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    <fireside:hostname>web02.fireside.fm</fireside:hostname>
    <fireside:genDate>Sun, 19 Apr 2026 21:59:00 -0500</fireside:genDate>
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    <title>Science for Sport Podcast - Episodes Tagged with “Load Management”</title>
    <link>https://scienceforsport.fireside.fm/tags/load%20management</link>
    <pubDate>Mon, 06 Apr 2026 06:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
    <description>Discover the Secrets Behind Elite Performance.
Join us on the Science for Sport Podcast, where every episode dives into the cutting-edge world of sports science and the untold stories behind the best athletes and teams on the planet.
Hosted by Richard Graves, we bring you exclusive insights from elite athletes, world-class coaches, and leading sports scientists who are shaping the future of global sport.
This isn’t just another sports podcast—this is your backstage pass to:
- The science powering record-breaking performances.
- The trends, challenges, and breakthroughs redefining the game.
- Mastering the balance of art and science in coaching.
Whether you’re a sports scientist, coach, physio, nutritionist, teacher, or just a passionate sports fan, this is your chance to learn from the pros and stay ahead of the curve.
Tune in every Monday and uncover what it takes to make the best, better.
</description>
    <language>en-gb</language>
    <itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type>
    <itunes:subtitle>Behind the Scenes of Elite Performance – Unlocking the Science, Stories, and Strategies That Make the Best Even Better</itunes:subtitle>
    <itunes:author>Science for Sport</itunes:author>
    <itunes:summary>Discover the Secrets Behind Elite Performance.
Join us on the Science for Sport Podcast, where every episode dives into the cutting-edge world of sports science and the untold stories behind the best athletes and teams on the planet.
Hosted by Richard Graves, we bring you exclusive insights from elite athletes, world-class coaches, and leading sports scientists who are shaping the future of global sport.
This isn’t just another sports podcast—this is your backstage pass to:
- The science powering record-breaking performances.
- The trends, challenges, and breakthroughs redefining the game.
- Mastering the balance of art and science in coaching.
Whether you’re a sports scientist, coach, physio, nutritionist, teacher, or just a passionate sports fan, this is your chance to learn from the pros and stay ahead of the curve.
Tune in every Monday and uncover what it takes to make the best, better.
</itunes:summary>
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    <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
    <itunes:keywords>sport, science, sports, sports science, education, coach, coaching, athletes, performance, strength, conditioning, strength &amp; conditioning, S&amp;C, recovery, nutrition, entertainment</itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:owner>
      <itunes:name>Science for Sport</itunes:name>
      <itunes:email>contact@scienceforsport.com</itunes:email>
    </itunes:owner>
<itunes:category text="Education"/>
<itunes:category text="Sports"/>
<itunes:category text="Science"/>
<item>
  <title>314: Player Load, Practice Periodisation, and the Art of Keeping It Simple with Jackson Polk</title>
  <link>http://scienceforsport.fireside.fm/314</link>
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  <pubDate>Mon, 06 Apr 2026 06:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
  <author>Science for Sport</author>
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  <itunes:episode>314</itunes:episode>
  <itunes:title>Player Load, Practice Periodisation, and the Art of Keeping It Simple with Jackson Polk</itunes:title>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:author>Science for Sport</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Jackson Polk, Director of Sports Science at USC Trojans football, joins Richard Graves to discuss how he built a sports science programme from the ground up using data analytics, GPS monitoring, and the art of genuine conversation. Jackson shares his unorthodox path from student videographer at Oklahoma to leading sports science at one of college football's biggest programmes, and offers a frank, grounded perspective on everything from Catapult metrics and force plate testing to the real limitations of AI in applied sport.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>29:24</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/e/ed3f06f4-af55-41d4-87cf-0e484d2d9fef/cover.jpg?v=3"/>
  <description>Richard Graves is joined by Jackson Polk, Director of Sports Science at the University of Southern California (USC), for a conversation that covers the full spectrum of what it actually means to do this job well, from wrangling a thousand Catapult metrics down to the handful that matter, to the perhaps surprising conclusion that conversation might be your most powerful tool.
Jackson's path into sports science isn't the conventional one. He started as a student videographer with Oklahoma football, found himself drawn to the patterns hiding in data, and taught himself enough statistics and analytics to make coaches stop and listen. That curiosity eventually took him from Norman, Oklahoma, to Los Angeles, where he's spent the past four years building USC football's sports science programme from the ground up.
What makes this episode stand out is Jackson's willingness to be honest about uncertainty, about AI, about his own mistakes, and about the limits of any single metric or method. He's equally at home referencing Principal Component Analysis and the TV show Veep, and that breadth of thinking is what makes him worth listening to. Whether you work in elite sport, study sports science, or just want to understand what goes into keeping a college football roster performing at its best, there's plenty here to take away.
In This Episode You Will Learn
* Why reducing Catapult's thousand-plus metrics down to a focused few, Player Load, sprint volume, and repeat sprint exposures, actually produces better decisions than trying to monitor everything
* How Jackson uses principal component analysis to build confidence in the data he's presenting to coaches and athletes
* The "iceberg" model of athlete monitoring: what data can tell you, and what only a direct conversation will uncover
* Why practice periodisation and load management have been one of USC's biggest organisational wins, and how PlayerLoad underpins that planning
* How force plates (via VALD/ForceDecks) and velocity-based training tools like Perch complement GPS data to reveal readiness on any given day
* The case for teaching college athletes sound recovery habits early, so they're not spending their rookie contracts figuring out what works
* How Jackson thinks about AI in sports science: where it's useful, where to be cautious, and why it's only as good as the data it's trained on
* Why communication, not technology, is the cornerstone of an effective sports science operation, and how to make data digestible for coaches under pressure
* The value of building a culture where experimentation and failure are treated as learning, not liability
* Lessons from Thinking in Bets by Annie Duke on separating process from outcome, applied directly to sports science decision-making
About Jackson Polk
Jackson Polk is the Director of Sports Science for USC Trojans football, a role he was elevated to in 2024 after serving as Assistant Director from 2022–23. He joined the USC support staff in March 2022, bringing with him an unconventional background that blends mathematics, data science, and a deep passion for American football.
His journey began at the University of Oklahoma, where he spent four seasons as a student videographer before becoming a volunteer performance analyst. While at OU, he co-founded the Oklahoma Sports and Data Analytics Club, which went on to win the Pro Football Focus Analytics Blitz contest. He completed his bachelor's degree in mathematics at Oklahoma in 2021 and subsequently pursued a master's in data science and analytics.
At USC, Jackson has been responsible for building the football programme's sports science infrastructure, integrating GPS monitoring, force plate testing, and load management into daily practice planning. He holds an MBA alongside his analytical credentials, and his work sits at the intersection of data science and high-performance sport.
FREE 7d SCIENCE FOR SPORT ACADEMY TRIAL
SIGN UP NOW: https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241
​ Learn Quicker &amp;amp; More Effectively
​ Optimise Your Athletes' Recovery
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In
​ Reduce Your Athletes' Injury Ratese
​ Save 100's Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More
​ Improve Your Athletes' Performance
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp;amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>sports science, sport science, strength and conditioning, S&amp;C, performance, athlete, sport, exercise, nutrition, injury, injuries</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Richard Graves is joined by Jackson Polk, Director of Sports Science at the University of Southern California (USC), for a conversation that covers the full spectrum of what it actually means to do this job well, from wrangling a thousand Catapult metrics down to the handful that matter, to the perhaps surprising conclusion that conversation might be your most powerful tool.<br>
Jackson&#39;s path into sports science isn&#39;t the conventional one. He started as a student videographer with Oklahoma football, found himself drawn to the patterns hiding in data, and taught himself enough statistics and analytics to make coaches stop and listen. That curiosity eventually took him from Norman, Oklahoma, to Los Angeles, where he&#39;s spent the past four years building USC football&#39;s sports science programme from the ground up.<br>
What makes this episode stand out is Jackson&#39;s willingness to be honest about uncertainty, about AI, about his own mistakes, and about the limits of any single metric or method. He&#39;s equally at home referencing Principal Component Analysis and the TV show Veep, and that breadth of thinking is what makes him worth listening to. Whether you work in elite sport, study sports science, or just want to understand what goes into keeping a college football roster performing at its best, there&#39;s plenty here to take away.</p>

