Rapid Fire

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Oct 24, 2025 • 50min

THE FAST LANE w/ Chris Korfist, Chris Kerr & Dan Fichter: Templates, Timing & The Art of Acceleration

Episode 2, Part 2 of The Fast Lane dives deep into the evolution of training templates & how great coaches move from simple early-career programs to refined, adaptive systems built around speed, neural readiness and longevity. Hosts Chris Kerr, Chris Korfist, and Dan Fichter break down the principles that guide year-round planning, from in-season football to spring and winter track. What begins as a conversation on weekly templates unfolds into a masterclass on movement, coordination, and coaching evolution. Key Topics From the Early Days to Smarter Templates Korfist, Fichter, and Kerr reflect on their first training systems — bodybuilding splits, Husker Power, and overspeed bungee cords that left battle scars. Why early mistakes shaped their understanding of what actually works in performance training. Year-Round Planning that Works How to structure the training calendar for football in the fall, indoor track in the winter, and outdoor track in the spring. Why acceleration is the foundation — and how the best programs blend it with targeted recovery and neural stimulation. How to maintain strength and movement quality all season without burning athletes out. Strength, Isometrics & Neural Recovery How extreme yielding isometrics build resilient athletes in- and off-season. Fichter’s six-station “neural recovery” circuit: dorsiflexion glides, infinity walks, barefoot acceleration, balance perturbations, rebound pushups, and splayed walks. The art of keeping athletes neurologically sharp while preserving their nervous-system health. Acceleration vs. Max Velocity Why acceleration is the deciding factor in sport performance — and why max-velocity work should be micro-dosed. The biomechanics of lean: getting your “heart over your hips” and your mass in front of your engine. Drills that connect the weight room to the field through forward lean, coordination, and posture under load. Profiling, Force-Velocity & Data Feedback How Korfist uses 1080 Motion data to evaluate horizontal force, Newtons/kg, and RF Max. How Fichter applies timing gates and change-of-direction tests to measure acceleration quality. Using data as a feedback loop — and knowing when to rely on your coaching eye over the metrics. 
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Oct 10, 2025 • 19min

THE FAST LANE w/ Chris Korfist, Chris Kerr & Dan Fichter: Episode 2, Part 1 - Audience Q&A

In this episode of The Fast Lane, Chris, Chris & Dan take some audience questions and break down some of the following topics: Training from yearly to daily perspectives to maximize effectiveness. Ankle mobility diagnosis and intervention. Total Motion Release (TMR) as a valuable warmup and injury-prevention tool. Emphasizing neuromuscular techniques and proper warmup strategies. Isometric training as useful for teaching muscles to relax, recover and build resilience. The lost art of jumping rope. This is part 1 of Episode 2 of the show, so make sure you stay tuned for part 2 coming soon, where the guys will dive deep into speed development, programming and more! 
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Sep 8, 2025 • 24min

THE FASTLANE w/ Chris Korfist, Chris Kerr & Dan Fichter: The Foundation (Part II)

SUMMARY In this second installment of THE FAST LANE, Chris, Chris, and Dan continue to dive into the evolution of coaching and the essential role of mentorship. The discussion highlights the importance of face-to-face learning, the historical foundations of periodization in strength training, and the ways in which coaches must balance modern techniques with timeless principles. They also explore how belief and personal connection drive athlete development, urging young coaches to seek guidance from experienced mentors and cut through the noise of surface-level social media impressions. As always make sure you stream this on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and right in the video above! TAKEAWAYS Face-to-face learning creates deeper, more meaningful understanding. Mentorship from experienced professionals is invaluable for young coaches. Social media often promotes superficial evaluations of coaching ability. Great coaching is about instilling belief and confidence in athletes. Knowledge of the history behind training methods is critical. Periodization was originally designed to build Olympic champions. Modern coaching thrives at the intersection of data and human interaction. Coaches must cut through distractions and focus on meaningful learning. Real-time athlete engagement enhances both teaching and performance. Open-mindedness leads to growth and effective coaching. TIMESTAMPS 00:00 – The Importance of Diverse Knowledge 02:45 – Mentorship and Face-to-Face Learnin 06:32 – The History and Purpose of Periodization 11:15 – Coaching Beyond Social Media Impressions 15:04 – Instilling Belief in Athletes 19:27 – Blending Data with Human Interaction 23:58 – Eliminating Noise and Focusing on Growth 27:49 – Staying Open-Minded as a Coach As always make sure you stream this on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and right in the video above! 
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Sep 5, 2025 • 30min

