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‘Don't try this at home' - the brutal NFL strength and conditioning protocol that some boxers can also benefit from
‘Don't try this at home' - the brutal NFL strength and conditioning protocol that some boxers can also benefit from

The Independent

time31-05-2025

  • Health
  • The Independent

‘Don't try this at home' - the brutal NFL strength and conditioning protocol that some boxers can also benefit from

The French contrast method is not for everyone; it is even too intense for some professional athletes. But those with the capacity to handle it can reap the rewards. This strength and conditioning protocol, comprising four exercises performed back to back, is used by Perform 365 chief executive and coach Dan Lawrence to develop enviable levels of strength and power in some of the elite athletes he works with. One of these athletes is Conor Benn, who incorporated the method into his preparations to take on Chris Eubank Jr. 'Conor has a very high training age, meaning he has lots of strength and conditioning experience, so he is able to do something like this, which is incredibly advanced,' Lawrence explains. 'There are not many fighters I would be putting through this, but Conor is at a level where he adapts really well to it.' Here is how to use this protocol, and why – for the crème de la crème of the sporting world – it could hold the key to improved performance. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Dan Lawrence - Perform365 (@danlawrence365) Conor Benn's French contrast method protocol: Perform four rounds of the sequence below, with 20 to 30 seconds of rest between exercises and three to five minutes of rest between rounds Quarter squats from blocks x3 (180kg, in Benn's case) Unloaded countermovement jump x3 (this is a max-height vertical jump) Barbell jump squat x3 (with a load that feels 'relatively heavy but can still be moved explosively'– roughly 30 per cent of your one-rep max squat, in this case Band-assisted over speed jump x3 (a vertical jump while holding a band attached to an anchor point above you to help propel you upward) The French contrast method comprises four exercises performed back to back. These exercises are all biomechanically similar, with fairly uniform joint angles and muscle recruitment throughout. However, they occupy different portions of the force-velocity curve – a graph demonstrating the inverse relationship between force and velocity, with the body forced to slow down when lifting heavier loads, and able to move faster when lifting lighter ones. The first exercise is a heavily loaded compound movement such as a squat. This targets developments in maximum strength, or the maximum weight a person can lift, with the goal of recruiting as many motor units as possible. Up next is an unloaded jump, with more of a focus on improving speed. This will have a slower and longer ground contact time, Lawrence says. This is followed by a loaded explosive exercise to work on speed-strength, which is the ability to create a lot of force, fast. And finally, there is an assisted explosive exercise, in this case a jump assisted by a resistance band, for overspeed work. This involves working at a velocity that is greater than normal to again promote speed and power development. Benefits of the French contrast method The French contrast method was created by sports scientist and track and field coach Gilles Cometti, and more recently developed by strength coach Cal Dietz, to 'exploit various areas of the force-velocity curve in order to bring out an acute physiological response,' according to an article by the National Strength and Conditioning Association. 'The method aims to increase post-activation performance enhancement through a combination of traditional resistance training and plyometrics exercises leading to greater rate of force development, movement velocity and power production.' In layman's terms: you can generate more speed and power during the later, lighter lifts after tackling the earlier, heavier loads. It is almost like picking up a bag you expected to be heavy, only to find it is empty and flies off the ground. A 2024 study published in the Journal of Musculoskeletal and Neuronal Interactions found that football players who used the French contrast method for six weeks saw improved performance in their vertical jump, 30m sprint and dynamic balance – the ability to maintain balance while moving or changing direction, which is of particular importance in a sporting context. Further formal scientific research into the method is limited, and the mechanisms behind its efficacy are still largely uncertain. However, as with many training principles, the proof is in the pudding, with many strength and conditioning coaches implementing it to great effect with their athletes. Who should use the French contrast method? The French Contrast method is not for everyone, Lawrence stresses. As Matchroom Boxing 's head of performance, he says there are even professional fighters he would avoid assigning it to. He says: 'If you give someone with a low training age this method, which was popularised around NFL athletes – high-octane, explosive athletes – they will just crumble and break down,' he explains. He concludes: 'The demand on the neuromuscular system is incredibly high, which is why the athlete must have a high training age to reap the rewards from this kind of system, from a physiological point of view. A base level of foundational strength and a good number of years of weight training experience would be advised before attempting such an advanced method.'