<p><strong>In This Episode You Will Learn</strong></p>

<ul>
<li>Why reducing Catapult&#39;s thousand-plus metrics down to a focused few, Player Load, sprint volume, and repeat sprint exposures, actually produces better decisions than trying to monitor everything</li>
<li>How Jackson uses principal component analysis to build confidence in the data he&#39;s presenting to coaches and athletes</li>
<li>The &quot;iceberg&quot; model of athlete monitoring: what data can tell you, and what only a direct conversation will uncover</li>
<li>Why practice periodisation and load management have been one of USC&#39;s biggest organisational wins, and how PlayerLoad underpins that planning</li>
<li>How force plates (via VALD/ForceDecks) and velocity-based training tools like Perch complement GPS data to reveal readiness on any given day</li>
<li>The case for teaching college athletes sound recovery habits early, so they&#39;re not spending their rookie contracts figuring out what works</li>
<li>How Jackson thinks about AI in sports science: where it&#39;s useful, where to be cautious, and why it&#39;s only as good as the data it&#39;s trained on</li>
<li>Why communication, not technology, is the cornerstone of an effective sports science operation, and how to make data digestible for coaches under pressure</li>
<li>The value of building a culture where experimentation and failure are treated as learning, not liability</li>
<li>Lessons from Thinking in Bets by Annie Duke on separating process from outcome, applied directly to sports science decision-making</li>
</ul>

<p><strong>About Jackson Polk</strong><br>
Jackson Polk is the Director of Sports Science for USC Trojans football, a role he was elevated to in 2024 after serving as Assistant Director from 2022–23. He joined the USC support staff in March 2022, bringing with him an unconventional background that blends mathematics, data science, and a deep passion for American football.<br>
His journey began at the University of Oklahoma, where he spent four seasons as a student videographer before becoming a volunteer performance analyst. While at OU, he co-founded the Oklahoma Sports and Data Analytics Club, which went on to win the Pro Football Focus Analytics Blitz contest. He completed his bachelor&#39;s degree in mathematics at Oklahoma in 2021 and subsequently pursued a master&#39;s in data science and analytics.<br>
At USC, Jackson has been responsible for building the football programme&#39;s sports science infrastructure, integrating GPS monitoring, force plate testing, and load management into daily practice planning. He holds an MBA alongside his analytical credentials, and his work sits at the intersection of data science and high-performance sport.</p>

<p><strong>FREE 7d SCIENCE FOR SPORT ACADEMY TRIAL</strong></p>

<p><strong>SIGN UP NOW:</strong> <a href="https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241" rel="nofollow">https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241</a></p>

<p>​ Learn Quicker &amp; More Effectively<br>
​ Optimise Your Athletes&#39; Recovery<br>
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In<br>
​ Reduce Your Athletes&#39; Injury Ratese<br>
​ Save 100&#39;s Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More<br>
​ Improve Your Athletes&#39; Performance<br>
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes<br>
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Richard Graves is joined by Jackson Polk, Director of Sports Science at the University of Southern California (USC), for a conversation that covers the full spectrum of what it actually means to do this job well, from wrangling a thousand Catapult metrics down to the handful that matter, to the perhaps surprising conclusion that conversation might be your most powerful tool.<br>
Jackson&#39;s path into sports science isn&#39;t the conventional one. He started as a student videographer with Oklahoma football, found himself drawn to the patterns hiding in data, and taught himself enough statistics and analytics to make coaches stop and listen. That curiosity eventually took him from Norman, Oklahoma, to Los Angeles, where he&#39;s spent the past four years building USC football&#39;s sports science programme from the ground up.<br>
What makes this episode stand out is Jackson&#39;s willingness to be honest about uncertainty, about AI, about his own mistakes, and about the limits of any single metric or method. He&#39;s equally at home referencing Principal Component Analysis and the TV show Veep, and that breadth of thinking is what makes him worth listening to. Whether you work in elite sport, study sports science, or just want to understand what goes into keeping a college football roster performing at its best, there&#39;s plenty here to take away.</p>

<p><strong>In This Episode You Will Learn</strong></p>

<ul>
<li>Why reducing Catapult&#39;s thousand-plus metrics down to a focused few, Player Load, sprint volume, and repeat sprint exposures, actually produces better decisions than trying to monitor everything</li>
<li>How Jackson uses principal component analysis to build confidence in the data he&#39;s presenting to coaches and athletes</li>
<li>The &quot;iceberg&quot; model of athlete monitoring: what data can tell you, and what only a direct conversation will uncover</li>
<li>Why practice periodisation and load management have been one of USC&#39;s biggest organisational wins, and how PlayerLoad underpins that planning</li>
<li>How force plates (via VALD/ForceDecks) and velocity-based training tools like Perch complement GPS data to reveal readiness on any given day</li>
<li>The case for teaching college athletes sound recovery habits early, so they&#39;re not spending their rookie contracts figuring out what works</li>
<li>How Jackson thinks about AI in sports science: where it&#39;s useful, where to be cautious, and why it&#39;s only as good as the data it&#39;s trained on</li>
<li>Why communication, not technology, is the cornerstone of an effective sports science operation, and how to make data digestible for coaches under pressure</li>
<li>The value of building a culture where experimentation and failure are treated as learning, not liability</li>
<li>Lessons from Thinking in Bets by Annie Duke on separating process from outcome, applied directly to sports science decision-making</li>
</ul>

<p><strong>About Jackson Polk</strong><br>
Jackson Polk is the Director of Sports Science for USC Trojans football, a role he was elevated to in 2024 after serving as Assistant Director from 2022–23. He joined the USC support staff in March 2022, bringing with him an unconventional background that blends mathematics, data science, and a deep passion for American football.<br>
His journey began at the University of Oklahoma, where he spent four seasons as a student videographer before becoming a volunteer performance analyst. While at OU, he co-founded the Oklahoma Sports and Data Analytics Club, which went on to win the Pro Football Focus Analytics Blitz contest. He completed his bachelor&#39;s degree in mathematics at Oklahoma in 2021 and subsequently pursued a master&#39;s in data science and analytics.<br>
At USC, Jackson has been responsible for building the football programme&#39;s sports science infrastructure, integrating GPS monitoring, force plate testing, and load management into daily practice planning. He holds an MBA alongside his analytical credentials, and his work sits at the intersection of data science and high-performance sport.</p>

<p><strong>FREE 7d SCIENCE FOR SPORT ACADEMY TRIAL</strong></p>

<p><strong>SIGN UP NOW:</strong> <a href="https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241" rel="nofollow">https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241</a></p>

<p>​ Learn Quicker &amp; More Effectively<br>
​ Optimise Your Athletes&#39; Recovery<br>
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In<br>
​ Reduce Your Athletes&#39; Injury Ratese<br>
​ Save 100&#39;s Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More<br>
​ Improve Your Athletes&#39; Performance<br>
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes<br>
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>308: Peak Demands and Decision-Making Under Fatigue with Stan Parker</title>
  <link>http://scienceforsport.fireside.fm/308</link>
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  <pubDate>Mon, 23 Feb 2026 07:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
  <author>Science for Sport</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/ed3f06f4-af55-41d4-87cf-0e484d2d9fef/d8c8bfdd-4691-474b-8698-6ef883849976.mp3" length="44404242" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episode>308</itunes:episode>
  <itunes:title>Peak Demands and Decision-Making Under Fatigue with Stan Parker</itunes:title>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:author>Science for Sport</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>In this episode, Stan Parker explains how elite sports science is evolving beyond basic load monitoring toward contextualised performance analytics that genuinely inform coaching decisions. Drawing on experience across multiple professional codes, he outlines how data, vision, communication and interdisciplinary collaboration combine to enhance availability, performance and long-term athlete development.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>30:50</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/e/ed3f06f4-af55-41d4-87cf-0e484d2d9fef/cover.jpg?v=3"/>
  <description>Fresh from pre-season camp in Australia, Richard Graves sits down with Stan Parker, Sports Scientist at the Western Bulldogs, to explore how tracking data, contextual analytics, and interdisciplinary collaboration shape performance in elite AFL.
Stan’s journey spans the Brisbane Broncos in the NRL, Queensland Rugby Sevens, and now five seasons embedded within the Bulldogs’ high-performance programme, including a PhD focused on contextualising tracking data beyond simple load metrics.
This episode moves beyond “distance covered” and “top speed” to examine how sports science actually influences coaching decisions, athlete development, injury management, and tactical execution. From peak demand analysis and real-world decision-making under fatigue, to AI readiness and workflow efficiency, this is a grounded, practitioner-led conversation about where elite sport is really heading.
In this episode you will learn:
* Why contextualising tracking data matters more than collecting more of it
* How to compare peak training demands to peak match demands
* The role of vision and video in translating data for coaches and players
* How to build buy-in when athletes aren’t “numbers learners”
* The balance between availability and performance in weekly competition cycles
* How interdisciplinary decision-making works inside an AFL club
* Why isolated fatigue “flags” can be misleading
* How gym-based physical development can be directly tied to on-field outcomes
* The importance of soft skills in high-performance environments
* Where AI realistically fits (and doesn’t fit) in elite sports science
About Stan Parker
Stan Parker is a Sports Scientist with the Western Bulldogs in the AFL. He has previously worked with the Brisbane Broncos and Queensland Rugby Sevens, building experience across multiple elite sporting codes in Australia.
Stan is also completing a PhD focused on the contextualisation of tracking data in team sports, exploring how movement patterns and peak demands can better explain performance impact rather than serving purely as load monitoring tools.
He is particularly interested in bridging the gap between data analytics, coaching vision, and real-world performance application.
FREE 7d SCIENCE FOR SPORT ACADEMY TRIAL
SIGN UP NOW: https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241
​ Learn Quicker &amp;amp; More Effectively
​ Optimise Your Athletes' Recovery
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In
​ Reduce Your Athletes' Injury Ratese
​ Save 100's Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More
​ Improve Your Athletes' Performance
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp;amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>sports science, sport science, strength and conditioning, S&amp;C, performance, athlete, sport, exercise, nutrition, injury, injuries</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Fresh from pre-season camp in Australia, Richard Graves sits down with Stan Parker, Sports Scientist at the Western Bulldogs, to explore how tracking data, contextual analytics, and interdisciplinary collaboration shape performance in elite AFL.</p>