THE FASTLANE w/ Chris Korfist, Chris Kerr & Dan Fichter: The Foundation (Part I)

In this episode of THE FAST LANE, Chris Kerr sits down with coaches Chris Korfist and Dan Fichter to break down the foundations of coaching in speed, strength and athlete development. They share their personal motivations, discuss how to positively influence younger athletes and dive into the techniques and principles that have shaped their philosophies. The conversation also explores their interactions with legendary coach Louis Simmons, the role of equipment and the importance of adaptability in training. At its core, this episode highlights coaching as a dynamic art form built on continuous learning and mentorship. This is only PART 1 of their conversation, so stay tuned for the second half-hour packed with more gems.This episode also marks the launch of THE FAST LANE, a new monthly correspondence series as part of Rapid Fire. Each month, we’ll check in with this trio and dive deep on all aspects of athletic development.Make sure to keep up with the guys on Twitter (X) at:@Korfist@WGF1@CoachChrisKerr
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Aug 15, 2025 • 40min

Episode 18: How Amanda Berg Used Systems & Curriculums to Build a S&C Program from the Ground Up

From building a strength & conditioning program from scratch to leading national initiatives for high school strength coaches, Amanda Berg has made a major impact in the field. In this episode, we dive deep into the systems, culture and curriculum she’s developed over nearly two decades, and how she’s helping coaches nationwide do the same (make sure to stick around for the 25% off code to her course!). Coach Berg shares her journey from college softball and military service to becoming a driving force in high school strength & conditioning. She breaks down her movement-first philosophy, athlete and non-athlete integration, auto-regulation systems and the progression models that have transformed her program. Plus, we explore her leadership role with the NHSSCA and the push for qualified strength coaches in every high school. Whether you’re in the private sector, at the high school level or coaching teams, you’ll take away actionable ideas to improve your training environment immediately.  What You’ll Learn in This Episode: How Coach Berg grew a “weight room supervisor” role into a full-scale high school S&C program at Dassel-Cokato HS Her drop-down menu progression system for squat, hinge and press movements using TeamBuildr Balancing athletes and non-athletes in the same class without sacrificing quality Why she uses a “stoplight” auto-regulation system for game-day readiness The NHSSCA’s mission to get qualified strength coaches in front of every high school athlete Why “cardio is not conditioning” and the real keys to sport-specific readiness How military lessons shaped her views on over-conditioning and athlete care Practical fundraising and space-expansion tips for high school weight rooms  Key Quotes: “Weightlifting will literally save your life. If you learn it at 15, you can come back to it at 33, 43, or any age.”  “Cardio is not conditioning. Conditioning is preparing athletes to perform at their highest level when it matters most.” “Some of the best movers in class aren’t just athletes—they’re role models that accelerate learning for everyone.” “The stoplight system puts decision-making in the hands of the athlete. It teaches them to adjust training based on readiness.”  Resources & Links: Amanda on Instagram: @chargertough NHSSCA: https://nhssca.us TeamBuildr Course: Building a Strength Training Curriculum CourseUse code PEstrength for a free 30-day TeamBuildr trial + 25% off the course  Connect with Us: Subscribe to Rapid Fire on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite player If you enjoyed the episode, leave us a ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ review—it helps us grow! Host: Justin Ochoa on Instagram Follow SimpliFaster on Instagram, X and LinkedIn 
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Jul 18, 2025 • 29min

