Saturday, 23 December 2017

Christmas Holiday Nutrition and Training

Christmas Holiday Nutrition and Training

December 24, 2015

It is that time of year when all the festivities are happening, the beer is flowing, and food is in abundance at every party. Many people who train hard all year stress their heads off at this time of year worrying that they will ruin all their hard work that they have done throughout the year. I now have new ways I go about it and I’ll share them with you today.

I have experienced both sides of the fence when it comes to holiday nutrition and training. And anyone who knows me will tell you I do things to the extreme. When I was younger I would not train at all for our 2 week break from training and I would eat and drink whatever I wanted. If there was a party, I was there. This was good mentally to freshen up but once I got back to training and was dragging arse it wasn’t so good. All that work done before the break felt like a waste. I also went the complete opposite and trained throughout my break, training Christmas day, new-year’s day, if it was programmed in to train, I did. I felt good doing this as I knew no one else was training and I felt like I was catching up or getting ahead of my competition. The problem is that you are a bit isolated from family and friends at a time of year when you should be enjoying their company and you can also burn yourself out for the new-year.

As I got older, trained consistently harder throughout the year, paid more attention to my nutrition throughout the year, and learnt more about health, training, nutrition, supplementation etc. I found a much better balance. The best advice I can give people is to just let it go. When I say this I mean if you are having a party with family and friends and want to have a beer or eat some crappy food then do it. What I do with clients is sit down and plan what days they will eat or drink whatever they want and we use these as their refuel days. Most of the time this is Christmas eve, Christmas day, Boxing day, new-year’s eve, and new-year’s day. The reason I do this is that it help them relax and enjoy the day as it is now “part of the plan”. Some people have a really hard time if it is not on the plan. I used to be like this but have learnt to adjust.

With the nutrition choices they can have whatever they choose. No limitations. For me personally I still try and stay away from gluten and some other inflammatory foods as I feel depressed after eating them and don’t enjoy the following day as much as I should. So to be happy around family and friends I choose the foods that won’t make me angry and depressed. I always start my morning with meat and nuts still, this doesn’t change for me, I have to feel good starting my day. It is just a matter of knowing what works for you. If you can get away with eating anything and feeling good them do it. If you do feel crappy with joint pain, start farting your arse out, or have brain fog then you can’t piss and moan about it as Charles Poliquin says.

You can read this great article from Charles on holiday nutrition to help find what is best for you:
 

With training I would have 5 to 7 days off. In this time just go surfing, play tennis, cricket, basically just be active and then after that get back into your strength work. I don’t like to plan sessions on this break. I rather go by feel and do more right brain type workouts. If you are on holidays and don’t have access to a gym you may just go to a park and so some chin-ups, push-ups, dips, jumps, and sprints. If you do go to the gym mix it up a bit and do exercises and rep schemes you don’t typically do. Keep the duration short, rip in, and get out and have fun.

If you are an athlete then I feel you need to stay a little more structured. This is especially true for rugby league players. The Christmas break is in the middle of pre-season and most clubs have only been back to training for 5-7 weeks. It is important to build as much strength as possible in the off-season because once the competition rolls around it’s just about maintenance, not the building of strength. So if you miss that opportunity to build strength its tough luck. The off season for a rugby league player is September and/or October depending on if you make the finals and where you finish up, this is when

you can follow the above advice. If you feel burnt out because your club has been running you into the ground with excessive conditioning work then I would say drop that to a very low volume or brush it altogether but continue to work in the gym on strength, dropping sets, not intensity.

If you train hard and eat well all year, then 2 weeks off shouldn’t affect you too much. It is what you consistently do. If you eat shit and train with no intensity all year then you are screwed anyway, the Christmas break is just a good excuse for you to use to convince yourself that the break is why you are fat and weak.

Friday, 22 December 2017

THP 2017 Highlights

THP 2017 Highlights

December 21, 2017

Congratulations to everyone for such a successful 2017. Gem and I are very proud of everything that was achieved this year and all of the hard work that went into it. It is a pleasure working with everyone and we love every single day. It is enjoyable and motivating to be able to wake up and help people become the best they can be. Let’s keep up the hard work and make 2018 even better.