<p>Stan’s journey spans the Brisbane Broncos in the NRL, Queensland Rugby Sevens, and now five seasons embedded within the Bulldogs’ high-performance programme, including a PhD focused on contextualising tracking data beyond simple load metrics.</p>

<p>This episode moves beyond “distance covered” and “top speed” to examine how sports science actually influences coaching decisions, athlete development, injury management, and tactical execution. From peak demand analysis and real-world decision-making under fatigue, to AI readiness and workflow efficiency, this is a grounded, practitioner-led conversation about where elite sport is really heading.</p>

<p><strong>In this episode you will learn:</strong></p>

<ul>
<li>Why contextualising tracking data matters more than collecting more of it</li>
<li>How to compare peak training demands to peak match demands</li>
<li>The role of vision and video in translating data for coaches and players</li>
<li>How to build buy-in when athletes aren’t “numbers learners”</li>
<li>The balance between availability and performance in weekly competition cycles</li>
<li>How interdisciplinary decision-making works inside an AFL club</li>
<li>Why isolated fatigue “flags” can be misleading</li>
<li>How gym-based physical development can be directly tied to on-field outcomes</li>
<li>The importance of soft skills in high-performance environments</li>
<li>Where AI realistically fits (and doesn’t fit) in elite sports science</li>
</ul>

<p><strong>About Stan Parker</strong><br>
Stan Parker is a Sports Scientist with the Western Bulldogs in the AFL. He has previously worked with the Brisbane Broncos and Queensland Rugby Sevens, building experience across multiple elite sporting codes in Australia.</p>

<p>Stan is also completing a PhD focused on the contextualisation of tracking data in team sports, exploring how movement patterns and peak demands can better explain performance impact rather than serving purely as load monitoring tools.</p>

<p>He is particularly interested in bridging the gap between data analytics, coaching vision, and real-world performance application.</p>

<p><strong>FREE 7d SCIENCE FOR SPORT ACADEMY TRIAL</strong></p>

<p><strong>SIGN UP NOW:</strong> <a href="https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241" rel="nofollow">https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241</a></p>

<p>​ Learn Quicker &amp; More Effectively<br>
​ Optimise Your Athletes&#39; Recovery<br>
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In<br>
​ Reduce Your Athletes&#39; Injury Ratese<br>
​ Save 100&#39;s Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More<br>
​ Improve Your Athletes&#39; Performance<br>
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes<br>
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Fresh from pre-season camp in Australia, Richard Graves sits down with Stan Parker, Sports Scientist at the Western Bulldogs, to explore how tracking data, contextual analytics, and interdisciplinary collaboration shape performance in elite AFL.</p>

<p>Stan’s journey spans the Brisbane Broncos in the NRL, Queensland Rugby Sevens, and now five seasons embedded within the Bulldogs’ high-performance programme, including a PhD focused on contextualising tracking data beyond simple load metrics.</p>

<p>This episode moves beyond “distance covered” and “top speed” to examine how sports science actually influences coaching decisions, athlete development, injury management, and tactical execution. From peak demand analysis and real-world decision-making under fatigue, to AI readiness and workflow efficiency, this is a grounded, practitioner-led conversation about where elite sport is really heading.</p>

<p><strong>In this episode you will learn:</strong></p>

<ul>
<li>Why contextualising tracking data matters more than collecting more of it</li>
<li>How to compare peak training demands to peak match demands</li>
<li>The role of vision and video in translating data for coaches and players</li>
<li>How to build buy-in when athletes aren’t “numbers learners”</li>
<li>The balance between availability and performance in weekly competition cycles</li>
<li>How interdisciplinary decision-making works inside an AFL club</li>
<li>Why isolated fatigue “flags” can be misleading</li>
<li>How gym-based physical development can be directly tied to on-field outcomes</li>
<li>The importance of soft skills in high-performance environments</li>
<li>Where AI realistically fits (and doesn’t fit) in elite sports science</li>
</ul>

<p><strong>About Stan Parker</strong><br>
Stan Parker is a Sports Scientist with the Western Bulldogs in the AFL. He has previously worked with the Brisbane Broncos and Queensland Rugby Sevens, building experience across multiple elite sporting codes in Australia.</p>

<p>Stan is also completing a PhD focused on the contextualisation of tracking data in team sports, exploring how movement patterns and peak demands can better explain performance impact rather than serving purely as load monitoring tools.</p>

<p>He is particularly interested in bridging the gap between data analytics, coaching vision, and real-world performance application.</p>

<p><strong>FREE 7d SCIENCE FOR SPORT ACADEMY TRIAL</strong></p>

<p><strong>SIGN UP NOW:</strong> <a href="https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241" rel="nofollow">https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241</a></p>

<p>​ Learn Quicker &amp; More Effectively<br>
​ Optimise Your Athletes&#39; Recovery<br>
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In<br>
​ Reduce Your Athletes&#39; Injury Ratese<br>
​ Save 100&#39;s Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More<br>
​ Improve Your Athletes&#39; Performance<br>
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes<br>
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>291: Managing Workload and Performance in the NHL</title>
  <link>http://scienceforsport.fireside.fm/291</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">3b54db46-64e0-40f3-9705-c443aa0318bb</guid>
  <pubDate>Mon, 27 Oct 2025 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
  <author>Science for Sport</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/ed3f06f4-af55-41d4-87cf-0e484d2d9fef/3b54db46-64e0-40f3-9705-c443aa0318bb.mp3" length="45589156" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episode>291</itunes:episode>
  <itunes:title>Managing Workload and Performance in the NHL</itunes:title>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:author>Science for Sport</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>In this episode, New Jersey Devils Sports Scientist Steven Nightingale joins host Richard Graves to discuss how data, workload management, and recovery strategies are applied in the NHL’s demanding 82-game season. He shares insights from his global career and PhD research, revealing how science and practical experience combine to keep athletes performing at their best.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>31:39</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/e/ed3f06f4-af55-41d4-87cf-0e484d2d9fef/cover.jpg?v=3"/>
  <description>This week, host Richard Graves welcomes Steven Nightingale, Sports Scientist with the New Jersey Devils (NHL), to explore the realities of managing workload, performance, and recovery in one of the world’s most demanding sporting environments.
From starting out in Peterborough to working in China, Russia, and now in the NHL, Steve shares his fascinating journey through elite sport, and how data, experience, and practical collaboration with coaches all come together to optimise athlete performance.
They dive deep into how workload is managed across an 82-game season, the impact of fixture congestion and travel, and the evolving role of data and AI in shaping the future of sports science.
In this episode, you’ll learn:
* How Steve’s career took him from teaching in England to sports science roles across China, the KHL, and the NHL.
* What workload management really means in professional ice hockey, and why it’s misunderstood.
* How the Devils balance recovery, readiness, and tactical demands across a relentless schedule.
* The challenges of measuring true intensity and how Steve uses Z-scores and T-scores to make data meaningful for coaches.
* Why less distance covered can actually correlate with winning more games.
* How travel, sleep, and recovery all factor into athlete performance across an 82-game season.
* The future of data analysis, including AI’s growing role in sports science.
About Steven Nightingale
Steven Nightingale is a Sports Scientist with the New Jersey Devils in the NHL and is currently completing his Doctorate in Applied Sport and Exercise Science. Originally from Peterborough, England, Steve’s career has taken him from teaching and voluntary roles in UK hockey to international positions with Ice Hockey UK, the Chinese Olympic Committee, and teams in the KHL (Kontinental Hockey League).
His research focuses on workload monitoring, return-to-play strategies, and performance optimisation, using technologies such as Catapult to inform evidence-based decision-making. Steven regularly shares insights on LinkedIn and publishes his research on ResearchGate.
FREE 7d SCIENCE FOR SPORT ACADEMY TRIAL
SIGN UP NOW: https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241
​ Learn Quicker &amp;amp; More Effectively
​ Optimise Your Athletes' Recovery
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In
​ Reduce Your Athletes' Injury Ratese
​ Save 100's Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More
​ Improve Your Athletes' Performance
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp;amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>sports science, sport science, strength and conditioning, S&amp;C, performance, athlete, sport, exercise, nutrition, injury, injuries, Sports Science, Performance Analysis, Workload Management, Athlete Monitoring, Data Analytics, Recovery, NHL, Ice Hockey, Strength and Conditioning, Catapult, Sports Technology, Return to Play, Applied Research, High Performance, Sports Data, Coaching, Load Management, AI in Sport, PhD Research, New Jersey Devils</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>This week, host Richard Graves welcomes Steven Nightingale, Sports Scientist with the New Jersey Devils (NHL), to explore the realities of managing workload, performance, and recovery in one of the world’s most demanding sporting environments.<br>
From starting out in Peterborough to working in China, Russia, and now in the NHL, Steve shares his fascinating journey through elite sport, and how data, experience, and practical collaboration with coaches all come together to optimise athlete performance.<br>
They dive deep into how workload is managed across an 82-game season, the impact of fixture congestion and travel, and the evolving role of data and AI in shaping the future of sports science.</p>