‘A savage high-octane athlete': Inside Conor Benn's brutal training camp for Eubank Jr showdown
‘A savage high-octane athlete': Inside Conor Benn's brutal training camp for Eubank Jr showdown

The Independent

time19-05-2025

  • Sport
  • The Independent

‘A savage high-octane athlete': Inside Conor Benn's brutal training camp for Eubank Jr showdown

In the searing Spanish sun, Conor Benn glides around a running track. He eats up 300m in 41 seconds, walks for 100m, then repeats this sequence nine more times without dropping the pace. Despite being significantly heavier than he's used to, the would-be welterweight is quite literally fighting fit – and it's just as well. On Saturday, April 26, he faces Chris Eubank Jr in a middleweight clash steeped in hype and history. As an added challenge, Benn had to pack on 13lb and move up two divisions in preparation for the fight, all while maintaining the speed and explosiveness that make him formidable. 'A boxer is a supreme athlete because they work across so many different disciplines from a physiological point of view,' Dan Lawrence, Benn's strength and conditioning coach, tells me. 'And Conor is a savage, high-octane athlete.' Below, he reveals how Benn was able to gain weight, stay lean and, crucially, improve performance over the course of a 70-plus day training camp in Mallorca. A week of Connor Benn's training Most people look at a week and see three, four or maybe even five opportunities to train. But Benn is an elite athlete, so Lawrence splits his days into AM and PM sessions so he can balance as many attributes as possible. 'A boxer isn't like a powerlifter; someone who has to produce high amounts of force with no time constraints to get from point A to point B,' says Lawrence. 'Boxing has an element of that; force production is important, as we know force times velocity equals power. 'But we also need to produce that force very quickly because we are under time constraints. That's the difference between landing a shot and not landing a shot. So we surf the force-velocity curve, and that's just one piece of the puzzle. 'Then we have energy systems – what goes on from a bioenergetic point of view. We know we can't train like an endurance athlete because he needs high-intensity repeated bouts of exercise. Then he recovers, then he goes again.' To ensure Benn remains a well-rounded athlete, while capitalising on his trademark power and explosiveness, this is what a typical training week looks like: Monday AM: Weighted run 'This is generally 30 to 35 minutes of running with a weighted vest,' Lawrence says. 'Conor is a savage so he'll do that run early [most days he and his team are up at 5am], sleep, fuel; it's really a case of eat, sleep, train, repeat.' Monday PM: Sparring ' He'll spar in the evening now,' says Lawrence. 'We've moved our sparring times to later in the evening over the last couple of weeks to get accustomed to being ready at that time – that's a key consideration of ours. His ring walk will be at about 9.50pm, so if we're only training until 4pm or 5pm that's problematic in terms of him being ready to go at that time.' Mallorca's 600 Santa Ponsa steps are seen as a challenge among tourists, who sweat and struggle their way to the top at walking pace. Over the course of the training vamp, Benn and Lawrence have commandeered these steps for hill sprints. Tuesday PM: Technical boxing 'This is where Conor will go through technical drilling with Tony Sims, the head coach.' Wednesday AM: Sparring Benn usually heads to the ring for 10.30am for a sparring session. Wednesday PM: Strength and conditioning Here, Lawrence again takes the lead, subjecting Benn to a series of strength and power-building protocols such as overcoming isometrics and the French contrast method – more on this below. 'Do we want high force from movements? Yes. But then we do strength-speed exercises, speed-strength exercises and high velocity unloaded exercises as well to enable him to become more explosive,' Lawrence explains. Thursday AM: Track session When he first arrived in Spain for the training camp, Benn did four rounds of a 300m run followed by a 100m walk. 'Tony said to Conor, 'By the end of camp, I want you doing 10 of these',' Lawrence says. 'Conor thought there was no way that was going to happen, but lo and behold he did 10 of them last Thursday, in times that were far superior to when he did four at the start of camp. 'On the track he's really impressed me. Biomechanically, the progression in the way he flows and the mechanics of his running has been really impressive to see.' Thursday PM: Technical boxing Friday AM: Recovery or a run 'Friday morning involves either recovery or a run based on training load management,' says Lawrence. 'There have been times where we've given him full recovery based on the data.' Friday PM: Sparring Saturday AM: Run 'This would likely be a steady state run, which we do as a team.' Saturday PM: Strength and conditioning Sunday: Full recovery day Benn has now entered a taper phase, which begins 10 days out from the fight. This involves maintaining a high training intensity while reducing total training volume by 30-60 per cent. 'The reason for that is to enable the athlete to peak on fight night, with all fatigue dissipated,' Lawrence explains. 'Reducing training loads allows some supercompensation to occur, which means Conor will then peak above his baseline [performance] levels on fight night.' Conor Benn: Diet Lawrence summarises his approach under the banner: 'Old school values, modern methods.' It was these modern methods he turned to when helping Benn pack on 13lb of lean mass. 'We took him to My Vital Metrics to do a comprehensive physiological profile,' Lawrence says. Alongside performance-based assessments, he tested Benn's resting metabolic rate (RMR, or the amount of calories he burns at rest) and completed a DEXA scan to reveal factors such as his body composition. 'Conor didn't want to go to the lab, but he knew that we had to do it and it was a non-negotiable for me because otherwise we would have been going in blind,' says Lawrence. 