
Just Fly Performance Podcast 486: Cody Hughes on Principles of Athlete Centered Power Development
Cody Hughes, a Nashville strength and performance coach with a decade of collegiate and private work, blends movement-first coaching with smart tech. He discusses force management, eccentric RFD, movement literacy, and using VBT and GPS as feedback and motivation. Short takes cover depth drops vs snapdowns, velocity-driven drills, gamified leaderboards, and when to hide numbers to protect intent.
01:27:41
From Near-Death Power Clean To Hip Replacement
- Cody Hughes described learning to lift as a kid, nearly getting crushed by a power clean and later squatting 500 lbs in college.
- He later required a total hip replacement that shifted his focus to stability, single-leg work, and long-term movement quality.
Earn Coaching Wisdom Through Doing
- Get skin in the game: coach real athletes and accept mistakes as primary learning tools.
- Combine mentorship with hands-on experience to accelerate development and avoid premature certainty.
Gamify To Sustain Training Intent
- Gamify effort to sustain athlete engagement and training intent.
- Use music, competition, and measurable feedback to keep sessions stimulating and results-driven.
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Intro
00:00 • 18min
Coaching Development and Learning from Mistakes
17:51 • 2min
Snapdowns: Why Context Matters
19:23 • 3min
Eccentric RFD and Durability
22:25 • 9min
Assessments and Force-Plate Logic
31:04 • 2min
Depth Jumps, Snapdowns and True Stimulus
32:50 • 4min
Historic Methods Repackaged, Not Reinvented
36:50 • 6min
Movement Literacy, Velocity, and Decision-Rich Drills
42:51 • 7min
VBT Explained: Metric, Feedback, Motivation
49:35 • 2min
Using Velocity Targets to Shape Stimulus
51:54 • 1min
Leaderboards and Competitive Incentives
53:22 • 3min
When to Hide Feedback for Elite Athletes
55:59 • 6min
Where VBT Shines: Youth and Early Training Ages
01:01:35 • 4min
Practical Gamification and Data Systems
01:05:57 • 5min
Goodhart's Law and Incentive Design
01:11:25 • 7min
Balancing Tech and Human Coaching
01:18:27 • 4min
Belief, Placebo, and the Art of Coaching
01:22:21 • 5min
Outro
01:26:53 • 48sec

#94051
The Gold Mine Effect

Rasmus Ankersen
In 'The Gold Mine Effect,' Rasmus Ankersen explores the phenomenon of talent clusters, where specific regions or communities produce a disproportionate number of high achievers.
He argues that success is not solely determined by innate ability but is also influenced by environmental factors, cultural norms, and unique local conditions.
Ankersen investigates various 'gold mines' around the world, from Kenyan runners to Korean golfers, to identify the common elements that foster excellence.
He emphasizes the importance of deliberate practice, focused effort, and a supportive community in nurturing talent.
The book provides practical insights for individuals and organizations seeking to cultivate success, advocating for a shift from a focus on individual genius to the creation of environments that breed exceptional performance.

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• Mentioned in 45 episodes
The talent code
Greatness Isn't Born. It's Grown. Here's How.


Daniel Coyle
In 'The Talent Code,' Daniel Coyle delves into the science behind talent development, highlighting three key elements: Deep Practice, Ignition, and Master Coaching.
Coyle draws on cutting-edge neurology and research from various talent hotbeds around the world to explain how myelin, a neural insulator, is crucial for skill development.
The book provides tools for parents, teachers, coaches, and individuals to maximize their potential and that of others, emphasizing that talent is not born but grown through targeted practice and the right motivation.