<p><strong>In this episode, you’ll learn:</strong></p>

<ul>
<li>How Steve’s career took him from teaching in England to sports science roles across China, the KHL, and the NHL.</li>
<li>What workload management really means in professional ice hockey, and why it’s misunderstood.</li>
<li>How the Devils balance recovery, readiness, and tactical demands across a relentless schedule.</li>
<li>The challenges of measuring true intensity and how Steve uses Z-scores and T-scores to make data meaningful for coaches.</li>
<li>Why less distance covered can actually correlate with winning more games.</li>
<li>How travel, sleep, and recovery all factor into athlete performance across an 82-game season.</li>
<li>The future of data analysis, including AI’s growing role in sports science.</li>
</ul>

<p><strong>About Steven Nightingale</strong><br>
Steven Nightingale is a Sports Scientist with the New Jersey Devils in the NHL and is currently completing his Doctorate in Applied Sport and Exercise Science. Originally from Peterborough, England, Steve’s career has taken him from teaching and voluntary roles in UK hockey to international positions with Ice Hockey UK, the Chinese Olympic Committee, and teams in the KHL (Kontinental Hockey League).<br>
His research focuses on workload monitoring, return-to-play strategies, and performance optimisation, using technologies such as Catapult to inform evidence-based decision-making. Steven regularly shares insights on LinkedIn and publishes his research on ResearchGate.</p>

<p><strong>FREE 7d SCIENCE FOR SPORT ACADEMY TRIAL</strong></p>

<p><strong>SIGN UP NOW:</strong> <a href="https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241" rel="nofollow">https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241</a></p>

<p>​ Learn Quicker &amp; More Effectively<br>
​ Optimise Your Athletes&#39; Recovery<br>
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In<br>
​ Reduce Your Athletes&#39; Injury Ratese<br>
​ Save 100&#39;s Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More<br>
​ Improve Your Athletes&#39; Performance<br>
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes<br>
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>This week, host Richard Graves welcomes Steven Nightingale, Sports Scientist with the New Jersey Devils (NHL), to explore the realities of managing workload, performance, and recovery in one of the world’s most demanding sporting environments.<br>
From starting out in Peterborough to working in China, Russia, and now in the NHL, Steve shares his fascinating journey through elite sport, and how data, experience, and practical collaboration with coaches all come together to optimise athlete performance.<br>
They dive deep into how workload is managed across an 82-game season, the impact of fixture congestion and travel, and the evolving role of data and AI in shaping the future of sports science.</p>

<p><strong>In this episode, you’ll learn:</strong></p>

<ul>
<li>How Steve’s career took him from teaching in England to sports science roles across China, the KHL, and the NHL.</li>
<li>What workload management really means in professional ice hockey, and why it’s misunderstood.</li>
<li>How the Devils balance recovery, readiness, and tactical demands across a relentless schedule.</li>
<li>The challenges of measuring true intensity and how Steve uses Z-scores and T-scores to make data meaningful for coaches.</li>
<li>Why less distance covered can actually correlate with winning more games.</li>
<li>How travel, sleep, and recovery all factor into athlete performance across an 82-game season.</li>
<li>The future of data analysis, including AI’s growing role in sports science.</li>
</ul>

<p><strong>About Steven Nightingale</strong><br>
Steven Nightingale is a Sports Scientist with the New Jersey Devils in the NHL and is currently completing his Doctorate in Applied Sport and Exercise Science. Originally from Peterborough, England, Steve’s career has taken him from teaching and voluntary roles in UK hockey to international positions with Ice Hockey UK, the Chinese Olympic Committee, and teams in the KHL (Kontinental Hockey League).<br>
His research focuses on workload monitoring, return-to-play strategies, and performance optimisation, using technologies such as Catapult to inform evidence-based decision-making. Steven regularly shares insights on LinkedIn and publishes his research on ResearchGate.</p>

<p><strong>FREE 7d SCIENCE FOR SPORT ACADEMY TRIAL</strong></p>

<p><strong>SIGN UP NOW:</strong> <a href="https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241" rel="nofollow">https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241</a></p>

<p>​ Learn Quicker &amp; More Effectively<br>
​ Optimise Your Athletes&#39; Recovery<br>
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In<br>
​ Reduce Your Athletes&#39; Injury Ratese<br>
​ Save 100&#39;s Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More<br>
​ Improve Your Athletes&#39; Performance<br>
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes<br>
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>286: NFL’s Digital Athlete – How Data is Transforming Player Health &amp; Safety</title>
  <link>http://scienceforsport.fireside.fm/286</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">b7c1d1bc-7f18-4264-be50-7825977e0c2e</guid>
  <pubDate>Mon, 22 Sep 2025 06:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
  <author>Science for Sport</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/ed3f06f4-af55-41d4-87cf-0e484d2d9fef/b7c1d1bc-7f18-4264-be50-7825977e0c2e.mp3" length="38098492" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episode>286</itunes:episode>
  <itunes:title>NFL’s Digital Athlete – How Data is Transforming Player Health &amp; Safety</itunes:title>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:author>Science for Sport</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>This episode dives into the NFL’s groundbreaking Digital Athlete, as host Richard Graves speaks with Dr Mackenzie Herzog (NFL) and Julie Souza (AWS) about how data and AI are transforming player health, safety, and performance.
Discover how advanced analytics, computer vision, and machine learning are driving injury prevention, rule changes, and equipment innovation across the league.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>26:27</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/e/ed3f06f4-af55-41d4-87cf-0e484d2d9fef/cover.jpg?v=3"/>
  <description>This week, host Richard Graves is joined by two leading figures driving innovation in sport:
Dr Mackenzie Herzog, VP of Player Health &amp;amp; Safety and Strategic Innovation at the NFL
Julie Souza, Global Head of Sports at Amazon Web Services (AWS)
Together, they explore the groundbreaking NFL Digital Athlete, a data-driven platform reshaping how the league prevents injuries, enhances performance, and safeguards the long-term health of its players.
This episode offers a rare look behind the scenes at how one of the world’s biggest sports organisations is using advanced analytics, computer vision, and machine learning to transform player welfare.
In this episode, you’ll learn:
How the NFL Digital Athlete creates a 360° view of every player by combining wearable, video, and performance data
The role of AWS in processing 500 million+ data points per week to power injury prevention and performance insights
How data modelling led to rule changes like the dynamic kickoff and banning hip-drop tackles to reduce injuries
How computer vision is used to track player pose and limb position to identify mechanisms of injury
How concussion risk has dropped thanks to position-specific helmets and guardian caps
Why player and coach buy-in has been crucial for the success of data-driven safety initiatives
How the Digital Athlete model is now influencing college football, global sport, and even other industries
About Dr Mackenzie Herzog
Dr Mackenzie Herzog is the Vice President of Player Health &amp;amp; Safety and Strategic Innovation at the NFL. She leads the league’s efforts to reduce injuries, improve player health outcomes, and integrate cutting-edge technology and analytics into performance and safety strategies. Mackenzie has overseen the creation and implementation of the NFL Digital Athlete, spearheading collaborations with partners such as AWS to harness data for player health and safety advancements across the league.
About Julie Souza
Julie Souza is the Global Head of Sports at Amazon Web Services (AWS), where she partners with leading sports organisations to leverage cloud technology, machine learning, and data analytics to transform athlete performance, fan engagement, and operational efficiency. Julie has played a pivotal role in AWS’s collaboration with the NFL, powering the Digital Athlete platform and pioneering innovations like next-gen stats, optical tracking, and large-scale injury risk modelling.
SIGN UP NOW: https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241
​ Learn Quicker &amp;amp; More Effectively
​ Optimise Your Athletes' Recovery
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In
​ Reduce Your Athletes' Injury Ratese
​ Save 100's Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More
​ Improve Your Athletes' Performance
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp;amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>sports science, sport science, strength and conditioning, S&amp;C, performance, athlete, sport, exercise, nutrition, injury, injuries, NFL, Digital Athlete, sports science, player health, player safety, injury prevention, performance analysis, sports technology, data analytics, computer vision, machine learning, biomechanics, load management, concussion prevention, athlete monitoring, AWS, sports innovation, rule changes, sports performance, sports data</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>This week, host Richard Graves is joined by two leading figures driving innovation in sport:</p>

