Dec 11, 2025 Solo Episode

The Role of Programming for the Everyday Athlete

Listen or watch on your favorite platform:

Show Notes & Resources

This episode opens the Programming Series by redefining what programming truly means for the everyday athlete. Anthony explains why most people mistake exercise selection for program design and how this misunderstanding leads to stalled progress despite high effort. The conversation walks through the differences between random workouts, short-term training plans, and long-term program structures that create predictable adaptation. Anthony also introduces the three foundational qualities that athletes must maintain year round and explains why linear models often fail adults with real-life constraints. The episode highlights why the conjugate method fits the needs of busy, high-performing individuals and how it supports training resilience without sacrificing progress. Listeners will learn how to evaluate whether their current approach is actually working and what separates entertainment from real training. This sets the foundation for the deeper method-based discussions coming later in the series.

Key Topics Covered:

The episode explores the distinction between exercising and training, clarifying why effort alone does not guarantee progress without structured overload. Anthony defines the hierarchy of workouts, training plans, and fully developed programs, highlighting why long-term progression requires planned stress and consistent abilities development. He discusses the three non-negotiable qualities every athlete must maintain strength, aerobic conditioning, and muscle mass and explains how conjugate training supports these year round. The discussion also examines why linear periodization only works in tightly controlled environments and how to evaluate the quality of a program using progression, structure, and measurable feedback.

Relevant Science & Articles Mentioned:

Although no specific studies were cited in the episode, the discussion aligns with foundational concepts in exercise science including progressive overload, the General Adaptation Syndrome, concurrent training literature, periodization theory, and aerobic base development. Helpful review articles for listeners include:

Turner, Anthony. The Science and Practice of Periodization: A Brief Review. (Strength and Conditioning Journal)

Blagrove RC, Howatson G, Hayes PR. Effects of Strength Training on the Physiological Determinants of Middle- and Long-Distance Running Performance: A Systematic Review. (Sports Medicine).

Maestroni L, Read P, Bishop C, Turner A. Strength and Power Training in Rehabilitation: Underpinning Principles and Practical Strategies to Return Athletes to High Performance. (Sports Medicine)

Jones AM, Carter H. The effect of endurance training on parameters of aerobic fitness. (Sports Medicine.)

Related Everyday Strength Episodes:

Train With the Seasons: Structuring Your Training Year as an Everyday Athlete

Concurrent Training: How to Build Strength and Conditioning Together

Related Performance Edge Articles

Train with the Seasons: Structuring Your Training Year as an Everyday Athlete

Train Like an Athlete, Even If You’re Not One

Time Stamps

(00:00) Introduction to the Programming Series

(00:26) What programming actually is

(01:33) Why effort alone does not create real progress

(02:01) Purpose of this mini-series

(02:22) Workouts vs training plans vs real programming

(05:57) What true programming is designed to accomplish

(07:03) Why everyday athletes need a program

(08:42) The three non-negotiable qualities every athlete must maintain

(10:52) Introducing the conjugate method

(12:06) Why linear periodization often fails busy adults

(13:21) How to evaluate whether a program is good

(15:57) What programming actually builds over time

(16:36) What’s coming next in Episode 2

JOIN THE PERFORMANCE EDGE NETWORK

Get weekly insights on strength, conditioning, and performance nutrition. The same methods I use with everyday athletes to build muscle, improve endurance, and perform at their best.