Eric Cressey

Eric Cressey is president and co-founder of Cressey Performance, a facilitylocated just west of Boston, MA. A highly sought-after coach for healthy and injured athletes alike, Eric has helped athletes at all levels – from youth sports to the professional and Olympic ranks – achieve their highest levels of performance in a variety of sports. Behind Eric’s expertise, Cressey Performance has rapidly established itself as a go-to high performance facility among Boston athletes – and those that come from across the country and abroad to experience CP’s cutting-edge methods. Eric is perhaps best known for his extensive work with baseball players.

Cressey received his Master’s Degree in Kinesiology with a concentration in Exercise Science through the University of Connecticut Department of Kinesiology, the #1 ranked kinesiology graduate program in the nation. At UCONN, Eric was involved in varsity strength and conditioning and research in the human performance laboratory. Previously, Eric graduated from the University of New England with a double major in Exercise Science and Sports and Fitness Management.

An accomplished author, Cressey is a regular contributor to Testosterone Nation, Men’s Fitness, and Elite Fitness Systems, authoring over 200 published articles in all. Eric has published four books and co-created three DVD sets that have been sold in over 50 countries around the world.

 

Were off to a good start in the industry today with new blog posts from Eric Cressey and Tony Gentilcore along with a new T-Nation article from Bret Contreras.


Eric Cressey explains the idea behind using Open vs. Closed Loop exercises.

“Never expect true carryover from your strength and conditioning programs to the “randomness” of your daily life unless you implement more unpredictable challenges in those strength and conditioning programs.”


Tony Gentilcore brings us his weekly ‘Stuff to Read While You’re Pretending to Work’ post. As always Tony links to some very useful info. He recommends articles from:

*Jason Seib on why we should avoid scales.
*JC Deen on how fitness marketing effects the lifting habits of women. This is a good one for those women terrified of getting bulky.
*Jim Smith with a Livestrong.com article on how to balance fitness with a busy life.

Bret Contreras is at it again with another T-Nation article titled ‘Max Out On Squats Everyday’. Bret discusses his research and visit to John Broz’s facility in Las Vegas.

The article is too packed with info to summarize, but you should definitely look for the points on Olympic Lifting Methodology, Overtraining, Peaking, and Why Your Body is a Liar. The opening quote alone is classic….

If your family was captured and you were told you needed to put 100 pounds onto your max squat within two months or your family would be executed, would you squat once per week? Something tells me that you’d start squatting every day. Other countries have this mindset. America does not.
– John Broz

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