Episodios

  • How We Individualize Training: The Layers That Drive Results
    Mar 30 2026

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    Episode 100 breaks down how we actually individualize training, and why systems are only the starting point.

    We walk through assessment, volume, periodization, and exercise selection, and how these decisions evolve with real client data over time.

    If you’re a coach looking to move beyond templates and make better programming decisions, this episode will give you clarity.

    0:00 Introduction - Episode 100

    2:15 Systems vs. Individualization

    4:44 Assessment and Initial Evaluation

    9:37 Frequency, Volume, and Split Design

    17:31 Periodization Models

    21:55 Wave Periodization and Block Structure

    44:41 Exercise Selection and Variation

    51:20 Work Capacity Considerations

    59:57 Phase Duration and Loading

    1:10:56 Final Thoughts

    Stay Connected with KILO:

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    Learn more at ⁠trainkilo.com

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    1 h y 14 m
  • Rapid Fire Q&A: Influential Coaches, Program Novelty & Athlete Durability
    Mar 23 2026

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    In this Rapid Fire Q&A episode of Between 2 Racks, the KILO coaches break down key programming and coaching questions submitted by listeners.

    The conversation opens with influential coaches and researchers who shaped their approach, including Charles Poliquin, Tudor Bompa, Mike Stone, Bryan Mann, and Dan Baker, and how these ideas still influence program design today.

    From there, the episode moves into practical coaching decisions, including:

    • How to introduce novelty without losing structure
    • How to assess limiting factors and technical breakdown
    • What to look at when a client plateaus
    • Why Achilles injuries may be increasing in sport
    • How training load spikes impact injury risk
    • Programming for inconsistent gen pop clients
    • When to move from linear to undulating periodization

    Throughout the episode, the focus remains the same: strong coaching is built on principles, observation, and consistent decision-making, not trends.

    If you're a personal trainer or strength coach looking to think more clearly about program design and athlete development, this episode will help sharpen your approach.

    0:00 Intro
    0:21 Influencing coaches and researchers
    17:46 Training clients with 5 to 7+ years experience
    27:10 How to assess limiting factors
    34:00 When an athlete or client plateaus
    38:06 Achilles tears in sports
    44:58 Rate of force development exercises
    45:50 Weight cutting stress management
    47:10 Training inconsistent gen pop clients
    49:36 Linear vs undulating periodization for beginners

    Stay Connected with KILO:

    Have a question? ⁠Submit it for a Rapid Fire episode⁠.

    Learn more at ⁠trainkilo.com

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    57 m
  • Rapid Fire Q&A: Buffers, Youth Athletes & Evolving Beliefs
    Mar 16 2026

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    In this Rapid Fire Q&A episode of Between 2 Racks, the KILO coaches tackle a wide range of programming questions submitted by coaches and listeners.

    First, we want to take a moment to wish Alexandra the best. Alex has been part of KILO since the very beginning, back in 2016 when it first started as a gym in California. As she moves into a new chapter focused on building her own brand, we want to thank her deeply for the years we spent building together and wish her nothing but success.

    If you’ve enjoyed hearing Alex on the podcast over the years, you can continue following her journey on Instagram at @alexandra.bernardin.

    The conversation opens with a deep dive into load buffers and how they can be used to manage fatigue, improve intermuscular coordination, and maintain training quality across a block. The coaches explain the difference between traditional loading and buffer-based approaches.

    From there, the discussion moves into exercise selection, specifically how coaches should approach choosing Squat 2 variations. The team explains why exercise selection is rarely a simple decision and how context, training phase, athlete strength levels, and program progression all influence the choice.

    The episode also explores topics like:

    • When challenge sets and intensifiers can help drive hypertrophy
    • Whether specialty techniques are useful or simply time-efficient tools
    • How coaches should approach squat training with young athletes
    • The growing use of isometrics in youth training
    • Why experienced coaches often move away from trendy methods over time

    Throughout the conversation, the focus remains on coaching decisions, not shortcuts. The goal is to clarify the principles behind programming choices so coaches can better understand why certain tools are used and when they actually make sense.