<p>Dr Mackenzie Herzog, VP of Player Health &amp; Safety and Strategic Innovation at the NFL</p>

<p>Julie Souza, Global Head of Sports at Amazon Web Services (AWS)</p>

<p>Together, they explore the groundbreaking NFL Digital Athlete, a data-driven platform reshaping how the league prevents injuries, enhances performance, and safeguards the long-term health of its players.</p>

<p>This episode offers a rare look behind the scenes at how one of the world’s biggest sports organisations is using advanced analytics, computer vision, and machine learning to transform player welfare.</p>

<p><strong>In this episode, you’ll learn:</strong></p>

<ul>
<li><p>How the NFL Digital Athlete creates a 360° view of every player by combining wearable, video, and performance data</p></li>
<li><p>The role of AWS in processing 500 million+ data points per week to power injury prevention and performance insights</p></li>
<li><p>How data modelling led to rule changes like the dynamic kickoff and banning hip-drop tackles to reduce injuries</p></li>
<li><p>How computer vision is used to track player pose and limb position to identify mechanisms of injury</p></li>
<li><p>How concussion risk has dropped thanks to position-specific helmets and guardian caps</p></li>
<li><p>Why player and coach buy-in has been crucial for the success of data-driven safety initiatives</p></li>
<li><p>How the Digital Athlete model is now influencing college football, global sport, and even other industries</p></li>
</ul>

<p><strong>About Dr Mackenzie Herzog</strong><br>
Dr Mackenzie Herzog is the Vice President of Player Health &amp; Safety and Strategic Innovation at the NFL. She leads the league’s efforts to reduce injuries, improve player health outcomes, and integrate cutting-edge technology and analytics into performance and safety strategies. Mackenzie has overseen the creation and implementation of the NFL Digital Athlete, spearheading collaborations with partners such as AWS to harness data for player health and safety advancements across the league.</p>

<p><strong>About Julie Souza</strong><br>
Julie Souza is the Global Head of Sports at Amazon Web Services (AWS), where she partners with leading sports organisations to leverage cloud technology, machine learning, and data analytics to transform athlete performance, fan engagement, and operational efficiency. Julie has played a pivotal role in AWS’s collaboration with the NFL, powering the Digital Athlete platform and pioneering innovations like next-gen stats, optical tracking, and large-scale injury risk modelling.</p>

<p><strong>SIGN UP NOW:</strong> <a href="https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241" rel="nofollow">https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241</a></p>

<ul>
<li>​ Learn Quicker &amp; More Effectively</li>
<li>​ Optimise Your Athletes&#39; Recovery</li>
<li>​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In</li>
<li>​ Reduce Your Athletes&#39; Injury Ratese</li>
<li>​ Save 100&#39;s Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More</li>
<li>​ Improve Your Athletes&#39; Performance</li>
<li>​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes</li>
<li>​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research</li>
</ul>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>This week, host Richard Graves is joined by two leading figures driving innovation in sport:</p>

<p>Dr Mackenzie Herzog, VP of Player Health &amp; Safety and Strategic Innovation at the NFL</p>

<p>Julie Souza, Global Head of Sports at Amazon Web Services (AWS)</p>

<p>Together, they explore the groundbreaking NFL Digital Athlete, a data-driven platform reshaping how the league prevents injuries, enhances performance, and safeguards the long-term health of its players.</p>

<p>This episode offers a rare look behind the scenes at how one of the world’s biggest sports organisations is using advanced analytics, computer vision, and machine learning to transform player welfare.</p>

<p><strong>In this episode, you’ll learn:</strong></p>

<ul>
<li><p>How the NFL Digital Athlete creates a 360° view of every player by combining wearable, video, and performance data</p></li>
<li><p>The role of AWS in processing 500 million+ data points per week to power injury prevention and performance insights</p></li>
<li><p>How data modelling led to rule changes like the dynamic kickoff and banning hip-drop tackles to reduce injuries</p></li>
<li><p>How computer vision is used to track player pose and limb position to identify mechanisms of injury</p></li>
<li><p>How concussion risk has dropped thanks to position-specific helmets and guardian caps</p></li>
<li><p>Why player and coach buy-in has been crucial for the success of data-driven safety initiatives</p></li>
<li><p>How the Digital Athlete model is now influencing college football, global sport, and even other industries</p></li>
</ul>

<p><strong>About Dr Mackenzie Herzog</strong><br>
Dr Mackenzie Herzog is the Vice President of Player Health &amp; Safety and Strategic Innovation at the NFL. She leads the league’s efforts to reduce injuries, improve player health outcomes, and integrate cutting-edge technology and analytics into performance and safety strategies. Mackenzie has overseen the creation and implementation of the NFL Digital Athlete, spearheading collaborations with partners such as AWS to harness data for player health and safety advancements across the league.</p>

<p><strong>About Julie Souza</strong><br>
Julie Souza is the Global Head of Sports at Amazon Web Services (AWS), where she partners with leading sports organisations to leverage cloud technology, machine learning, and data analytics to transform athlete performance, fan engagement, and operational efficiency. Julie has played a pivotal role in AWS’s collaboration with the NFL, powering the Digital Athlete platform and pioneering innovations like next-gen stats, optical tracking, and large-scale injury risk modelling.</p>

<p><strong>SIGN UP NOW:</strong> <a href="https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241" rel="nofollow">https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241</a></p>

<ul>
<li>​ Learn Quicker &amp; More Effectively</li>
<li>​ Optimise Your Athletes&#39; Recovery</li>
<li>​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In</li>
<li>​ Reduce Your Athletes&#39; Injury Ratese</li>
<li>​ Save 100&#39;s Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More</li>
<li>​ Improve Your Athletes&#39; Performance</li>
<li>​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes</li>
<li>​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research</li>
</ul>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>284: Club Plans &amp; Personal Coaches: Adding An Edge?</title>
  <link>http://scienceforsport.fireside.fm/284</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">5c906c5b-b9ad-4e50-bf43-4b0daf552014</guid>
  <pubDate>Mon, 08 Sep 2025 06:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
  <author>Science for Sport</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/ed3f06f4-af55-41d4-87cf-0e484d2d9fef/5c906c5b-b9ad-4e50-bf43-4b0daf552014.mp3" length="46439285" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episode>284</itunes:episode>
  <itunes:title>Club Plans &amp; Personal Coaches: Adding An Edge?</itunes:title>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:author>Science for Sport</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Richard Graves and performance coach Daniel Booth debate how clubs, national teams, and personal practitioners can align around “one athlete, one plan” without adding risk—covering communication, data sharing, contracts, and load management. Practical takeaways draw on football, rugby, Olympic sport, and case studies like Mahomes and LeBron to show what good collaboration looks like in practice.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>32:14</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/e/ed3f06f4-af55-41d4-87cf-0e484d2d9fef/cover.jpg?v=3"/>
  <description>Club Plans &amp;amp; Personal Coaches: Adding An Edge?
In this week’s episode, host Richard Graves sits down with Daniel Booth, a performance coach who’s worked inside elite teams (Watford FC, Ealing Trailfinders), across Olympic sprint programmes, and independently with top athletes, to unpack one of the hottest debates in high performance:
 Should athletes stick strictly to club schedules, or can personal trainers/physios/dietitians add an edge without adding risk?
Drawing on experience from football, rugby, and Olympic sport, Daniel explains why tensions flare (mismatched philosophies, poor communication, asset ownership), what great collaboration looks like in the real world, and how high-performing organisations formalise outside support without losing control.
What you’ll learn
* The real source of conflict between club performance/medical staff and external coaches, and how cross-sport thinking challenges “that’s how we’ve always done it.”
* A practical collaboration model: who shares what, when, and how (weekly data drops, post-match/flight recovery notes, and a single “central coordinator” to integrate inputs).
* Risk vs. reward in load management: why living on the “edge” drives adaptation, and how to avoid double-loading athletes after intense sessions.
* Contracts done right: how some teams formally write approved externals into player agreements and set clear, shared calendars.
* International duty realities: why centralised models in rugby/cricket often outperform football’s fragmented approach, and what football can copy now.
* Case studies that translate: lessons from LeBron/Mancias and Mahomes/Stroop—how season-long regen blocks and role clarity reduce noise and improve availability.
* Social media pitfalls: why chasing a “brand” erodes trust, and how word-of-mouth and discretion still win in elite environments.
About Daniel Booth
Daniel Booth is a performance coach with 10+ years’ experience across elite football (Watford FC), rugby (including Ealing Trailfinders), and Olympic sprint programmes, as well as work with Warner Bros. Discovery. Now operating independently, he partners with clubs and national teams to deliver athlete-centred programming and is formally written into several Premiership rugby player contracts to act as the central performance coordinator, integrating club, country, and external inputs. Daniel’s approach blends cross-sport best practice, honest communication, and low-ego, data-led decision-making focused on availability and longevity.
SIGN UP NOW: https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241
​ Learn Quicker &amp;amp; More Effectively
​ Optimise Your Athletes' Recovery
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In
​ Reduce Your Athletes' Injury Ratese
​ Save 100's Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More
​ Improve Your Athletes' Performance
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp;amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>sports science, sport science, strength and conditioning, S&amp;C, performance, athlete, sport, exercise, nutrition, injury, injuries, sports science, high performance, athlete monitoring, load management, player availability, injury prevention, return to play, strength and conditioning, S&amp;C, periodisation, recovery strategies, regeneration, data sharing, GPS tracking, club vs personal coach, external practitioners, collaboration in sport, communication in teams, central contracts, football performance, premier league, rugby performance, olympic sport, player welfare, performance pathways, multidisciplinary teams, elite sport, coaching philosophy, programme design, case studies Mahomes LeBron Brady</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p><strong>Club Plans &amp; Personal Coaches: Adding An Edge?</strong></p>

