Tactical Fitness Report with Stew Smith Podcast  By  cover art

Tactical Fitness Report with Stew Smith Podcast

By: Stew Smith
  • Summary

  • This is the Tactical Fitness Report with Stew Smith podcast. We will post these each week and discuss a variety of topics focused on Tactical Fitness Training for Military, Special Ops, Police, and Fire Fighting Training. We will also review videos on swimming, give quick power point presentations and discuss all things Tactical Fitness related. Check out other videos of combat swimmer stroke, workouts, and other spec ops related training. See www.stewsmith.com or www.stewsmithfitness.com for more information, training programs, books, ebooks, and online coaching for military, law enforcement, special ops, fire fighting training programs.

    Copyright 2024 Stew Smith
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Episodes
  • Episode 279: Group PT Ideas and Some of the Best Questions Answered in this QA Session.
    Jun 5 2024

    Here is a group workout I do with 800+ high school recruits / candidates at Naval Academy Summer Seminar. My goal is to teach them some strategies to improve on their entrance fitness test as well as the Naval Academy fitness test: Plank, Pushups, 1.5 mile run - taken every semester.

    Warmup
    100-meter run or 20 jumping jacks or jump rope, 10 push-ups, 10 squats
    200-meter run or 20 jumping jacks or jump rope, 20 push-ups, 20 squats
    300-meter run or 20 jumping jacks or jump rope, 30 push-ups, 30 squats
    Light stretching throughout each set, focusing on arms and legs.
    Core Exercises
    Sit-ups and plank pose will be tested as part of the Candidate Fitness Assessment for admission to the Naval Academy and at the Academy each semester.

    The CFA consists of the following exercises:

    Kneeling basketball throw
    Pull-ups
    Shuttle run: 120 feet (4 x 30-foot runs as fast as you can)
    Crunches two minutes
    Push-ups two minutes
    One-mile timed run

    Crunches/Situps are still tested on the CFA, and sit-ups will be tested on the Navy SEAL/EOD/Diver PST if you're interested in that career path.

    Once you get into the Naval Academy, you will be tested with the plank pose for time and cadence push-ups (up and down in two seconds). (Note: The cadence push-up is for the Naval Academy only and not a Navy-wide test.)

    Crunches: Focus on a pace of 20 repetitions in 30 seconds
    Flutter-kicks 20
    Crunches 20 in 30 seconds
    Leg levers 20
    Crunches 20 in 30 seconds
    Scissors 20
    Crunches 20 in 30 seconds
    Stretch stomach

    The reason why we focus on a pace for crunches and sit-ups is to prepare for a two-minute test. You need to learn to maintain a sustainable pace, because most people fail this test by starting off too fast in the first 30 seconds and then failing to match their performance in the next 1:30.

    By focusing on a pace of 20-25 per 30 seconds, you can find yourself in the 80-100 repetition range in a two-minute test. The extra hip flexor exercises are a fun addition to the workout to give it more of a Grinder PT feel.

    Add PT Reset Exercises to balance out front-side pushing and core/hip flexor work. These exercises should be part of transitions or cooldown periods.

    PT reset:

    Rev push-ups 20
    Birds 20
    Arm haulers 20
    Swimmers one minute
    Death By Push-Ups! Plank and Push-Ups (New USNA and Navy Test)
    Stay in a push-up "up" position or plank pose for 10 minutes. Do not drop your knee, but you can shake out an arm when in a side plank position. Every minute, do a step of the push-up pyramid, decreasing by one each minute on the minute.

    The workout looks like this:

    Minute 1: 10 push-ups. Stay in a plank pose for the remainder of one minute.
    Minute 2: Nine push-ups.
    Continue in "up" push-up position or plank pose nonstop for 10 minutes, increasing the push-up repetitions by one each minute:
    Minute 3: Eight push-ups
    Minute 4: Seven push-ups. Keep going to minute 10 and one push-up. That equals 55 pushups and 10 minutes of plank. We call it Death by Push-Ups, but it is more Death by Plank.
    Advanced level athletes can try 10 push-ups every minute on the minute for 100 total reps if you prefer.

    Cooldown:
    30 push-ups, 30 squats, 300-meter run or one minute of jumping jacks
    20 push-ups, 20 squats, 200-meter run or 40 seconds of jumping jacks
    10 push-ups, 10 squats, 100-meter run or 20 seconds of jumping jacks
    Light stretches throughout each set.

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    57 mins
  • Episode 278: Tactical Fitness Report 239 - Tyler Koch – MS CSCS - Human Performance Director for Air Force Squadrons
    May 9 2024

    Tyler Koch has a degree in psychology and a master's degree in exercise physiology. Developed and implemented the first-ever S&C initiative for Undergraduate Pilot Training. Former Head Strength and Conditioning Coach for the 71st Flying Training Squadron. Former Head of Human Performance for the 158th Fighter Wing. Current Physician Assistant Student at Penn State University pursuing orthopedic medicine. For LinkedIn connection - go to - https://www.linkedin.com/in/tyler-koch-m-s-c-s-c-s-a0613963/

    We talk about tactical fitness training and compare it to athletic training. Learning how to become a trainer is discussed with resources mentioned, such as the National Strength and Conditioning Association (https://www.nsca.com) and getting the CSCS certification. Also, numerous companies contract trainers to be military strength and conditioning coaches:

    GAP Solutions
    Booz Allen
    Guardian Defense Group
    T3i

    The Tactical Fitness Report is a fitness discussion with professionals in the tactical arena. Check out https://www.StewSmithFitness.com for access to the podcasts (audio and video) and for books, ebooks, online coaching, and a wide variety of training/coaching advice.

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    58 mins
  • Episode 277: There is More to Training for Spec Ops Selection Than Beat Down Workouts
    May 3 2024

    You have to push yourself—YES, but programming smartly so you see improvements in your self-assessments (PST, runs, rucks, swims, lifts, etc.) is the goal of your training. Obviously, this is relative to your athletic history, as someone's "beat-down" could be another person's warmup.

    Have you considered teamwork drills, communication, and problem-solving with your workouts? You cannot do this by yourself, true, but you will find that really tough workouts can be divided by a team of people to reduce the total load on the individuals and involve significant training in strategizing, thinking while tired, and working together to accumulate reps to complete the workout.

    Take the Sand Baby Devil Murph for instance, we did this workout the other day with 4 groups of 4 people: https://www.stewsmithfitness.com/blogs/news/the-official-sandbaby-devil-murph-workout-log-pt-plus-simulation

    Each team of four had to discuss their strategy to complete the workout, then work together, keep track of reps, distances, and times, and communicate effectively. Using the strengths of each team member to offset any weaknesses of others worked well for the teams, as did a simple group division of 4 on each event. Some teams divided and conquered. Some teams doubled up some events with a single member to balance a weakness or injury that prevented a team member from being helpful on a particular event.

    All in all, the teams finished the tasks at about the same time, completing them in four different ways. Discussing those methods and best practices in the debrief again demonstrated the need for more communication throughout the team. Now, let's take some questions.

    Want to create live streams like this? Check out StreamYard: https://streamyard.com/pal/d/6164612443013120

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    1 hr and 2 mins

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Extremely valuable advice and guidance

Stew Smith is an invaluable recourse for holistically developing yourself for SOF selection and assessment. These podcasts are packed with great information. Stew is an amazing man who has helped countless individuals. WORTH THE LISTEN

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