit down on that. Perfect. We're going to start there. That becomes, and then you just slowly take away the pads as they start to gain capacity to change shape and then produce pressure, right? And then you just make it harder. It's just like we were talking about before. It's like, do you do things in the hardest manner to start? Is it highest velocity, fullest range of motion, the hardest activity to control? It's like, no, you don't do that. You start with whatever range of motion they can control and whatever speed they can control, et cetera. So that's all you're doing. You're just creating a constraint within the activity to make sure that they are successful.
squat coachingcenter of gravitybiomechanical compensationprogressive loadingconstraint-led coaching