<p>In this week’s episode, host Richard Graves sits down with Daniel Booth, a performance coach who’s worked inside elite teams (Watford FC, Ealing Trailfinders), across Olympic sprint programmes, and independently with top athletes, to unpack one of the hottest debates in high performance:<br>
 Should athletes stick strictly to club schedules, or can personal trainers/physios/dietitians add an edge without adding risk?</p>

<p>Drawing on experience from football, rugby, and Olympic sport, Daniel explains why tensions flare (mismatched philosophies, poor communication, asset ownership), what great collaboration looks like in the real world, and how high-performing organisations formalise outside support without losing control.</p>

<p><strong>What you’ll learn</strong></p>

<ul>
<li>The real source of conflict between club performance/medical staff and external coaches, and how cross-sport thinking challenges “that’s how we’ve always done it.”</li>
<li>A practical collaboration model: who shares what, when, and how (weekly data drops, post-match/flight recovery notes, and a single “central coordinator” to integrate inputs).</li>
<li>Risk vs. reward in load management: why living on the “edge” drives adaptation, and how to avoid double-loading athletes after intense sessions.</li>
<li>Contracts done right: how some teams formally write approved externals into player agreements and set clear, shared calendars.</li>
<li>International duty realities: why centralised models in rugby/cricket often outperform football’s fragmented approach, and what football can copy now.</li>
<li>Case studies that translate: lessons from LeBron/Mancias and Mahomes/Stroop—how season-long regen blocks and role clarity reduce noise and improve availability.</li>
<li>Social media pitfalls: why chasing a “brand” erodes trust, and how word-of-mouth and discretion still win in elite environments.</li>
</ul>

<p><strong>About Daniel Booth</strong><br>
Daniel Booth is a performance coach with 10+ years’ experience across elite football (Watford FC), rugby (including Ealing Trailfinders), and Olympic sprint programmes, as well as work with Warner Bros. Discovery. Now operating independently, he partners with clubs and national teams to deliver athlete-centred programming and is formally written into several Premiership rugby player contracts to act as the central performance coordinator, integrating club, country, and external inputs. Daniel’s approach blends cross-sport best practice, honest communication, and low-ego, data-led decision-making focused on availability and longevity.</p>

<p><strong>SIGN UP NOW:</strong> <a href="https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241" rel="nofollow">https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241</a></p>

<ul>
<li>​ Learn Quicker &amp; More Effectively</li>
<li>​ Optimise Your Athletes&#39; Recovery</li>
<li>​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In</li>
<li>​ Reduce Your Athletes&#39; Injury Ratese</li>
<li>​ Save 100&#39;s Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More</li>
<li>​ Improve Your Athletes&#39; Performance</li>
<li>​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes</li>
<li>​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research</li>
</ul>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p><strong>Club Plans &amp; Personal Coaches: Adding An Edge?</strong></p>

<p>In this week’s episode, host Richard Graves sits down with Daniel Booth, a performance coach who’s worked inside elite teams (Watford FC, Ealing Trailfinders), across Olympic sprint programmes, and independently with top athletes, to unpack one of the hottest debates in high performance:<br>
 Should athletes stick strictly to club schedules, or can personal trainers/physios/dietitians add an edge without adding risk?</p>

<p>Drawing on experience from football, rugby, and Olympic sport, Daniel explains why tensions flare (mismatched philosophies, poor communication, asset ownership), what great collaboration looks like in the real world, and how high-performing organisations formalise outside support without losing control.</p>

<p><strong>What you’ll learn</strong></p>

<ul>
<li>The real source of conflict between club performance/medical staff and external coaches, and how cross-sport thinking challenges “that’s how we’ve always done it.”</li>
<li>A practical collaboration model: who shares what, when, and how (weekly data drops, post-match/flight recovery notes, and a single “central coordinator” to integrate inputs).</li>
<li>Risk vs. reward in load management: why living on the “edge” drives adaptation, and how to avoid double-loading athletes after intense sessions.</li>
<li>Contracts done right: how some teams formally write approved externals into player agreements and set clear, shared calendars.</li>
<li>International duty realities: why centralised models in rugby/cricket often outperform football’s fragmented approach, and what football can copy now.</li>
<li>Case studies that translate: lessons from LeBron/Mancias and Mahomes/Stroop—how season-long regen blocks and role clarity reduce noise and improve availability.</li>
<li>Social media pitfalls: why chasing a “brand” erodes trust, and how word-of-mouth and discretion still win in elite environments.</li>
</ul>

<p><strong>About Daniel Booth</strong><br>
Daniel Booth is a performance coach with 10+ years’ experience across elite football (Watford FC), rugby (including Ealing Trailfinders), and Olympic sprint programmes, as well as work with Warner Bros. Discovery. Now operating independently, he partners with clubs and national teams to deliver athlete-centred programming and is formally written into several Premiership rugby player contracts to act as the central performance coordinator, integrating club, country, and external inputs. Daniel’s approach blends cross-sport best practice, honest communication, and low-ego, data-led decision-making focused on availability and longevity.</p>

<p><strong>SIGN UP NOW:</strong> <a href="https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241" rel="nofollow">https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241</a></p>