Below are some of the results and awards achieved by the THP team this year:
  • Simon Chandra - won gold at the 2017 events BJJ Initiator cup
  • Gilgamesh Blanch - won the UAEJJF Australian National Pro Adult blue belt 69kg division and the won the UAEJJF Sydney International Pro 62kg Adult blue belt division
  • Tamara Garces – Silver medal at Australian National Pro (Jiu-Jitsu)
  • Gilgamesh Blanch – won gold at Sydney Cup (jiu-Jitsu)
  • Igor Almeida – 3rd Place Pan American Championships in California - fighting with a dislocated shoulder that popped out at 5 times throughout the day
  • Aaron Smith - won gold at Sydney International Open (jiu-jitsu)
  • Gilgamesh Blanch – WORLD CHAMPION - winning Gold at the Abu Dhabi World Professional Jiu-Jitsu Championship
  • Simon Chandra – Won Gold at the Sydney Cup BJJ 2017
  • Brendan Waters – Ron Massey Cup Representative Team and named captain. Played Queensland on the Gold Coast and won. 4 from 4 wins for Brendan in these representative games.
  • Jerry Key - Ron Massey Cup Representative Team and named vice captain. Played Queensland on the Gold Coast and won. Jerry was also voted players player in this game.
  • Ben Quinlan, Marcus Moore, Alfio Tropea, Tom Chanter – Under 17’s SWAS Development Squad
  • Marcus Moore and Ben Quinlan – Won school boys rugby league comp with St. Gregorys.
  • Simon Chandra – Won Gold NSW State Championship
  • Samantha Garces – Won Gold NSW State Championship
  • Tamara Garces - Won Gold NSW State Championship
  • Stef Puskar – Won Gold NSW State Championship
  • Richard Avery – Bronze NSW State Championship
  • Sydney Jiu Jitsu Academy  – Won Gold in kids, adults, and masters overall NSW State Championship
  • Gil and Sol Blanch – Gold and Silver Grappling Industries Sydney 155lb gi category
  • Sol Blanch – Gold Grappling Industries Sydney advanced adults 155lb no-gi category
  • Simon Chandra – Won Gold Australian National Jiu Jitsu Championship
  • Gil and Sol Blanch – Gold and Silver at AFBJJ Australian National BJJ Championship adult purple belt 61.5kg division (No-Gi)
  • Sol Blanch – Won Gold in the adult purple open division AFBJJ Australian National BJJ Championship (No-Gi)
  • Samantha Garces - Won Gold AFBJJ Australian National BJJ Championship (No-Gi)
  • Samantha Garces - Won Gold AFBJJ Australian National BJJ Championship (Gi)
  • Tamara Garces - Won Gold AFBJJ Australian National BJJ Championship (Gi)
  • Tamara Garces - Won Gold AFBJJ Australian National BJJ Championship Open Weight
  • Sol Blanch – Bronze in Adult Purple Belt Gi Open weight division at AFBJJ Australian National BJJ Championship
  • Aaron Smith – Bronze AFBJJ Australian National BJJ Championship
  • Brendan Waters – won the Noel Kelly award which is an award for the most outstanding player in the club (Western Suburbs Magpies). This is the second year in a row he has been the best player in the club.
  • Luke Williams – won the Western Suburbs Magpies Best and Fairest award for Ron Massey Cup
  • Tom Morrison – won the Pratten Park Magpies Club Person of the Year (Western Suburbs Magpies) and also most consistent player in the Ron Massey Team award.



  • Bruno Alves – Finished second place at the World Masters event held in Las Vegas (jiu-jitsu). Got beat by a refs decision.
  • Bought our first set of Watson dumbbells and specialty bars.
  • Brendan Waters – named halfback in the Ron Massey Cup Team of the Year
  • Jerry Key - named lock in the Ron Massey Cup Team of the Year
  • Marcus Moore – SWSAS Athlete of the Year Nomination
  • Brendan Waters – finished top 3 in the Ron Massey Cup Player of The Year votes (Won it last year)
  • Marcus Moore – selected in North Sydney Bears S.G Ball train on squad
  • Ben Quinlan – selected in Western Suburbs Magpies S.G Ball train on squad
  • Jarrod Kinchin – selected in Western Suburbs Magpies S.G Ball train on squad
  • Tristyn Ball – selected in Western Suburbs Magpies Harold Mathews train on squad
  • Emmanuel kandi – selected in SWAS under 15’s development squad
  • Sol and Gil Blanch – won adult purple belt 67-70kg gi division, 67kg no gi division, the adult purple belt no gi open weight division, and 3rd in the adult purple belt open weight gi division at Oceanic Championships
  • Tamara Garces – won gold in her Gi division, 2nd in open weight with Gi, Won gold in her no Gi division, and 3rd in the open weight no gi at the IBJJF Pan Pacific Jiu-Jitsu Championship
  • Samantha Garces – won double gold at the IBJJF Pan Pacific Jiu-Jitsu Championship, winningboth her division and open weights with Gi.
  • Sol and Gil Blanch – 2nd and 3rd place at the IBJJF Pan Pacific Jiu-Jitsu Championship
  • Marcus Moore – made the North Sydney Bears S.G Ball team
  • Christian Urso – made the Western Suburbs Magpies S.G Ball team
  • Ben Quinlan – made the Western Suburbs Magpies S.G Ball team
  • Jarrod Kinchin – made the Western Suburbs Magpies S.G Ball team
  • Tristyn Ball – made the Western Suburbs Magpies Harold Matthews team
  • Jack Simpson - 2017 Mt Annan Christian College Sportsman of the year
  • Simon Chandra - awarded the Excellence in Sports Award for Jiu Jitsu at his high school 
  • Tristyn Ball – Year 8 Male Sports Person of the Year Mount Carmel Catholic College
  • Tristyn Ball – Campbelltown City Kangaroos Senior Player with the Most Potential Award
  • Simon Chandra - awarded The Forestville RSL Club Award for Outstanding Prowess in Jiu Jitsu