Episode 17: Cody Hughes Talks Performance Training From Youth to Pro

Episode Summary: Cody Hughes joins Justin on Rapid Fire to talk about his next chapter—building one of the most innovative performance facilities in the country from the ground up. From training 10-year-olds to 10-year NFL vets, Cody breaks down how foundational principles never change, regardless of level. We dive into youth development, parent education, tech integration and training philosophy.  Key Takeaways: Youth Training Principles: Coordination over output. Layer in motor control, skipping, games and fundamental movement patterns. Common Mistakes: Overloading young athletes too early. Lack of recovery. Too much organized sport, not enough play. Tech at Farm & Forge: Vitruve VBT, Keiser, 1080 Sprint, Hawkin Dynamics, Z-Tread, FiyrPod GPS & Rock Daisy AMS. Private Sector Potential: Opportunity to build deeper athlete relationships over time, track long-term development and prioritize longevity in pros.  Notable Quotes: “The way we train some of our 10-year-olds and a 10-year NFL vet looks very similar.” “Specificity is about knowing when to apply stimulus, not doing something that just looks sport-specific.” “You don’t see results if you don’t recover—training adaptation doesn’t happen in the session, it happens after.” “Parents want advanced too early. But if your training age is low, you shouldn’t skip the foundational work.” “Your facility might be five-star, but if the steak is bad, nobody’s coming back. The product matters.”  Timestamps:  00:00 – Intro & Pacers fandom  01:30 – Cody’s move to Nashville and Farm & Forge Club  03:20 – Non-negotiables in youth development  06:00 – Common training mistakes for kids  09:00 – Navigating tough conversations with parents  11:00 – The myth of advanced training for youth  13:00 – Full tech breakdown at the new facility  18:30 – Assessment process & AMS integration  22:00 – Training youth vs. pros: principles & adjustments  27:00 – Why training a 10-year-old is more like training an NFL vet than you'd think  29:00 – Where to find Cody & facility updates  Connect with Cody Hughes: Instagram / Twitter: @CLH_strength Website: clhstrength.com Facility: @thefarmandforgeclub 
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Jun 13, 2025 • 32min

Episode 16: Holistic Coaching & Athlete Development with George Greene

In this episode of Rapid Fire, Host Justin Ochoa connects with George Greene — Director of High Performance at UMass Football — for a deep dive into holistic athlete management at the college level. George shares how he’s building trust with a brand-new roster, how data helps shape practice and training, and why being a good human is performance coaching. You’ll hear about:Managing staff, sport coaches, and athletes through one connected vision.Using force plates, NordBord, and Catapult data to drive decisions.Creating buy-in with college athletes.Supporting young coaches and interns with confidence and opportunity.Turning the dining hall into a secret weapon for performance.A powerful episode for any coach looking to lead people, not just programs.Key QuotesOn player buy-in: “If they don’t believe in you, they’ll never believe in the program.”On sports science tools: “The data is only as good as what you’re willing to act on.”On managing teams: “We’re not strength staff vs. sport coach — we’re one team, chasing one goal.”On young coaches: “Give them the floor. Give them reps. Then step back and watch them grow.”On culture change: “You don’t flip a culture overnight — you cook it slow and stay consistent.”Time-Stamps00:00–03:00 — Intro and George’s background03:00–06:30 — Managing staff and building alignment between departments06:30–11:00 — Using Hawkin Dynamics, NordBord, and Catapult for better decisions11:00–17:30 — Creating buy-in with new athletes and building trust first17:30–23:30 — George’s holistic performance model: sleep, food, training, recovery23:30–28:00 — Teaching young coaches how to lead with confidence and context28:00–32:00 — Training culture at UMass and building long-term adaptations32:00–35:00 — UMass Dining: an underappreciated performance edge35:00–End — Final thoughts, leadership advice, and where to connect with GeorgeConnect with George GreeneInstagram/Twitter: @greenestrength Email: ggreen@umass.edu
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May 23, 2025 • 36min

