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MMA Training Techniques and Fighting Tips: Paulson's Podcast, and Slumps vs. Plateaus
Stephan Kesting Stephan Kesting is not only a Carlson Gracie black belt in BJJ under Marcus Soares he has worked and trained with some of the best fighters in the world along the way. One of his good friends is Erik Paulson, whom Stephan has trained with for a number of years. Today's MMA grappling training has a great MMA podcast interviewing Paulson as well as a great article that explains slumps and plateaus. If you train in any type of submission wrestling you will notice that at times your game will be improving so fast and at other times you seem to not even improving at all. These slumps can last weeks or even months at times. Conversely your game can be so high that you think your improving so fast. Today Stephan talks about this phenomenon that affects every fighter. Enjoy. Eric Paulson PodcastMy friend and coach Erik Paulson was recently featured on the MMA Podcast Carson's Corner. It is a very interesting interview in which he candidly discusses his recent (triumphant) return to the ring, why he wasn't allowed to compete in the early UFC, and coaching such fighters as Ken Shamrock and Josh Barnett. If you are interested, check it out ------------------------------------------------ Slumps vs. PlateausAcquiring new skill sets and polishing your existing skills is the very essence of training. When everything is working properly and you're surfing up the learning curve it is an exhilarating process. The learning curve isn't always smooth, however, and sometimes you run into things called slumps and plateaus. These two phenomena have some similarities, but are different. In a slump your skills and performance deteriorate. Suddenly you have no gas, no coordination, and are always a step behind in sparring. Those sparring partners you usually dominate start dominating you, tapping you out with ease. Oftentimes there is an obvious reason for the slump (at least in retrospect). Maybe it was because you were overtrained, or fighting off a cold, or emotionally drained from work, or sleeping badly, or not training enough. In any case, you usually figure it out and your learning curve starts to go head in the right direction again. Most slumps are fairly short, on the scale of days to a few weeks. It's very frustrating while it's happening, but at least it's over quickly. A plateau, on the other hand, happens when you stop making progress and get stuck at the same skill and performance level for a long time. You might be training just as hard as you always have, but you're just not getting any better. Plateaus usually last longer than slumps, especially as you become more skilled. Plateaus typically last one to several months, and sometimes as long as half a year. To make matters worse, during this time your highly inconsiderate training partners insist on continuing to make progress, widening the gulf and leaving you in the dust. Plateaus are usually more demoralizing than slumps. Anyone can handle having a bad day or two, but training hard and not seeing any obvious benefits or improvements from training is hard on the ego and can make anyone question themselves. The underlying cause for skill plateaus is hard to diagnose, and definitely harder than figuring out why someone is in a slump. Furthermore, without knowing the cause for a plateau it's hard to prescribe a cure, so often one is just left with a shotgun approach to solving the problem. Sometimes people have some success in ending a My advice for dealing with plateaus: maybe try shaking things up in your training or conditioning routine, but mainly try not to get too discouraged and remember that everyone goes through this at some point. Definitely hang in there: everyone gets better eventually. Stephan Kesting |
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2008-09-06 10:00:00 GMT+00:00
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