Episodios

  • More Fatigue Doesn’t Mean More Progress
    Mar 17 2026

    Many athletes judge the quality of a workout by how tired they feel afterward. If they’re exhausted, breathing hard, and drenched in sweat, it must have been productive. But fatigue and progress are not the same thing. In this episode, Andrew breaks down the important difference between fatigue and adaptation, and why simply chasing exhaustion doesn’t necessarily improve performance.

    Fatigue can come from many sources during training — metabolic stress, muscle damage, energy depletion, and nervous system demand. In some cases, especially with conditioning, fatigue is part of the stimulus. But problems arise when fatigue doesn’t match the quality you’re trying to develop. For example, explosive movements like sprints, jumps, or Olympic lifts require high levels of force and speed. When these exercises are performed in a highly fatigued state, athletes often shift the training stimulus away from power development and toward conditioning.

    Andrew also discusses the importance of training dosage. Progress doesn’t come from doing the most work possible — it comes from applying the right amount of stress to drive adaptation while maintaining movement quality and repeatability. Instead of judging sessions purely by how hard they felt, athletes should focus on whether they trained the intended quality effectively and can recover to perform again. Great training doesn’t just make you tired — it makes you better. Enjoy the episode!

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    13 m
  • High Performance Is Built on Habits
    Mar 3 2026

    Life doesn’t slow down when you’re trying to improve. Schedules get packed, stress rises, sleep drops, and motivation fluctuates. And when that happens, you don’t suddenly become more disciplined — you fall back on your habits. In this episode, Andrew breaks down why performance under stress reveals your default behaviors, not your intentions.

    Goals are important, but they don’t protect you when things get hectic. Habits do. The athletes who continue to improve through busy seasons aren’t relying on motivation — they’ve built simple, repeatable routines that hold up under pressure. Sleep consistency, training with intent, managing stress responses, and maintaining basic movement standards become automatic rather than optional.

    If you want long-term performance, you need habits that survive adversity. This episode will challenge you to examine what your defaults look like when life gets demanding — and how to build routines that support your performance even when conditions aren’t perfect. Enjoy the episode!

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    12 m
  • 2025 Wrap Up: How to Train Smarter in the New Year
    Dec 23 2025

    As the year wraps up, it’s tempting to overhaul everything — training, nutrition, goals, routines. In this short end-of-year episode, Andrew explains why that approach usually backfires. Progress doesn’t come from drastic changes or emotional overload. It comes from small, intentional improvements executed consistently. The athletes who improve year after year aren’t doing more — they’re doing the basics better.

    Andrew breaks down the difference between progressive overload and drastic overload, and why confusing the two leads to soreness, tightness, inconsistency, and stalled progress. He shares three non-negotiables to carry into the new year: moving better before adding more, training with clear intent and gradual progression, and paying attention to recovery signals instead of ignoring them. These principles apply whether you’re lifting, running, or simply trying to stay healthy and resilient.

    This episode is a reset — not a reinvention. If you want the new year to look different from the last, focus less on changing everything and more on executing a few key habits with precision and consistency. Small improvements, repeated over time, are what actually move the needle.

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    12 m
  • Why You Feel Tight — And Why Stretching Isn’t Solving It
    Nov 18 2025

    Athletes chase tightness like it’s a flexibility problem, but the truth is far more interesting — and way more useful. In this episode, Andrew breaks down why chronic “tight” muscles are almost never caused by short tissue, and why stretching only gives temporary relief. Tightness is a signal, not a diagnosis. It shows up when the body doesn’t trust the joint position, doesn’t have enough strength or stability in key ranges, or is getting noisy sensory input that forces the nervous system to lock things down. Instead of fighting the tension, you need to understand what it’s protecting you from.

    Andrew explains the deeper drivers of tightness through the lens of biomechanics, stability, and somatosensory control. Weakness, poor joint mechanics, and compensatory patterns can all create a loop where certain muscles grip to stabilize things they shouldn’t be stabilizing. Add in inaccurate proprioception or poor movement variability, and the nervous system only tightens its guard. When the brain doesn’t feel safe, tension goes up — regardless of how much stretching you do.

