Excelsior Banner
Excelsior Print Banner

Latest Blog Entry

18/05/2012 - 08:19
Bayern vs Chelsea: Only the fittest will prevail. As the world’s top footballers prepare to meet in the Champions League Final this weekend, we explore what it takes to make it at the highest level....

User login

Olympic Weightlifting Tips: Neil Taylor

Posted On Saturday, 27th February 2010 at 06:57

Don’t over complicate these lifts

 I have been performing the Olympic lifts since the age of 11, my coach at the time kept it simple, didn’t over complicate the movement and allowed for errors early on.  With his expertise he helped me lift MY way and not the way the books said.

30 years down the line I have watched those lifts turn into a menu of biomechanical myths and mind numbing terminology.  KEEP IT SIMPLE.

In my opinion it is always easier to teach the Power Snatch first, the pulling phase is the same as the Power Clean and the lift a little less problematic.

 DO

  •    Demonstrate the lift without a verbal description then ask athlete to perform the lift and observe their interpretation of that lift, they may be near perfect, they may be not, treat each one on how THEY lift   
  •    At the start position instruct your athlete to push the chest out and through whilst pulling the bar off the floor this will encourage correct lifting posture with the back being slightly in extension
  •     Depending on your athletes training age you may wish to break the lift down into stages.  Start with the first pull by dead lifting the bar to the waist position and returning it back to the floor, encourage the athlete to push their chest through to retain good posture. Repeat this until your comfortable with what you see, be patient
  •      Once confident with the first pull,  move to the high pull.  It is important to at this point for your athlete to work on pushing the hips forward and extend up on to the toes.  One coaching tip you may wish to use here is to pull the bar up to chest height rubbing finely against the navel area, this will encourage the athlete to keep the bar close to their body
  •     Move on to the full lift when you feel the athlete has mastered the above and never be afraid to revisit the basics. A great tool to use is the video camera but be aware of consenting the parents or guardians of your athletes should they be under 18 years old
  •       Compliment the athlete on their good lifting points as it is important to finish lifting on a feel good note, people deal too much with the negative, with what is wrong. Try and see positive things, to just touch those things and make them bloom.

Neil Taylor: Commonwealth games medallist. RFU Weightlifting Coach.

Comments

Great comment with regard to

Great comment with regard to finishing with positive feedback. Too often as coaches we look at what is wrong and what we need to correct... step back and let the movement teach the athlete. Let them know what is right about their movement... not always what is deficient!!

Liking the new website format James!! Really good to hear from a variety of coaches!! Logging on to here always gets me thinking!!

Cheers!!

Matt Archer

Thanks Neil, it is refreshing

Thanks Neil, it is refreshing to hear how to lift from someone who knows how to do it properly, not someone who has read about it in a book!

I also like your way of making lifts part of a training programme, not the wholefocus for non lifters and their sports

Post new comment

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.
Twitter Youtube Facebook Google Plus