Yunus Barisik, Author at Next Level Athletics - Page 32 of 40
Yunus Barisik

Author Archives: Yunus Barisik

Yunus Barisik, CSCS, specializes in making hockey players strong, fast and explosive. He has trained 500+ hockey players at the junior, college and pro levels, including NHL Draft picks and World Champions. An accomplished author, Yunus has had articles published on top fitness and performance sites, including T Nation, STACK and Muscle & Strength. He also wrote Next Level Hockey Training, a comprehensive resource for ice hockey players on building athletic strength, size and power, while staying injury-free.

TOP 11 Metallica Training Songs

Back in the day I would get really psyched up before a big lift and couldn’t approach a barbell without In Flames, Killswitch Engage, AC/DC or Metallica blasting through the loudspeakers.

Metallica

Over the years, I’ve moved away from a powerlifting-centric training program to one prioritizing bodyweight movements and dumbbell exercises that won’t beat up my joints as badly.

I’ve also mellowed out in the music department and in the last month alone have set PR’s listening to 50 Cent, Bomfunk MC’s and Red Hot Chili Peppers.

But I still get that extra kick whenever a raw, hard metal song with banging guitar riffs and a hoarse, heavy voice like that of James Hetfield comes on.

Here are my top picks for the best Metallica training songs of all time…

#11 Some Kind of Monster

How can you not approach a weight with unshakable determination when James starts shouting “Some kind of MONSTEEERRRRR”. Instantly adds a 10% increase on any lift.

Continue Reading

Ring Chin-Ups: 4 Reasons Why They Rock

As I have been saying for years, you won’t find many better weight room exercises for athletes than regular chin-ups.

When added together with other key movements – such as a squat, deadlift, upper body push and an Olympic lift or jump variation – you would have the foundation of your strength training program in place. No bells and whistles needed.

However, delving deeper into gymnastic rings training over the past few years, my fondness for ring chin-ups has really blossomed from a casual fling into a full-scale love affair.

ring chin-up

While the straight bar chin-up remains a fine choice, in some cases the ring chin-up could prove to be an even better option.

Here are four reasons why you should do them…

1. Upper Body Strength Gains

I’m sure this comes as no surprise to anyone… chin-ups are an excellent way to build upper body strength and size.

Especially once you can load them up with some decent weights and go to town – just like our 18-year-old hockey players below…

Continue Reading

3 Advanced Ab Exercises I Like

“Dude, how do I get abs??”

The question that any trainer worth his slim fit Under Armour shirt cringes at…Yuri van Gelder - Ring L-Sit

But then I realized I haven’t really touched on the topic of core training in the past apart from a brief mention when pointing out the benefits of gymnastic rings training.

So today I’m gonna show you three brutally effective core exercises that will take your core development to a whole new level.

1. Ring L-Sit

As you must have noticed by now, I have a special relationship with advanced bodyweight movements and gymnastic rings. I would never tout a training method or implement as superior to others, but you can’t argue with the effectiveness of ring training.

The ring L-sit is an excellent core movement – well, technically it’s not even a movement since you’re trying to move as little as possible during its execution – that challenges the mid-section like no other common isometric exercise.

Continue Reading

Training Around Hockey Injuries

My new article on training around hockey injuries was recently published on STACK.com.

But first, I wanted to give a shoutout to the seven Blues U20 players donning the Finnish national team jersey during an international break this week.

Photo Credit: Leijonat.fi

Photo Credit: Leijonat.fi

Kasper Björkqvist got called up to the Finnish U20 national team hosting Russia, Sweden and Czech Republic in the last international tournament prior to the World Junior Championships starting late December.

Joonas Niemelä and Teemu Väyrynen made the U19 team playing three games against the Czechs.

Niclas Almari, Kasper Kotkansalo and Emil Oksanen travel to Switzerland to play against the Swiss, Czechs, Swedes and Americans with the U18 team.

On top of that, Urho Vaakanainen will be representing Finland at the World U17 Hockey Challenge in Canada.

Congrats to all the guys and best of luck with the games.

And as promised, here’s the link to the article on STACK:

How to Train Around 3 Common Hockey Injuries

 

Leg Training Advice for the Beat Up Lifter

Now that a few of my training articles have been published on the interwebz, I’ve been getting a bunch of reader questions as of late.

One particularly well-received piece was a pistol squat tutorial that I successfully implemented in my own training back in the summer of 2012.

If you haven’t read it yet, go check it out here: How to Go From Zero to 15 Pistol Squats in 90 Days

Arnold_squat

I may be in the minority among strength coaches but I don’t view training questions from readers as a drag or waste of my time… Actually, I like getting them.

Mainly because it shows me that a) somebody took their time to read what I have to say and b) they’re serious about applying the information in their own training.

The latter is also the reason why very few people make progress in the gym while the majority don’t.

Huh?

Most people skim through training articles as if they were swiping up and down through their Facebook news feed – then do NOTHING with the advice they were given.

Don’t bother wasting your precious time reading stuff that you’re never gonna apply.

Continue Reading

5 Ways to Improve Performance and Stay Healthy for Athletes

Being strong is great.

But not at the expense of diminished athleticism and getting injured.

We’ve all seen the big guy who can bench the house yet gets gassed playing pickup football with a bunch of dudes from the office.