<ul>
<li>​ Learn Quicker &amp; More Effectively</li>
<li>​ Optimise Your Athletes&#39; Recovery</li>
<li>​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In</li>
<li>​ Reduce Your Athletes&#39; Injury Ratese</li>
<li>​ Save 100&#39;s Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More</li>
<li>​ Improve Your Athletes&#39; Performance</li>
<li>​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes</li>
<li>​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research</li>
</ul>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>276: Coaching Through Rehab with Michael Carolan</title>
  <link>http://scienceforsport.fireside.fm/276</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">4f735f00-aab9-4f11-afbe-35c42fceb3ab</guid>
  <pubDate>Mon, 14 Jul 2025 06:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
  <author>Science for Sport</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/ed3f06f4-af55-41d4-87cf-0e484d2d9fef/4f735f00-aab9-4f11-afbe-35c42fceb3ab.mp3" length="34041571" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episode>276</itunes:episode>
  <itunes:title>Coaching Through Rehab with Michael Carolan</itunes:title>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:author>Science for Sport</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>In this episode, performance coach and rehab expert Michael Carolan shares his athlete-first approach to coaching through injury, blending science, communication, and real-world experience. From pro footballers to military personnel, Michael explains how tailored rehab, psychological support, and smart coaching can turn setbacks into comebacks.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>35:27</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/e/ed3f06f4-af55-41d4-87cf-0e484d2d9fef/cover.jpg?v=3"/>
  <description>This week on the Science for Sport podcast, host Richard Graves welcomes back Michael Carolan, a performance coach and subject lead in sport rehabilitation at the University of Salford. With nearly two decades of experience across elite sport, the military, and education, Michael shares a refreshingly honest and deeply practical perspective on what it really means to coach athletes through injury and recovery.
Whether you're a coach, therapist, or performance practitioner, this episode offers a wealth of real-world insights you can apply immediately.
In this episode, you’ll learn:
Why rehab should be treated as coaching, not just therapy
How communication and trust are at the heart of effective injury recovery
The mental toll of injury, and how to keep athletes feeling connected and valued
Why protocols are useful, but experience and adaptability matter more
How to “train around injury” and keep performance progressing
The role of environment, load tolerance, and coaching cues in recovery
How elite recoveries (like NFL star Aaron Rodgers') can mislead athletes
Why Michael teaches his students to “get miles on the soul” through experience
How to filter hype, stay objective, and build athlete autonomy
Michael’s no-nonsense, athlete-first approach is as insightful as it is relatable, combining science, coaching, and a human touch in every decision he makes.
About Michael Carolan
Michael Carolan is a highly experienced performance coach and academic specialising in sport rehabilitation. He is the Subject Lead and Programme Lead for Sport Rehabilitation at the University of Salford, where he teaches and mentors future practitioners while supporting clinical practice through partnerships with organisations like the PFA and Salford City Council. With a background spanning elite athletics, rugby, professional football, and the British military, Michael brings a unique blend of hands-on coaching, clinical rehab, and academic insight. He continues to work directly with athletes across the world, from youth sprinters to pro footballers, helping them navigate injury and return stronger than before.
FREE 7d SCIENCE FOR SPORT ACADEMY TRIAL
SIGN UP NOW: https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241
​ Learn Quicker &amp;amp; More Effectively
​ Optimise Your Athletes' Recovery
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In
​ Reduce Your Athletes' Injury Ratese
​ Save 100's Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More
​ Improve Your Athletes' Performance
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp;amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>sports science, sport science, strength and conditioning, S&amp;C, performance, athlete, sport, exercise, nutrition, injury, injuries, sports rehabilitation, injury recovery, athlete rehab, ACL rehab, return to play, strength and conditioning, performance coaching, sports science, rehab coaching, communication in sport, mental health in athletes, coaching injured athletes, elite athlete rehab, functional training, sport performance, coaching psychology, injury prevention, load management, rehab protocols, professional sport rehab</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>This week on the Science for Sport podcast, host Richard Graves welcomes back Michael Carolan, a performance coach and subject lead in sport rehabilitation at the University of Salford. With nearly two decades of experience across elite sport, the military, and education, Michael shares a refreshingly honest and deeply practical perspective on what it really means to coach athletes through injury and recovery.</p>

<p>Whether you&#39;re a coach, therapist, or performance practitioner, this episode offers a wealth of real-world insights you can apply immediately.</p>

<p>In this episode, you’ll learn:</p>

<ul>
<li>Why rehab should be treated as coaching, not just therapy</li>
<li>How communication and trust are at the heart of effective injury recovery</li>
<li>The mental toll of injury, and how to keep athletes feeling connected and valued</li>
<li>Why protocols are useful, but experience and adaptability matter more</li>
<li>How to “train around injury” and keep performance progressing</li>
<li>The role of environment, load tolerance, and coaching cues in recovery</li>
<li>How elite recoveries (like NFL star Aaron Rodgers&#39;) can mislead athletes</li>
<li>Why Michael teaches his students to “get miles on the soul” through experience</li>
<li>How to filter hype, stay objective, and build athlete autonomy</li>
</ul>

<p>Michael’s no-nonsense, athlete-first approach is as insightful as it is relatable, combining science, coaching, and a human touch in every decision he makes.</p>

<p><strong>About Michael Carolan</strong><br>
Michael Carolan is a highly experienced performance coach and academic specialising in sport rehabilitation. He is the Subject Lead and Programme Lead for Sport Rehabilitation at the University of Salford, where he teaches and mentors future practitioners while supporting clinical practice through partnerships with organisations like the PFA and Salford City Council. With a background spanning elite athletics, rugby, professional football, and the British military, Michael brings a unique blend of hands-on coaching, clinical rehab, and academic insight. He continues to work directly with athletes across the world, from youth sprinters to pro footballers, helping them navigate injury and return stronger than before.</p>

<p><strong>FREE 7d SCIENCE FOR SPORT ACADEMY TRIAL</strong></p>

<p><strong>SIGN UP NOW:</strong> <a href="https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241" rel="nofollow">https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241</a></p>

<p>​ Learn Quicker &amp; More Effectively<br>
​ Optimise Your Athletes&#39; Recovery<br>
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In<br>
​ Reduce Your Athletes&#39; Injury Ratese<br>
​ Save 100&#39;s Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More<br>
​ Improve Your Athletes&#39; Performance<br>
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes<br>
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>This week on the Science for Sport podcast, host Richard Graves welcomes back Michael Carolan, a performance coach and subject lead in sport rehabilitation at the University of Salford. With nearly two decades of experience across elite sport, the military, and education, Michael shares a refreshingly honest and deeply practical perspective on what it really means to coach athletes through injury and recovery.</p>

<p>Whether you&#39;re a coach, therapist, or performance practitioner, this episode offers a wealth of real-world insights you can apply immediately.</p>

<p>In this episode, you’ll learn:</p>

<ul>
<li>Why rehab should be treated as coaching, not just therapy</li>
<li>How communication and trust are at the heart of effective injury recovery</li>
<li>The mental toll of injury, and how to keep athletes feeling connected and valued</li>
<li>Why protocols are useful, but experience and adaptability matter more</li>
<li>How to “train around injury” and keep performance progressing</li>
<li>The role of environment, load tolerance, and coaching cues in recovery</li>
<li>How elite recoveries (like NFL star Aaron Rodgers&#39;) can mislead athletes</li>
<li>Why Michael teaches his students to “get miles on the soul” through experience</li>
<li>How to filter hype, stay objective, and build athlete autonomy</li>
</ul>

<p>Michael’s no-nonsense, athlete-first approach is as insightful as it is relatable, combining science, coaching, and a human touch in every decision he makes.</p>

<p><strong>About Michael Carolan</strong><br>
Michael Carolan is a highly experienced performance coach and academic specialising in sport rehabilitation. He is the Subject Lead and Programme Lead for Sport Rehabilitation at the University of Salford, where he teaches and mentors future practitioners while supporting clinical practice through partnerships with organisations like the PFA and Salford City Council. With a background spanning elite athletics, rugby, professional football, and the British military, Michael brings a unique blend of hands-on coaching, clinical rehab, and academic insight. He continues to work directly with athletes across the world, from youth sprinters to pro footballers, helping them navigate injury and return stronger than before.</p>

<p><strong>FREE 7d SCIENCE FOR SPORT ACADEMY TRIAL</strong></p>

<p><strong>SIGN UP NOW:</strong> <a href="https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241" rel="nofollow">https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241</a></p>