    This episode shows you what actually works: restoring joint position, improving local strength and force control, and training the nervous system to better sense and coordinate movement. When you upgrade position, stability, and sensory accuracy, tightness stops being a daily battle and starts becoming a rare signal you actually understand. Whether you’re an athlete tired of feeling tight or a coach looking to clean up movement quality, this will help you solve tightness at the root — not chase symptoms at the surface.

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    20 m
  • Don’t Just Do the Work, Do It Well: The Power of Movement Efficiency
    Nov 4 2025

    In this episode of the HNL Movement Podcast, Andrew dives into an important but often overlooked concept — that there are levels to movement efficiency and exercise technique. Just because you’re sweating or feeling fatigued doesn’t necessarily mean you’re improving performance. Andrew explains why athletes who move efficiently tend to make training look effortless, while those who rely on poor mechanics often mistake exhaustion for progress.

    He breaks down how movement efficiency is a skill that develops through precision, control, and awareness — not just effort. By focusing on how you move rather than how much you do, you can extract far more from every rep, reduce compensations, and build strength and coordination that actually transfer to performance.

    This episode is a reminder to stop chasing the sweat and start chasing quality. True progress happens when you pay attention to the details and refine your movement over time. Tune in to learn how improving your technique and efficiency can take your training and performance to the next level. Enjoy the episode!

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    15 m
  • Balancing Progress, Patience, and Purpose in Training and Life
    Oct 7 2025

    In this short and reflective episode of the HNL Movement Podcast, Andrew shares an honest update on life, balance, and the ongoing pursuit of progress. With exciting projects and new opportunities on the horizon, he discusses the importance of slowing down just enough to focus on quality — both in training and in life. Just as great training isn’t about doing more, but doing things with purpose and consistency, Andrew emphasizes that true growth comes from staying intentional through all of life’s busy seasons.

    He ties this message back to his core philosophy: that strength, conditioning, and health aren’t separate from life — they are life. Training teaches us patience, discipline, and the ability to keep showing up even when things get hectic. As the podcast shifts to a biweekly release for the coming weeks, this episode serves as a reminder to focus on what matters most, trust the process, and keep progressing one step at a time.

    Tune in for a quick dose of perspective and inspiration to help you stay grounded, consistent, and motivated in your training, work, and everyday life. Enjoy the episode!

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    14 m
  • How Mastering Weight Distribution Can Unlock Strength and Performance
    Sep 23 2025

    In this episode of the HNL Movement Podcast, Andrew dives into one of the most overlooked yet powerful aspects of training—weight distribution. How you distribute your weight during exercises determines how forces travel through your body, how strong you feel, and how effectively you can improve. From squats to deadlifts, push-ups, and even agility work, subtle shifts forward, backward, or into the wrong joints can completely change the mechanics of the movement and the stress on your body.

    Andrew breaks down the biomechanics behind weight distribution in a simple and relatable way, sharing how balanced pressure through the midfoot and stable positioning can unlock more strength, protect your joints, and enhance long-term progress. He uses real-world examples and analogies that athletes and coaches can apply immediately to optimize training results.

    If you want to move better, get stronger, and reduce injury risk, this episode will help you understand why details like weight distribution matter more than you think. Tune in and learn how small adjustments in your foundation can make a big difference in performance. Enjoy the episode!

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    19 m
  • Stick to a Program to Unlock Your Best Results
    Sep 9 2025

    In this episode of the HNL Movement Podcast, Andrew dives into the importance of sticking with a program long enough to truly maximize your results. Too often, athletes and fitness enthusiasts move on from exercises or programs after only a few attempts, thinking they’ve already mastered them or searching for something new. Andrew explains why real progress takes time, repetition, and consistency, and how improvements often don’t reveal themselves until you’ve practiced something over and over again.

    Throughout the episode, Andrew emphasizes finding the right balance between variety and consistency in training. While variety has its place to keep things engaging and challenging, the key to lasting progress comes from repeating and refining the fundamentals. He draws from relatable examples in both training and sport, showing how mastery and breakthroughs happen only when you commit to practicing with focus and intention over time.

    This episode serves as a reminder to trust the process and be patient with your progress. The small refinements you make from one session to the next eventually add up to big results. Tune in to learn why sticking with your program, rather than constantly chasing novelty, is the real path to improving performance. Enjoy the episode!

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    12 m