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AC In The AM: Sports Science A Game-Changer For Dolphins

Perfect72

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[FONT=&quot]In a small office on the ground floor of the Dolphins training facility, just adjacent to the weight room, you’ll find Wayne Diesel sitting behind his desk. Diesel is in his second season running the team’s sports science department and he very well could be as valuable as anyone in this organization. [/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]The Dolphins, you see, are on a mission and Diesel – a man who has spent his professional life studying what makes athletes tick – is a vital part of that mission. The mission is really simple: Use every scientific resource available to help these players reach a level of peak performance and, in addition, use those resources to both prevent and rehabilitate injuries. [/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]That’s what Diesel’s sports science department is all about. It is the realization of a vision by Owner Stephen Ross and Executive Vice President Mike Tannenbaum to literally take this franchise where it has never gone before. From nutrition to analytics to developing the most up-to-date training methods, it all under the sports science umbrella. [/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]And based on the feedback I have already received from several players, it is already paying significant dividends. [/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]The impact of Diesel and his staff is evident in so many ways from the length of practices to which days the players have off to how hard they are pushed. Nobody wanted a tired football team when training camp ended. It is part of Diesel’s job to have made sure that didn’t happen. [/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]“We are evaluating everything,” Diesel said. “What should you do after a game? What is the best day to train hard? This sport, like all sports, is about recovery. We push them as hard as we possibly can to get the most out of them, so we need proper recovery time.” [/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]I know what you are probably thinking. Can this give the Dolphins an edge late in games or maybe late in the season, clearly two of the major themes surrounding this team. [/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]“I think it can be a huge factor,” says Diesel. “The more physically prepared you are and hydrated you are, the bigger effect you can have late in a game or late in a season. If you are not hydrated properly, it can reduce your performance by about 10 percent. In a sport where one percent can be the difference, this can be a huge factor.” [/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]Diesel gets up from his desk and walks over to a large touch screen on the wall. On that screen is a listing of every player and next to each player are numerous categories designed to measure every facet of his athletic make-up from body fat, heart rate recovery, movement analysis, hydration, sleep and energy. If it can be measured, and it’s important, it’s on that chart.[/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]With the help of a GPS device worn by each player, all these things are updated on a daily basis. All are available to each player. All can have a direct correlation in how they train, how hard they work and how well they avoid and respond to injuries. [/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]Why, the Dolphins even do a thorough sweat analysis of each player. [/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]“Players who have too much salt in their sweat have a tendency to cramp easier,” Diesel said. [/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]Diesel, who spent the eight years working with Tottenham Hotspur (Soccer) Football Club of the English Premier league calls this opportunity “the pinnacle for me, the ultimate challenge.”

More at LINK: [/FONT]
http://www.miamidolphins.com/news/article-4/AC-In-The-AM-Sports-Science-A-Game-Changer-For-Dolphins-/1a640c76-d183-4aef-a9c4-13e93ce01a82

Your thoughts? :ponder:
 
Saw this this morning while walking the dog. Pretty cool article, but the main thing I took away: It's interesting how after a couple of good wins all of a sudden stuff like the sports science appears to be working. It can be the difference between a guy catching a pass or not that makes so many aspects of the team look either like ass or like gold.
 
it feels like something every other team in the nfl is doing at the same time....having experts give advice and scientific measurements on recovery, diets tailored to specific players, practice lengths, etc....

don't see anything groundbreaking but happy we're doing everything we can to properly prepare our team
 
it's helpful for sure. Seattle took the approach towards this when Pete Carroll took over, Chip Kelly tried to do it with the Eagles, but he took it over board, and Stanford's S&C coach uses bits of this to help build a team's diet and workout regiment.
 
Uh...hamstring injuries....too many Mr. Sports Science guy. FIX IT!
 
Replace this quack w Vin Diesel and I bet you wouldn't even notice a difference.
 
it feels like something every other team in the nfl is doing at the same time....having experts give advice and scientific measurements on recovery, diets tailored to specific players, practice lengths, etc....

don't see anything groundbreaking but happy we're doing everything we can to properly prepare our team

Perhaps, but EPL has been using this program for years. I do not know if any other franchise has hired an EPL expert to advance this portion of their program. I am not sure that the NFL coaches buy-in to this technology. I am confident that all the teams are collecting the statistics. The question is are any teams including the Dolphins turning it into actionable information.
 
Blocking people and running the ball well and making tackles on 1st down has a lot more to do with our success than some ****ing milkshakes.
 
Thanks for posting the article brother :up:

If your players are very good to start with it surely helps to monitor and fine tune them however if you don't start with good solid NFL players all the sports medicine in the world will make little different.
 
This stuff is a no-brainer. It is obviously a good thing to do.

Kind of reminds me of how athletes first started videotaping themselves practicing to hone their technique. It is better. It works. It helps. It is optimizing time, recovery, physical development, and preventing some injuries.

Is it super-important, probably not, but it definitely helps, so we would be nothing more than stubborn and foolish to not use it.

I'm very glad we are on-board early in its development.

Sent from my SM-N920V using Tapatalk
 
The sports science thing is fine, but it will have little effect on overall results until there is a major upgrade of talent on this roster.
 
I've been playing around with structuring water the past month via torsion fields utilizing black sand from Hawaii. I put the water in a glass jug and surround it with the black sand for three days. I've noticed the mark improvement within three weeks of drinking the structured water with pressure sores I've had, from paralysis, for over 15 years. The wound clinic Dr. went ballistic last week when one of my sores had healed 50%. One side effect I have experienced is cottonmouth, but supposedly that's from the structural water being more efficient hydrating my blood cells. Can I prove it no, but I'm feeling much better. BTW, there are other ways to structure water them what I doing. One method is utilizing magnetics fields, another is "tumbling" the water over a series of ball bearings. Water is really quite amazing if you research it.
 
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