Episode 15: Kyle Brown on Universal Speed Rating, Speed Labs and Entrepreneurship

Episode SummaryIn this episode of Rapid Fire, Justin Ochoa sits down with Kyle Brown — former Team USA Skeleton athlete, Owner of Kyle Brown Performance and Northeast Speed Lab Director for Universal Speed Rating (USR). Kyle dives into:His transition from sprinting on ice to sprinting development as a coach.The power of data with USR — and how it's changing the game for athletes of all ages.Lessons learned from Mike Boyle, Les Spellman and Stu McMillan.His strategies for scaling a business with his name on it.And why early sport specialization might be one of the biggest threats to athletic development.They wrap up with the first-ever lightning round of rapid-fire questions covering favorite lifts, pizza toppings, speed training mistakes, pet peeves and more.Key QuotesOn USR’s value: “Data is great. But what you do with the data — that’s where USR really separates itself.”On scaling a personal brand: “My goal is for every client to feel like I was there… even if I wasn’t coaching them that day.”On lifting year-round: “If you’re not going to play another sport, weightlifting should be your other sport.”On specialization: “Specialization is killing athletic potential. It’s okay to suck at something — go get better.”On business systems: “Hire people who believe in your philosophy. Then build systems that let you step back and still deliver results.”Time-Stamps00:00–03:00 — Kyle’s intro and background in skeleton racing03:00–06:00 — Competing on the World Cup circuit + training with Mike Boyle06:00–12:00 — What is Universal Speed Rating (USR) and how Speed Labs work12:00–16:30 — Mentorship from Boyle, Spellman, Stu McMillan & carrying that into business16:30–21:30 — How to scale a business built on your name + staffing and delegation advice21:30–28:00 — Inside KBP’s athlete onboarding, assessments, and daily programming28:00–34:00 — The dangers of early specialization + why lifting should be the "other sport"34:00–36:30 — Encouraging kids to try new sports and lean into challenge36:30–40:00 — 🔥 First-ever Rapid Fire Lightning Round40:00–End — Where to find Kyle and how to get involved with USRConnect with Kyle BrownInstagram (Personal): @kylebrown_baaInstagram (Business): @kbptrainingWebsite: kbptraining.comUniversal Speed Rating: universalspeedrating.com
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May 2, 2025 • 41min

Episode 14: Rodrigo Alvira Discusses Training Smarter in the NBA and G-League

Episode SummaryIn this episode of Rapid Fire, Justin welcomes Rodrigo Alvira Isla, Head Strength and Conditioning Coach for the Motor City Cruise, the NBA G-League affiliate of the Detroit Pistons. Rodrigo shares insights into his journey through the S&C industry, from internships to his current position in the Detroit Pistons organization. He shares how he filters useful tech data in high-level environments and gives a deep analysis of countermovement jump (CMJ) force plate testing.The two also discuss the importance of making training enjoyable and sustainable for pro athletes, as well as the evolving use of velocity-based training (VBT) beyond traditional velocity zones.A must-listen for anyone passionate about performance, coaching and building human connections in sport.Time-Stamps00:00-02:20 — Rodrigo's path: From visa struggles to NBA/G-League coaching.02:20-08:20 — How Rodrigo filters valuable tech in a data-saturated environment.08:20-17:00 — Deep dive: How to read force plate CMJ data effectively.17:00-23:30 — Building enjoyable, sustainable training environments for athletes.23:30-35:00 — Rethinking VBT: Moving beyond traditional velocity zones.35:00-42:00 — Life and career advice for young coaches: relationships, patience and persistence.42:00-End — Rodrigo's projects, Spaniard Performance Podcast and final thoughts.Major TakeawaysSelective Tech Usage: Don't overwhelm athletes — use simple, repeatable tests like the CMJ and learn to extract deep insights from a single jump.Real-World Force Plate Applications: Focus on curve smoothness, left-right asymmetries and understanding how propulsion stems from good deceleration.Training Buy-In: Building trust and adapting to athlete needs is more effective than rigid, one-size-fits-all lifting protocols during the season.Updated VBT Thinking:Forget rigid "velocity zones."Focus on intent (moving fast) and use real-time velocities to adjust training loads.Program by effort and velocity loss instead of just reps and percentages.Relationships Drive Careers: Knowledge matters, but your ability to connect, stay humble and be persistent ultimately opens doors.Connect with RodrigoInstagram: @spaniardperformance Podcast: Spaniard Performance PodcastAs always, make sure to share & review this episode!
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Apr 25, 2025 • 28min