<p>​ Learn Quicker &amp; More Effectively<br>
​ Optimise Your Athletes&#39; Recovery<br>
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In<br>
​ Reduce Your Athletes&#39; Injury Ratese<br>
​ Save 100&#39;s Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More<br>
​ Improve Your Athletes&#39; Performance<br>
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes<br>
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>266: Blending Science, Rehab and Reality in Elite Football</title>
  <link>http://scienceforsport.fireside.fm/266</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">b25aa8b7-b854-42c2-b5cc-22918e1d91a4</guid>
  <pubDate>Mon, 05 May 2025 06:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
  <author>Science for Sport</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/ed3f06f4-af55-41d4-87cf-0e484d2d9fef/b25aa8b7-b854-42c2-b5cc-22918e1d91a4.mp3" length="29337859" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episode>266</itunes:episode>
  <itunes:title>Blending Science, Rehab and Reality in Elite Football</itunes:title>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:author>Science for Sport</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Athletic Trainer Scott Armistead joins the Science for Sport podcast to share his journey from New Zealand to the MLS, offering candid insights into injury rehab, player trust, and performance optimisation. With real-world examples from FC Cincinnati and Seattle Sounders, this episode explores the power of multidisciplinary teamwork and cutting through data overload.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>30:33</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/e/ed3f06f4-af55-41d4-87cf-0e484d2d9fef/cover.jpg?v=3"/>
  <description>This week on the Science for Sport podcast, host Richard Graves is joined by Scott Armistead, Athletic Trainer at Seattle Sounders FC, to explore the realities of working at the highest level of football in the US.
Born and raised in New Zealand, Scott’s journey has taken him across continents — from youth football in Auckland to the intensity of Major League Soccer. In this candid conversation, Scott reflects on his early struggles in pro sport, navigating four head coaches in 12 months, and playing a key role in transforming FC Cincinnati from bottom of the table to Supporters’ Shield winners.
You’ll hear Scott’s insights into:
Building trust with players through communication, not just data
Balancing holistic care with performance metrics
Avoiding "paralysis by analysis" in a tech-heavy environment
The power of multidisciplinary collaboration
Why being a generalist can be just as important as being a specialist
Whether you're a practitioner looking for real-world advice or a sports fan curious about what really happens behind the scenes, this episode delivers practical takeaways and thoughtful reflections.
About Scott Armistead
Scott Armistead, MS, LAT, ATC, is an accomplished Athletic Trainer currently serving with Seattle Sounders FC in Major League Soccer. Originating from New Zealand, Scott's career has spanned various roles, including positions with FC Cincinnati, FC Tucson, and the Barça Residency Academy. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Athletic Training from McKendree University and a Master’s degree in Sports Performance from Arizona State University. Scott is renowned for his holistic, athlete-centered approach, seamlessly integrating sports science, rehabilitation, and performance optimisation. His commitment to evidence-based practice and multidisciplinary collaboration has made him a respected figure in elite football circles
https://www.linkedin.com/in/scottarmistead/
FREE 7d SCIENCE FOR SPORT ACADEMY TRIAL
SIGN UP NOW: https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241
​ Learn Quicker &amp;amp; More Effectively
​ Optimise Your Athletes' Recovery
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In
​ Reduce Your Athletes' Injury Ratese
​ Save 100's Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More
​ Improve Your Athletes' Performance
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp;amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research
🔔 Subscribe to the podcast on your favourite platform
Apple Podcasts (https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/science-for-sport-podcast/id1506431005)
Google Podcasts (https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5maXJlc2lkZS5mbS9zY2llbmNlZm9yc3BvcnQvcnNz?sa=X&amp;amp;ved=0CAIQ4aUDahcKEwj43vyLxbrrAhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQBA)
Spotify (https://open.spotify.com/show/5DZlm3bNyPQd1QknUxCWTz?si=yHWOt3LORfeGgp7i31ey8g)
Stitcher (https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/science-for-sport-podcast) 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>sports science, sport science, strength and conditioning, S&amp;C, performance, athlete, sport, exercise, nutrition, injury, injuries</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>This week on the Science for Sport podcast, host Richard Graves is joined by Scott Armistead, Athletic Trainer at Seattle Sounders FC, to explore the realities of working at the highest level of football in the US.</p>

<p>Born and raised in New Zealand, Scott’s journey has taken him across continents — from youth football in Auckland to the intensity of Major League Soccer. In this candid conversation, Scott reflects on his early struggles in pro sport, navigating four head coaches in 12 months, and playing a key role in transforming FC Cincinnati from bottom of the table to Supporters’ Shield winners.</p>

<p>You’ll hear Scott’s insights into:</p>

<p>Building trust with players through communication, not just data</p>

<p>Balancing holistic care with performance metrics</p>

<p>Avoiding &quot;paralysis by analysis&quot; in a tech-heavy environment</p>

<p>The power of multidisciplinary collaboration</p>

<p>Why being a generalist can be just as important as being a specialist</p>

<p>Whether you&#39;re a practitioner looking for real-world advice or a sports fan curious about what really happens behind the scenes, this episode delivers practical takeaways and thoughtful reflections.</p>

<p><strong>About Scott Armistead</strong><br>
Scott Armistead, MS, LAT, ATC, is an accomplished Athletic Trainer currently serving with Seattle Sounders FC in Major League Soccer. Originating from New Zealand, Scott&#39;s career has spanned various roles, including positions with FC Cincinnati, FC Tucson, and the Barça Residency Academy. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Athletic Training from McKendree University and a Master’s degree in Sports Performance from Arizona State University. Scott is renowned for his holistic, athlete-centered approach, seamlessly integrating sports science, rehabilitation, and performance optimisation. His commitment to evidence-based practice and multidisciplinary collaboration has made him a respected figure in elite football circles<br>
<a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/scottarmistead/" rel="nofollow">https://www.linkedin.com/in/scottarmistead/</a></p>

<p><strong>FREE 7d SCIENCE FOR SPORT ACADEMY TRIAL</strong></p>

<p><strong>SIGN UP NOW:</strong> <a href="https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241" rel="nofollow">https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241</a></p>

<p>​ Learn Quicker &amp; More Effectively<br>
​ Optimise Your Athletes&#39; Recovery<br>
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In<br>
​ Reduce Your Athletes&#39; Injury Ratese<br>
​ Save 100&#39;s Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More<br>
​ Improve Your Athletes&#39; Performance<br>
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes<br>
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research</p>

<h3>🔔 Subscribe to the podcast on your favourite platform</h3>

<ul>
<li><a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/science-for-sport-podcast/id1506431005" rel="nofollow">Apple Podcasts</a></li>
<li><a href="https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5maXJlc2lkZS5mbS9zY2llbmNlZm9yc3BvcnQvcnNz?sa=X&ved=0CAIQ4aUDahcKEwj43vyLxbrrAhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQBA" rel="nofollow">Google Podcasts</a></li>
<li><a href="https://open.spotify.com/show/5DZlm3bNyPQd1QknUxCWTz?si=yHWOt3LORfeGgp7i31ey8g" rel="nofollow">Spotify</a></li>
<li><a href="https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/science-for-sport-podcast" rel="nofollow">Stitcher</a></li>
</ul>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>This week on the Science for Sport podcast, host Richard Graves is joined by Scott Armistead, Athletic Trainer at Seattle Sounders FC, to explore the realities of working at the highest level of football in the US.</p>

<p>Born and raised in New Zealand, Scott’s journey has taken him across continents — from youth football in Auckland to the intensity of Major League Soccer. In this candid conversation, Scott reflects on his early struggles in pro sport, navigating four head coaches in 12 months, and playing a key role in transforming FC Cincinnati from bottom of the table to Supporters’ Shield winners.</p>

<p>You’ll hear Scott’s insights into:</p>

<p>Building trust with players through communication, not just data</p>

<p>Balancing holistic care with performance metrics</p>

<p>Avoiding &quot;paralysis by analysis&quot; in a tech-heavy environment</p>

<p>The power of multidisciplinary collaboration</p>

<p>Why being a generalist can be just as important as being a specialist</p>

<p>Whether you&#39;re a practitioner looking for real-world advice or a sports fan curious about what really happens behind the scenes, this episode delivers practical takeaways and thoughtful reflections.</p>

<p><strong>About Scott Armistead</strong><br>
Scott Armistead, MS, LAT, ATC, is an accomplished Athletic Trainer currently serving with Seattle Sounders FC in Major League Soccer. Originating from New Zealand, Scott&#39;s career has spanned various roles, including positions with FC Cincinnati, FC Tucson, and the Barça Residency Academy. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Athletic Training from McKendree University and a Master’s degree in Sports Performance from Arizona State University. Scott is renowned for his holistic, athlete-centered approach, seamlessly integrating sports science, rehabilitation, and performance optimisation. His commitment to evidence-based practice and multidisciplinary collaboration has made him a respected figure in elite football circles<br>
<a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/scottarmistead/" rel="nofollow">https://www.linkedin.com/in/scottarmistead/</a></p>

<p><strong>FREE 7d SCIENCE FOR SPORT ACADEMY TRIAL</strong></p>

<p><strong>SIGN UP NOW:</strong> <a href="https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241" rel="nofollow">https://bit.ly/SFSepisode241</a></p>

<p>​ Learn Quicker &amp; More Effectively<br>
​ Optimise Your Athletes&#39; Recovery<br>
​ Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In<br>
​ Reduce Your Athletes&#39; Injury Ratese<br>
​ Save 100&#39;s Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More<br>
​ Improve Your Athletes&#39; Performance<br>
​ Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes<br>
​ Save Yourself The Stress &amp; Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research</p>

<h3>🔔 Subscribe to the podcast on your favourite platform</h3>

<ul>
<li><a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/science-for-sport-podcast/id1506431005" rel="nofollow">Apple Podcasts</a></li>
<li><a href="https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5maXJlc2lkZS5mbS9zY2llbmNlZm9yc3BvcnQvcnNz?sa=X&ved=0CAIQ4aUDahcKEwj43vyLxbrrAhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQBA" rel="nofollow">Google Podcasts</a></li>
<li><a href="https://open.spotify.com/show/5DZlm3bNyPQd1QknUxCWTz?si=yHWOt3LORfeGgp7i31ey8g" rel="nofollow">Spotify</a></li>
<li><a href="https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/science-for-sport-podcast" rel="nofollow">Stitcher</a></li>
</ul>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
  </channel>
</rss>