    This episode is another reminder that strong programming isn’t about chasing methods. It’s about applying principles with consistency and judgment.

    Let’s kick it.

    0:00 Welcome & Introduction
    0:54 Alex's Departure Announcement
    1:45 Rapid Fire Q&A Begins
    1:50 Training Buffers for Absolute Strength
    17:13 Choosing Squat Variations
    22:21 Running Specific Training & Isometric Drills
    34:13 Challenge Sets & Hypertrophy
    39:12 Youth Athletes & Isometric Training
    42:07 Beliefs That Have Changed Over Time
    50:39 Wrap Up & Episode 100 Teaser

    Stay Connected with KILO:

    Have a question? ⁠Submit it for a Rapid Fire episode⁠.

    Learn more at ⁠trainkilo.com

    Follow KILO on ⁠Instagram⁠ and ⁠YouTube⁠.

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    51 m
  • Power in the Weight Room: Why It Belongs in Long-Term Development
    Mar 9 2026

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    In this episode of Between 2 Racks, the KILO Crew breaks down why power training deserves a place in long-term development, even for lifters who are not competitive athletes.

    We clarify what power actually is, what it is not, and how it differs from maximal strength. The conversation explores force-velocity relationships, starting strength, explosive strength, and how velocity-based work can complement traditional strain-focused training.

    We also discuss who benefits from power phases, where they fit inside a structured training year, and when they make sense within different periodization models. From absolute strength blocks to balanced years, we examine how power can be sequenced intelligently rather than randomly inserted.

    Beyond performance, we address overlooked benefits: joint stress reduction, neural refresh, novelty stimulus, and long-term resilience. We explain how power work can serve as both a performance driver and a strategic shift in training emphasis.

    For coaches, this episode reinforces an important principle: training quality should not become one-dimensional. Exposure to velocity, when programmed properly, expands capacity rather than distracting from it.

    Power is not a trend. It is a tool. The key is knowing when and how to use it.

    Stay Connected with KILO:

    Have a question? ⁠Submit it for a Rapid Fire episode⁠.

    Learn more at ⁠trainkilo.com

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    1 h y 4 m
  • Strength After 40: What Changes and What Doesn’t
    Mar 2 2026

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    In this episode of Between 2 Racks, we break down what actually changes in training as you get older and what does not.

    There is a growing conversation around strength training for longevity, especially for those in their forties and beyond. But much of the discussion lacks context. Blanket statements about rep ranges, intensity, or “age appropriate” training miss the bigger picture.

    We explore the real factors that influence performance as you age: recovery capacity, life stress, hormonal changes, mobility limitations, and accumulated training history. More importantly, we clarify the difference between age as a number and age as a reflection of lifestyle.

    We discuss how volume tolerance may shift, why intensity should not disappear, and why mobility and movement quality become non-negotiable. We also address the role of external stressors, chronic load, and the long-term consequences of detraining.

    For coaches, this episode reinforces an important principle: you do not program for age. You program for the person in front of you. The fundamentals of progressive overload, consistency, and movement quality do not expire at 40.

    Train well early. Stay consistent. Adapt intelligently.

    Stay Connected with KILO:

    Have a question? ⁠Submit it for a Rapid Fire episode⁠.

    Learn more at ⁠trainkilo.com

    Follow KILO on ⁠Instagram⁠ and ⁠YouTube⁠.

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    57 m
  • The Squat: Principles, Variations, and Driving Progress
    Feb 23 2026

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    In this episode of Between 2 Racks, we finally give the squat the attention it deserves.

    We break down why the squat remains one of the most versatile and scalable movement patterns in strength training. From high bar vs low bar positioning to stance width and foot angle, this conversation moves beyond dogma and into application. The goal is not to argue preferences, but to understand leverage, anatomy, and context.

    We discuss when to front load, when to back load, and how to choose between goblet, Zercher, safety bar, cambered bar, quad squat, cyclist squat, hack squat, box squat, and wide stance variations. More importantly, we explain why those decisions should reflect the person in front of you, not ideology.