Episode 13: Data-Informed Coaching & The Future of Speed Training with Matt Tometz

Podcast SummaryIn this episode of Rapid Fire by SimpliFaster, host Justin Ochoa connects with Matt Tometz to dive into the evolution of his role from strength coach (Formerly: TC Boost, Northwestern) to marketing manager at 1080 Motion. The conversation spans topics like load velocity profiling, the power of being data-informed over data-driven, how to coach speed effectively with limited equipment, and the broader role of sports tech in coaching. Tometz shares both high-level philosophy and practical coaching hacks for improving performance outcomes, regardless of budget.Timestamps00:00 – 01:00 | Introduction & Catching Up Justin introduces Matt Tometz (aka Coach Big Toe). The two reconnect and discuss how their paths originally crossed through 1080 and mutual contacts.01:00 – 03:30 | Transition to 1080 & New Role Matt shares his move from on-floor coaching to leading marketing at 1080. He explains how his coaching experience, content creation skills, and product familiarity made the transition natural.03:30 – 06:15 | Load Velocity Profiling & “Peaking Out” They dive into LVP basics. Matt explains the concept of “peaking out” — ensuring an athlete hits top velocity at each load for valid data. He discusses how that impacts profiling accuracy and programming.06:15 – 09:00 | Troubleshooting Profiling: Load, Distance, and R² Justin asks how to respond if an athlete doesn’t peak. Matt introduces the “triangle” approach: coach's eye, athlete feedback, and the data. He breaks down the importance of maintaining consistent protocols and explains how R² helps validate the profile.09:00 – 10:30 | What’s a Good R²? Matt suggests aiming for R² > 0.97–0.98. Below that range likely indicates a flawed profile or poor execution, in which case it’s best to repeat the session.10:30 – 14:00 | Coaching with Tech vs. Coaching without It Justin asks about Matt’s perspective on sports tech. Matt emphasizes that tech is just hardware — it’s how you use it that matters. He shares how he ran his own experiments with 1080 at TC Boost and how good training doesn’t require fancy tools.14:00 – 16:45 | What Tech Adds: Precision, Not Necessity Matt breaks down how coaches can now “put fingers on” previously invisible performance factors. He explains metrics like RF max, DRF, V max, and V zero. He also contrasts old-school Excel-based workflows with today's instant software outputs.16:45 – 20:30 | Data-Informed vs. Data-Driven Matt explains the difference: - *Data-driven* = letting the data dictate every decision - *Data-informed* = using data alongside coaching judgment He gives a practical example of adjusting RF max thresholds to better fit a team’s needs.20:30 – 24:00 | Best Low-Cost Tools for Speed Training Matt outlines his favorite affordable tools—specifically thick resistance bands (~$60) used in a double-loop configuration. He prefers them to friction-based devices due to smoother resistance and versatility.24:00 – 27:00 | Velocity Decrement Without Expensive Tech He explains how coaches can simulate velocity-based programming using time and distance. Example: if an athlete runs 10 yards in 2 seconds unresisted, aim for 4 seconds to simulate 50% VDEC. He shares how he scaled this with large groups using run rockets and manual timing.27:00 – 29:00 | Where to Find Matt & Final Thoughts Matt plugs his social media (@CoachBigToe), YouTube, podcast, and Patreon, where he posts exclusive articles. Make sure to give Matt a follow!

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