In this discussion, Sam Elsner, a former NCAA champion thrower and motor learning educator, shares insights on athletic performance and movement learning. He emphasizes the importance of play and ecological dynamics over rigid drills, explaining how adaptability and creativity in training yield better results. Sam critiques traditional strength training approaches, highlights the value of a 'slow-cook' method, and discusses how training culture and environment shape athlete development. He advocates for integrating games into practice to boost confidence and skill.
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question_answer ANECDOTE
Early Throwing Journey And Key Setback
Sam grew from a multi-sport youth to a collegiate thrower, using trial-and-error and family coaching early on.
He fouled out at state despite throwing far in practice, a formative setback that shaped his thinking about coaching.
question_answer ANECDOTE
College Moves, Cal Dietz, And Championship Wins
Sam transferred to Minnesota, worked with Cal Dietz, and later returned to UW Stout to win two Division III national titles.
His time with Cal sparked his interest in strength and conditioning and high-volume lifting culture.
insights INSIGHT
Creativity Beats Blind Repetition
Sam realized that rote drill repetition at the collegiate level can limit creativity and performance ceiling.
He concluded that autonomy and varied movement solutions matter more than endless perfect-drill repetition.
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Today’s guest is Sam Elsner. Sam is a former NCAA Division III national champion thrower turned motor learning writer and educator. He’s the author of The Play Advantage and creator of the Substack CALIBRATE, where he explores how humans learn movement through play, perception, and environment design. Sam brings a rare blend of elite athletic experience and deep skill-acquisition insight to help coaches and athletes move beyond drills toward true adaptability and creativity in sport.
As athletic performance is largely driven by weight-lifting. It digs into maximal strength and force-related outcomes in such excess that all other elements of athleticism are negated. Skill learning and high velocity movement are the wellspring of sporting success. As such, having a balanced understanding of the training equation is critical for the long-term interest of the athlete.
On today’s podcast, Sam and I dive into how athletes truly learn to move. Sam traces his journey from WIAC throws circles to Cal Dietz’s weight room, why a rigid “triphasic for everyone” phase backfired with a soccer team, and how ecological dynamics and a constraints-led lens reshaped his coaching. Together we unpack the strength–skill interplay, 1×20 “slow-cook” gains versus block periodization, the value of autonomous, creative training application. We touch on youth development, culture, and team ecology, plus where pros are experimenting with these ideas. This episode is loaded with both philosophy of training and skill learning, along with practical takeaways in program design.
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Timestamps
1:18 - Early training experiences and triphasic background
5:44 - Implementing triphasic as a young coach
11:22 - The failure of rigid block periodization
17:49 - Vertical integration and maintaining all qualities
24:58 - Discovery of the ecological dynamics lens
29:57 - Why skill learning changed his view of strength
35:43 - 1x20 as a slow cooking strength framework
43:15 - Autonomy and stance/position freedom in the weight room
52:38 - Culture, environment, and how athletes learn
1:00:43 - Highlight play examples and perception-action
1:14:23 - Constraint-led models in team sport settings
1:20:55 - Where to find Sam’s work
Actionable Takeaways
5:44 - Learning from early programming mistakes
Rigid triphasic blocks without speed and skill work led to slower, less adaptable athletes.
Keep speed, power, and reactive work present year-round in some capacity.
Avoid assuming what works for one context transfers straight across to another.
17:49 - Vertical integration instead of siloed periodization
Train multiple physical qualities year-round with shifting emphasis rather than isolating one block at a time.
This prevents athletes from losing speed while developing strength, or vice versa.
Small doses across the year keep qualities alive and connected.
24:58 - Skill learning must reflect the chaos of sport
Sport is unpredictable, not robotic. Training should reflect that uncertainty.
Use varied environments, movement options, and constraints instead of perfect reps.
Skill emerges from exploration, not memorization.
35:43 - 1x20 for strength that supports skill
1x20 builds strength while leaving room for sprinting, jumping, and skill work.
The last few reps in a 1x20 set still hit high effort without excessive nervous system cost.
Use stance and tempo variations to match individual structure.
43:15 - Autonomy inside the weight room
Allow athletes to choose stance width, bar position,