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• Mentioned in 54 episodes
Biology of Belief


Bruce Lipton
In this book, Bruce H. Lipton presents a new understanding of how genes and DNA can be influenced by our beliefs and thoughts.
He argues that genes do not control our biology; instead, DNA is controlled by signals from outside the cell, including the energetic messages emanating from our positive and negative thoughts.
This synthesis of cell biology and quantum physics shows that our bodies can be changed as we retrain our thinking.
Lipton emphasizes the role of the subconscious mind in processing information and how our beliefs shape our health, relationships, and overall success.
He also discusses the importance of cooperative living and the potential for transforming our lives by becoming conscious of and reprogramming our limiting beliefs.
Today’s guest is Cody Hughes. Cody is a strength and performance coach at Farm & Forge in Nashville, blending over a decade of collegiate and private-sector experience into a practical, athlete-centered approach. His work bridges foundational movement with modern tools like VBT and GPS tracking, always anchored by the belief that health drives performance.
With the rising influence of technology in training, it can become more difficult to look clearly at the core facets of athletic force production, as well as how to optimally use technology to fill gaps, inform decisions, and even motivate groups.
On today’s episode, Cody traces his shift from heavy-loading bias to a performance lens built on force management, eccentric RFD, and training that actually reflects sport. We unpack depth drops vs. “snapdowns,” why rigid “landing mechanics” miss the mark, and how movement literacy, variability, and velocity drive speed and durability. On the tech side, we get into velocity-based training (VBT) as a feedback and motivation tool, using it to gamify effort and auto-regulate load, and knowing when to remove the numbers to protect recovery and intent.
Leaderboards, incentives, and smart stimulus design all matter, but Cody keeps it clear that data supports the human element that produces real power.
Today’s episode is brought to you by Hammer Strength and LILA Exogen wearable resistance.
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View more podcast episodes at the podcast homepage. (https://www.just-fly-sports.com/podcast-home/)
Timestamps
0:00 – Early lifting story and the hip replacement turning point
5:31 – Coaching development, biases, and error-driven learning
19:29 – The snapdown debate: context, progressions, and purpose
25:44 – What eccentric RFD tells us about athletic durability
30:42 – Strength as expression: assessments and force-plate logic
42:31 – Movement literacy and using competitive, decision-rich drills
49:30 – VBT explained: feedback, governors, and gamification
56:50 – When to hide feedback: elite athletes and psychological load
1:01:35 – Where VBT shines: youth and early training ages
1:25:28 – Wrap up and where to find Cody
Actionable Takeaways
0:00 – Early lifting story and the hip replacement turning point.
Cody’s early heavy-loading bias led to a total hip replacement and changed his training philosophy toward stability and movement quality.
Reassess program priorities after a major injury: shift emphasis from maximal compressive loading to single-leg work, mobility, and stability.
Use your injury story as a guardrail: design training that preserves life-long movement and allows play with family.
Teach athletes the why: heavy strength is useful, but it must be paired with tissue resilience and mobility to avoid long-term breakdown.
5:31 – Coaching development, biases, and error-driven learning.
Cody stresses that coaching wisdom grows from coaching people, making mistakes, and combining mentorship with hands-on experience.
Get "skin in the game": coach real athletes and collect mistakes that refine your practice, not just textbook theory.
Seek mentorship and internships to accelerate learning while still accepting the value of self-discovery.
Avoid premature certainty: test provocative ideas and be ready to change your mind when evidence or outcomes demand it.
19:29 – The snapdown debate: context, progressions, and purpose.
Snapdowns can be either a motor-learning tool for hinge/positioning or a low-value, non-stimulating ritual depending on context.
Use snapdowns as a micro-dose progression: for young athletes, combine unweighting, pelvic control, and velocity to teach hinge and pretension.
Do not use snapdowns as a one-size-fits-all landing mechanic; if the only goal is "landing mechanics," favor exposing tissues to a range of velocities, angles, and vectors instead.
If snapdowns are used with elite athletes, ensure they serve an explicit force- or RFD-related progression, not just a warm-up checkbox.
25:44 – What eccentric RFD tells us about athletic durability.
Eccentric rate of force development strongly correlates with sports performance and longevity; capacity to handle rapid braking is crucial.
Include progressive eccentric exposures (depth drops, drop jumps) to train braking RFD, using force metrics when possible.
