Why Measuring Matters - Loden Sports
Why Measuring Matters

Date

Updated: May 18, 2023 This month, Loden Sports takes a look at why measuring matters - a key pillar to the upcoming Loden Sports LTAD. Best practices and recommendations for measuring (depending on where the athlete is in their development) are discussed in detail.

This blog entry is an excerpt from the upcoming Loden Sports LTAD. The Loden Sports LTAD will be an inclusive, holistic, and philosophical reference guide for developing athletes of all sports and levels of aspiration.

Why Measuring Matters

Developing athletes should be measured in order to benchmark progress and for the aspiring and competitive athlete, to help keep them healthy. It’s the same reason why the doctor logs height and weight along with other measurables at yearly check-ups: so that there is history to reference.

It is important to strike a balance between measuring too much and measuring too little. This will come down to the needs of the athlete depending on where they are in their development (recommendations to follow).

Recommendations for Athletes of Different Ages

The Loden Sports Performance Lab App is by far the easiest way for young, aspiring, and competitive athletes to track their performance on their own.

Young Athlete (Age 5-13) – A developing athlete whose physical activity should involve the sampling of a wide-variety of sports and activities; a healthy amount of unstructured play and exploration; and a focus on enjoyment in participation in sports and physical activities.

Young athletes should consider measuring for performance or physical traits at the same rate that the doctor does, once a year. In unique cases, such as where a young athlete has suffered an unfortunate injury, more frequent measuring can be performed as the young athlete rehabs. While measuring should be infrequent for this age group, it is still important. Note: for most young athletes, best practice for measuring #3 goes out the window.

Aspiring Athlete (Age 14+) – A developing athlete whose physical activity is geared towards attaining a certain outcome in sports or in their chosen activity. An aspiring athlete should find enjoyment in their sport and should choose to pursue their desired outcome of their own volition. An aspiring athlete should continue to participate in unstructured play, but should have a healthy amount of deliberate, structured training and practice in unity with their goals.

Aspiring athletes should measure with regularity over the course of the year. Frequency can vary from monthly if resources allow to 3-4 times per year when appropriately spaced. An aspiring athlete is a growing athlete and as such, it is important that they are taking advantage of an important development window before they reach physical maturation. Measuring can help make sure that an aspiring athlete is doing the right training or, doing their training right (correctly). In addition to measuring progress, data from regular measuring can help keep the athlete healthy and guide the creation of good habits.

Competitive Athlete (Age 17+) – A developing athlete whose physical activity is geared towards a high-level of competition in their sport or activity. A competitive athlete should find enjoyment in their sport and should choose to continue participation in the sport of their own volition. A competitive athlete should have a healthy amount of deliberate, structured training and practice in unity with their goals. Competitive athletes should measure with regularity and deliberately over the course of the year. Frequency can vary from monthly to multiple times per week if resources allow. There are a number of measuring tools that can help inform an athlete that is trying to sustain performance in-season and improve in the off-season. With the technology available today, there is no reason why competitive athletes shouldn’t be regularly measuring and tracking their training goals and using measuring to stay healthy. Measuring can allow for adjustments to routines (sleep, nutrition, recovery, in-season lifting, etc.) and can be a key piece to keeping the competitive athlete healthy – because if the athlete can’t stay healthy, the athlete can’t compete.

Best Practices for Measuring

Use tools you trust and use them consistently - like the Loden Sports Performance Lab App... available now on the iOS App Store starting at just $5 / month!!
  1. Use reliable measuring tools. Make sure you can trust whatever you are using to measure, whether that be a weight-scale, a measuring tape, or timing gates.
  2. Consistently use the same tools. There is unavoidable variance between tools that measure the same thing. It is important that when benchmarking progress, the same tools are used from evaluation to evaluation. Example: don’t compare a laser-timed 10-yard sprint to a hand-timed 10-yard sprint.
  3. Consistently repeat the same process. There is variance in instruction from a coach and there is variance in how a developing athlete performs a test. If it is within the control of the developing athlete, they should try to repeat the same process each time they measure. Example: don’t compare a laser-timed 10-yard sprint with a standardized start (front foot location) to a laser-timed 10-yard sprint with a non-standardized or alternate standardized start. A difference in as few as 4-5 inches in front foot placement at the start of a 10-yard sprint can make a .10-.20 second difference in run times.
  4. Try to be as consistent as possible on time of day for measuring performance. Time of day matters. Each developing athlete has a circadian rhythm (the body’s biological clock).
  5. Peak performance for a developing athlete that gets regular sleep will be between 3pm and 6pm in the afternoon. Expect peak performance measurements closer to this window and less so the further outside that window you get.
  6. Use measured information to guide developmental goals. This is the best way to answer the questions: Am I wasting my time? Is this working? Is there more I could be doing? Is there something different I could be doing that is more effective? If you don’t measure, you can’t ask or answer these questions. If the goal is to jump higher, measure before training starts and after the block of training finishes. Follow the first four, best practices for measuring and use measuring to help you get better.
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A Universal Tool Available to Anyone, Anytime, Anywhere.

The Loden Sports Performance Lab App allows you to check all of the boxes from Best Practices for Measuring above from the comfort of your own home and without breaking the bank.
  • Easy-to-use: no markers, just video.
  • Affordable: starting at just $5 / month.
  • Accessible: available now in the iOS App Store – jump anytime, anywhere.
  • Track Progress + Readiness
  • Know immediately where you stack up.
  • Manage whole teams and organizations.  
  • There isn’t an easier solution in the marketplace and the data is ACCURATE + RELIABLE.
Available now on the iOS App Store.

As coaches, parents, or athletes, it is important to gain access to objective feedback. Objective feedback attained through measuring can confirm the effectiveness of training programs; provide accountability; identify trends; raise flags for the health of the athlete; and provide baseline data to guide rehabilitation from injury. Every developing athlete is different – they sleep different, practice different, train different, have different genetics, and are reaching physical maturity at different rates. Measuring is the gateway to optimizing what is best for each individual athlete. Measuring is one of the greatest tools for improvement – use it responsibly and effectively.

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