    The episode also explores sticking points in the squat, technical breakdown patterns, and how programming adjustments differ for novice, intermediate, and advanced trainees. Whether you are addressing bottom range weakness, mid-range stalls, or upper back collapse, the solution lies in structured progression, not random variation.

    If you coach strength athletes, general population clients, or yourself, this episode is a deep dive into one of the most fundamental patterns in training.

    The squat is simple. Coaching it well is not.

    0:00 Welcome and Introduction to the Squat Episode

    1:00 Why the Squat is So Important

    3:42 Squat as a Primal Movement Pattern

    7:00 High Bar vs Low Bar Squat Discussion

    12:41 Pauric's Experience with Low Bar Squat

    16:00 Squat Stance and Foot Position

    22:27 Breathing Techniques During Squats

    28:48 Goblet Squat and Front Squat Variations

    31:51 Quad Squat and Cyclist Squat Explained

    39:31 Hack Squat Technique and Common Mistakes

    42:21 Safety Bar and Camber Bar Squats

    50:26 Box Squat vs Squat to Box

    55:33 Wide Stance Squat Applications

    60:10 Optimizing Squat Macrocycle Resource

    65:49 Closing Announcements and Upcoming Events

    Stay Connected with KILO:

    Have a question? ⁠Submit it for a Rapid Fire episode⁠.

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    1 h y 6 m
  • Rapid Fire Q&A: Isometrics, Contrast, Petersens & Programming Decisions
    Feb 16 2026

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    In this Rapid Fire Q&A episode of Between Two Racks, the KILO Crew answers advanced coaching questions around isometrics, contrast training, chin-up progressions, and programming decision-making.

    The conversation covers when and why to use yielding isometrics to exhaustion, how to properly load extended eccentrics and contrast methods, and how grip, variation, and angle selection influence long-term strength development.

    You’ll also hear nuanced discussions on Peterson step-ups, chin-up variations, the 90-degree principle for pressing, and when finishers actually make sense for fat loss clients.

    This episode is built for coaches who want clarity, not trends, and for lifters who care about why something is programmed, not just what’s written on the sheet.

    0:00 Introduction and Rapid Fire Q&A

    0:32 Yielding Isometric to Exhaustion

    7:46 Extended Eccentric Methods

    12:52 Why Vary Chin-Up Grips

    16:55 Advanced Chin Up Variations

    22:40 Peterson Step Up Rep Limits

    31:12 Contrast Training Load Guidelines

    40:00 90° Principle for Bench Press Macrocycles

    45:25 Metabolic Finishers for Fat Loss

    46:56 Closing Remarks

    Stay Connected with KILO:

    Have a question? ⁠Submit it for a Rapid Fire episode⁠.

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    47 m
  • Deloads Done Right: Volume, Intensity & Context
    Feb 9 2026

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    In this episode of Between 2 Racks, the KILO Crew breaks down what a deload actually is, how it differs from active recovery, and why it is so often misunderstood in strength programming.

    We discuss deloads through the lens of volume management, intensity preservation, and long-term program design, including when deloads make sense, when they are unnecessary, and when they are simply covering up poor loading decisions.

    The conversation explores deloads in different periodization models, why general population clients rarely need planned deloads, and how mesocycle loading, exercise selection, and session structure can manage fatigue more effectively than defaulting to time-based deloads.

    This episode provides practical context for coaches looking to understand deloads as a tool, not a rule, and how to make better recovery decisions without disrupting long-term progress.

    0:00 Welcome & What is a Deload?
    2:40 Deload vs Active Recovery
    6:54 How to Structure a Deload Session
    10:23 Common Deload Mistakes
    12:37 Why We Use 3-Week Mesocycles
    22:20 Which Exercises to Deload
    27:50 When Do You Actually Need a Deload?
    33:37 Different Periodization Models
    42:22 Pre-Planned vs Reactive Deloads
    45:44 Key Takeaways
    48:00 Upcoming Courses & Wrap-Up

    Stay Connected with KILO:

    Have a question? ⁠Submit it for a Rapid Fire episode⁠.

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    49 m