Teach athletes both options: hard, stiff contacts for quick reactivity or yielding strategies for impulse extension depending on the task.
Combine eccentric work with decision-making drills so athletes learn to anticipate and pretense contact in sport contexts.
30:42 – Strength as expression: assessments and force-plate logic.
Strength is task-dependent expression; force plates can reveal propulsive power, braking power, and RFD in meaningful ways.
Use force-plate metrics to profile athletes: concentric power, eccentric RFD, and MRSi reveal different capacities than a 1RM.
Prefer task-specific assessments over global 1RMs when the sport requires velocity and elastic qualities.
Interpret strength as what athletes can express in context; design training to improve the expression that matters for their sport.
42:31 – Movement literacy and using competitive, decision-rich drills.
Velocity and decision-making make drills stimulating and transferable; gamified constraints produce higher engagement and better transfer.
Replace rote, low-stimulus drills with short competitive tasks that require decision making and speed under load (medicine-ball throws for distance, target throws).
Use velocity and competitive constraints to drive intent and motor learning rather than static, pre-planned movement only.
Track whether the stimulus actually pushes sport expression; if not, rework the drill into a more game-like challenge.
49:30 – VBT explained: feedback, governors, and gamification.
Velocity is a real-time metric that gives context to load and can be used as feedback, an auto-regulatory governor, or a target for progression.
Use VBT as a governor for youth and novices: set minimum velocity thresholds to preserve technique and avoid grindy lifts.
Turn VBT into gamified progression: allow athletes to increase weight when they exceed a target velocity, creating clear incentives.
Combine velocity rules with technical constraints (range of motion, sequence) so numbers reward quality, not sloppy reps.
56:50 – When to hide feedback: elite athletes and psychological load.
Feedback can over-intensify ultra-competitive athletes; sometimes removing numbers preserves performance and mental stability.
For elite, highly competitive athletes, selectively hide feedback during heavy phases or pre-competition to avoid harmful intensification.
Monitor athlete psychology: if feedback creates anxiety or counterproductive competition, reduce or remove it.
Let tools be optional; coaching art decides when to give feedback and when to protect athlete readiness.
1:01:35 – Where VBT shines: youth and early training ages.
VBT is especially useful for high-school and early-college athletes to build intent, maintain quality, and teach progression.
Apply VBT to 14-18 year olds as a way to teach velocity thresholds and encourage technical integrity.
Use a three-level VBT approach: simple feedback, a governor to enforce minimum velocity, and targets for competition.
Include VBT even with youth to keep training engaging and to prevent excessively heavy, low-quality loads.
1:25:28 – Wrap up and where to find Cody.
Cody recommends practical systems that combine measurement and human coaching, and points listeners to his resources.
When building a program, combine objective metrics with careful observation and athlete buy-in.
Use tools to reduce guesswork, but always interpret them through athlete readiness and context.
Find Cody on Instagram @clh_strength and at clhstrength.com for programs and resource sheets.
Quotes from Cody Hughes
“People have to be able to handle eccentric forces. Eccentric RFD is an extremely important metric for all field and court sport athletes.”
“If you use a snapdown as a micro-dose progression to teach hinge, pelvic control, and velocity, it can be useful for young athletes.”
“Strength is not an attribute, it’s an expression. You evaluate strength based on the task it’s being observed in.”
“Velocity is just another metric that gives context. It’s real-time feedback rather than operating off old percentage information.”
“Get it outside of coach’s judgment and let it be a number on a screen. Now I cheer you on instead of guessing.”
“Use VBT as a governor: set minimum velocity thresholds so athletes don’t grind through sloppy reps.”
“For elite athletes, sometimes you have to take numbers away. The hyper-competitive athlete can get destabilized by constant feedback.”
“Movement efficiency is everything. You challenge it with velocity and with a variety of options where the athlete has to make a decision.”
“Don’t keep chasing a strength stimulus if it’s not helping the expression you want. Do the thing at the velocity you need to transfer.”
“Make training stimulating and measurable. If you can gamify the system, athletes will want to push the bar and engage more.”
About Cody Hughes
Cody Hughes, MS, SCCC, CSCS, PSL1, is a strength and performance coach at Farm & Forge in Nashville, Tennessee. A former collegiate athlete with more than a decade of coaching experience across NCAA Division I and II programs, high schools, and the private sector, Cody brings a practical, athlete-centered approach to performance training. His work focuses on building strong movement foundations,