'Looking at RMR, that gives us a baseline number, then we record the data from training. So let's say in session one he expends 700 calories, in a second boxing session he may expend 1,200 calories, so his total output would be around 3,500, sometimes even 4,000 calories, per day. 'If we're only consuming 3,000 calories, for a guy who's stepping up 13lb and two weight classes, that's going to be problematic. ' Using this data, Benn's team builds a suitable nutrition plan, factoring in the optimal doses of protein, carbohydrates and fats to ensure his packing on mass optimally for his performance. 'He'll be in either maintenance or a slight surplus of calories to ensure that his weight is good,' Lawrence says. 'And his weight has been absolutely brilliant throughout camp. He checks his weight every single morning, feeds back to us, then we build a nutrition plan for that day.' Conor Benn: Recovery Speaking to Lawrence, the importance of data is clear. He even has the metrics from Benn's Whoop band stream straight to his phone to monitor his sleep, recovery and readiness to train. 'There's no guesswork here,' he says. 'We use data to drive our decision-making processes – both subjective, aka 'How are you feeling?', 'Are you sore?', and also objective markers. 'This is how he merges his incredibly hard work – no one works harder than Conor – with smart work to enable us to reach our goals.' One of the objective markers is neuromuscular readiness testing, which comes in the form of a daily vertical jump test. For this, Benn performs three max-effort countermovement (or vertical) jumps, and the results indicate his levels of fatigue. 'Conor's PB on that currently is 58.6cm, which puts him in an elite range,' says Lawrence. 'If he is 10 or 12 per cent down on his numbers, he may be in a slightly more fatigued state than we would like. 'Do we then take that as gospel, decide he can't train and go home? Of course not. But it does mean we then have deeper conversations around how his sleep was last night. And if he's had a poor night's sleep, we identify why.' This might be that Benn has eaten too late or his room is too hot. After one poor night's sleep, his team even found themselves remedying a 'pillow issue'. 'Sleep is the number one priority tool, and it costs absolutely nothing,' Lawrence says. 'He'll use saunas sporadically as well as massage, and there's a physio out here. He also uses ProTec compression boots every day to promote blood flow and help recovery.' The principle behind these constant data-driven tweaks is the 'aggregation of marginal gains' – a term popularised by Ineos director of sport and esteemed cycling coach Sir Dave Brailsford. 'Getting one per cent better every day yields a 37-time improvement throughout the year,' Lawrence says. Conor Benn: Workouts 'For Conor's workouts we look at general physical qualities first, then we work in a bit more specificity as we draw closer to fight night,' Lawrence says. 'Do we want to become stronger? Yes. Do we want to become more powerful? Yes. Do we want to improve VO2 max? Yes, of course we do. All of these are going to help as general qualities, so we develop them.' But on top of this, his workouts pay heed to the nuances and needs of the sport – specifically: developing strength, robustness and mobility in the neck, lower leg, mid-spine and shoulders. 'We do a lot of work around the lower leg,' Lawrence says. 'We want him to be springy and reactive when pushing into the floor, so when he steps back he doesn't bleed energy into the ground with his foot, but he can be springy and elastic like a kangaroo as opposed to being like a gorilla. 'We do a lot of work around the neck too. From a shot absorption point of view, obviously the goal is to not get caught, but it's boxing, and you're going to get caught. Conor's stepping up in weight and we've got to be aware of that. 'And then we work the core. The core is a transfer centre, so we want to transfer energy to the fist through the kinetic chain. If all we ever do is old school ab crunches, it's probably not going to cut it.' However, given Benn's calorie surplus, weight gain goal and high overall training load, Lawrence says he has the 'luxury' of being able to add 'bolt-ons' to his sessions. 'I want him to walk out of that gym feeling great, not beaten up,' Lawrence says. 'I get what I need from a strength, power and robustness point of view, then at the end I'm absolutely fine with him doing a couple of sets of bicep curls so he goes out the gym feeling good.' Conor Benn: Sample training day Benn is in enviable shape, but building muscle isn't a priority in his training. Instead, he needs a body that's built for purpose, and that purpose is having his arm raised on April 26. Here's an example of the methods he uses to do just that: A warm-up using the RAMP protocol. Raise the heart rate, activate specific muscles, mobilise around key joints, then potentiate or prime the neuromuscular system to prepare for the training ahead. This involves mobilising the hips ('If he's throwing his backhand, we want to be able to extend the glutes properly – if he's tight through the opposite side of the anterior hip complex, he might lose power') and performing exercises such as thoracic extensions and rotations. Activation sequences often work the glutes work and posterior shoulder. Neuromuscular readiness testing with countermovement jumps. 'We've just gone through a block which focusses on both strength and power using the French contrast method,' says Lawrence. This is four exercises performed back to back – this might be heavy (180kg) quarter squats, followed by squat jumps, then a loaded jump to develop strength-speed, and finally an over-speed exercise like assisted jumps using a resistance band. 'Conor has a very high training age, he has lots of strength and conditioning experience, so he's able to do something like French contrast method which is incredibly hard,' says Lawrence. 'There are not many fighters I'd be putting through that. The demand on the neuromuscular system is incredibly high, which is why the athlete must have a high training age to reap the rewards from that kind of system. But Conor adapts really well to it.'

