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OAK PERFORMANCE RADIOAuthor: Adam Lane
We have a passion for optimizing performance and minimizing injury. Language: en Genres: Fitness, Health & Fitness Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it |
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Episode 166: Why Better Movement Beats Sport-Specific Training in Volleyball.
Episode 166
Sunday, 21 December, 2025
Most athletes aren’t undertrained — they’re under-recovered.And for volleyball players especially, doing more isn’t always doing better.Welcome to Oak Performance Radio — a space for athletes, coaches, and parents who want stronger, healthier performers built for longevity. We get into real experiences, honest lessons, and smarter approaches to training, recovery, and performance that actually hold up over time.Episode HighlightsIn this episode, Adam sits down with Missy Mitchell McBeth, Director of Sports Performance at a volleyball club in Texas, to talk about what truly matters in developing volleyball athletes. Missy breaks down why basic movement patterns outperform flashy, sport-specific drills, how overtraining shows up more often than people realize, and why rest, nutrition, and individualized programming are often overlooked. This conversation brings clarity to what sustainable, effective training should actually look like.Episode OutlineMissy’s path from volleyball player and coach to strength and conditioning specialist.How mentorship and real-world experience shaped her coaching philosophy.Why squatting, hinging, and single-leg strength matter more than band-based drills.Common misconceptions in volleyball strength and conditioning.The long-term cost of poor movement quality and rushed progressions.Managing training load, recovery, and injury prevention.The importance of sleep, nutrition, and intentional time off.How parents and coaches can better advocate for athlete health.Why individualized training beats one-size-fits-all programming.Using technology like force plates to support — not replace — good coaching.Missy’s book and her work supporting volleyball athletes beyond the gym.Action TakenRe-evaluate whether current training supports long-term health or short-term output.Prioritize foundational movement quality before advanced exercises.Build in real recovery time throughout the training year.Advocate for better communication between club coaches, strength coaches, and parents.Assess athletes individually instead of relying on generic programsConclusionThis episode is a reminder that strong athletes aren’t built through shortcuts or constant intensity. They’re built through consistency, fundamentals, and respect for the body. Missy’s perspective reinforces that when training is done well, it supports performance instead of stealing from it.CTAIf this conversation challenged the way training is currently approached, share the episode with a coach, parent, or athlete who needs to hear it — and follow Oak Performance Radio for more conversations like this.Supporting InformationFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/oakperformancelabInstagram: @oakperformanceConnect with Missy:https://missymitchellmcbeth.com/https://www.instagram.com/missymmcbeth/https://www.facebook.com/people/Missy-Mitchell-McBeth/61558787987743/Thank you for tuning in and being part of the Oak Performance Radio community. These conversations matter because the athletes matter — and we appreciate you choosing to be part of that effort.