Or the middle-aged fella who pulls a hamstring when working up to a sprint on the track trying to show his kids Daddy’s still got it after all these years.

That ain’t athletic.

That’s sad.

And certainly not what we’re after.

Here are 5 ways for improving athleticism and staving off injuries for anyone involved in sports…

#1. Jump

Every athlete should include some type of jumping in their training program.

Begin with easier variations such as box and vertical jumps, while also adding single-leg jumps like lateral bounds and hurdle hops in your workouts.

Over time you can move on to advanced movements like depth jumps.

The key with all jump exercises is to keep reps low and rest periods long enough for proper recovery.

While certain exercise methodologies advocate pummeling yourself into oblivion with depth landings from 50″ boxes followed by 20 reps of box jumps, you need to be smarter than that if you want to train for increased power and stay healthy.

Do 3-6 sets of 3-5 reps per exercise, two or three times per week.

#2. Sprint

Sprinting is great for getting faster and leaner.

It’s also a great way to get injured.

Huh – whadda ya mean?

Lemme explain…

Sprinting at full speed is a demanding physical activity that most people are not ready for on day 1.

Especially if the last time you ran sprints dates back to PE class in high school.

Starting your quest to get back in shape with 200 m dashes on the track at 100% will soon have you sidelined with an injury as the muscular stress will be too high.

Welcome groin and hamstring pulls. Goodbye getting faster and shedding body fat.

The solution?

Use shorter distances. With short distances, you’re spending considerably more time in the acceleration phase, which places less stress on lower body muscles and leads to less injuries as opposed to the max speed phase taking place after it.

For some of you that might mean starting with 10 meter sprints, then adding another 5-10 meters to it every two weeks or so.

After a couple months, you’d be running 30-50 meters with significantly decreased injury risk as your body will be better prepared to handle the muscular stress caused by higher running speeds.

For longer distance sprinting, run hills. The incline of a hill forces you to run below your true maximal running speed (which is when the majority of injuries occur) and makes hamstring pulls a lot less likely.

Perform one flat ground and one hill sprint workout for a total of two weekly sprinting sessions.

#3. Change Directions

Sports is random and chaotic by nature. The best athletes – whether we’re talking about football, hockey, tennis or basketball – go from moving in one direction to exploding the other way as a new play develops in the blink of an eye.

Sprinting only in a straight line will not cut it if you want to gain the quickness and agility to dominate the opposition on the pitch or in the rink.

You need to add some exercises with braking and cutting into your training for that.

These can be as simple as setting up two cones anywhere between 5-10 meters apart and sprinting from one to the other a few times.

Or you can perform more advanced variations with forward, backward, lateral and diagonal direction changes. The possibilities are only limited by your imagination.

Include some sort of short change-of-direction drill in every warm-up before sports practice and train them more extensively once or twice per week.

#4. Load Single-Leg Exercises

Single-leg exercises have long been an undervalued part of strength training – but they’re extremely important for athletes in improving performance and staying healthy.

Not everyone can handle the wear and tear accumulated over years of subjecting your joints and tendons to heavy bilateral squatting and deadlifting.

Incidences of low back and knee pain increase the longer you’ve been in the Iron Game.

However, few people will display those same problems when we squat or deadlift on one leg at a time.

Many gym-goers regard single-leg training as an afterthought, something you can throw in at the end of a workout for high reps with light weight – if performed at all.

I’m telling you to work those unilateral lower body movements just like you would heavy squats and deads from now on. Get stronger in the 3-8 rep range on dumbbell and barbell split squats, reverse lunges and rear-foot elevated split squats.

You can still keep the heavy bilateral lifts in your program if they don’t beat you up. Though also including some single-leg stuff certainly wouldn’t hurt.

A decent number to shoot for on any of those single-leg squat variations mentioned above is 1.5x BW of external load for 5 reps. If you could bump that up to 2x BW for 5 over the next few years, you’d be an extremely strong individual.

Add at least two heavy single-leg exercises – one a squat, the other a deadlift pattern – in your training program each week.

#5. Master Your Bodyweight

Male gymnasts possess unparalleled mastery in moving their own bodyweight through space, which is a great way to build upper body strength and overall athleticism.

Think about it… how many fat, out of shape people can perform loaded chin-ups? What about ring push-ups? Or climbing rope?

Practically none.

That’s because demonstrating any level of decent athleticism and being able to handle your own bodyweight go hand in hand.

When you see a fella at the park, kicking and flailing to climb the invisible ladder in front of his 10-year-old son to show Junior how to do chin-ups, you may think "man, what a dope".

But when you come across a guy at the gym chinning effortlessly with a pile of plates attached to his waist?

Now that is dope.

Are You Using the Wrong Exercise Order?

lu xiajoun2

Before we dive into today’s post, I wanted to share something cool with you.

Cuz, ya know, it’s MY blog after all…

Our junior hockey team recently had pictures taken of all the players and staff for the 2015-2016 season – and this beauty came out…

Blues_Yunus

The most official looking photo ever

Pretty sweet, huh?

With the backdrop out of the way, let’s talk exercise order.

Certainly not the sexiest training topic out there and you’d think people knew how to structure a workout aimed at improving strength, speed, power and body composition by now.

Turns out they don’t.

Continue Reading

>