Latham puts Warwickshire on top against Surrey
Latham puts Warwickshire on top against Surrey

BBC News

time09-05-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

Latham puts Warwickshire on top against Surrey

Rothesay County Championship Division One, Edgbaston (day one)Warwickshire 364-4: Latham 139*, Yates 86; Lawrence 2-68Surrey: Yet to batWarwickshire 3 pts, Surrey 1 ptMatch scorecard Tom Latham scored a debut century as Warwickshire reached 364-4 against Surrey on the opening day of their County Championship Division One Zealand batter Latham struck an unbeaten 139 from 244 balls after Surrey chose to bowl on another belter of a batting pitch at Edgbaston. Rob Yates scored 86 against the champions' much-changed team with Ollie Pope, Jamie Smith and Gus Atkinson having departed on England are also without Dan Worrall, who they decided to spare the hard labour on a pitch which appears so good for batting that the best chance of victory lies in a fourth day run-chase. Warwickshire, meanwhile, are without young seamer Michael Booth who will be sidelined for two to three months by a stress fracture of the fibula. Against a Surrey attack including debutant Nathan Smith, Warwickshire started serenely in the Second City sunshine as Yates and Alex Davies (45) gathered an untroubled 70 in 19 overs. Davies twice hoisted Jordan Clark for six over the short Hollies Stand boundary but departed in angst after swinging and missing at a full toss from Dan and Latham added 112 before the former departed in a different type of angst to this captain. With a century beckoning, he tickled an unthreatening leg-side delivery from Tom Lawes to the wicketkeeper.A Latham century looked likely from the moment he took guard. He moved sweetly into the 40s, took a breather and spent 35 balls there, then pulled Clark for six to reach his half-century and galloped from 50 to 80 in another 18 balls. It was batting of simple, solid, unhurried rejigged bowling attack, with Smith, Lawes and Cameron Steel each playing their first game of the season, persevered nobly. Sam Hain flicked Clark straight to backward square leg and Lawrence bowled Beau Webster with a beauty through the Ed Barnard (38 not out) joined the implacable Latham to add an unbroken 83 in the last 24 overs of the day. Latham reached his 27th first-class century from 161 balls to emulate his countryman Jeetan Patel in making a ton on his Warwickshire debut, immediately providing the top order ballast they badly was a gruelling day in the field for Surrey but they will expect similar plunder from their batters, including Jason Roy who will be looking to make it back-to-back Championship centuries spanning six years eight months, having scored 128 against Essex at The Oval in his last Championship game, in September last first-class appearance was against Hampshire in the Bob Willis Trophy in Reporters' Network supported by Rothesay

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