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Our athletes lift throughout the season, and they believe in what we do. <br>The Mustang s weightroom consists primarily of individual workout stations and one BFS elite station, but Gouse s plan is to eventually have just elite stations.  We re going to try to replace all our weights with those, and we recently budgeted to buy one each year until we have six total. They are so much safer, and they help protect the floor. We just put a new floor in the weightroom and we want to preserve it. It s awesome. <br>With his coaching success established, Gouse faces the possibility of moving to a bigger school but says he finds it difficult to leave.  I have a daughter who is in the 8th grade and she wants her dad to coach her in high school. In one sense I would like to move on, but I m happy where I m at. I m a hometown guy. his point, Siff compared the stress of squatting with running.  Suppose that one child runs a few hundred meters a day in some sporting or recreational activities. This can easily involve several thousand foot strikes in which the reaction force imposed on the body can easily exceed 4 times bodyweight with every stride. Now let another child do a typical average wight training session with 3-5 sets of squats (say, with 10 reps, 8, 6 and 4 reps), with bodyweight or more for the last set. That bodyweight is divided between the two legs, so that, even taking acceleration into account, the loading per leg is bodyweight or a little more, while the spine is subjected to the full load on the bar. In other words, the legs and spine in controlled squatting are exposed to significantly less force than in running and jumping. Normally, exercises such as squatting will be done no more than twice a week for a total of about 60 repetitions, while the running child will run every day and subject the body to those many thousands of impulsive foot strikes. <br> It does not require much scientific knowledge or computational genius to see that the cumulative loading imposed by simple running activities on the lower extremities and the spine is far greater than the cumulative load of two or three times a week of weight training. Does this now mean that we are justified in recommending that children not be allowed to run, jump, throw or catch because biomechanical research definitely shows that such activities can produce very large forces on many parts of the growing body? <br>It should be obvious then that there is nothing wrong with running and other normal activities of childhood, and therefore no reason to disallow activities of lesser impact, such as carefully structured programs of weight training.<bons football.<br>The next year the Falcons finished with a 7-3 record, winning their last five games, and just missed the playoffs by one-tenth of a point (on a power rating system) in a competitive conference. This tied the school record (over a 41-year period) of wins during the regular season and consecutive wins. The Falcons led the team district in rushing, and four players earned First Team All District, the most in school history.<br>Especially noteworthy was Andre Boone, a sophomore who rushed for 1,398 yards, a 6.2 average, and scored 15 touchdowns. All