Ryan Cabiles Canned / Robert Harris new Director of S&C | Page 9 | Syracusefan.com

Ryan Cabiles Canned / Robert Harris new Director of S&C

Nutrition is not supplements management.
It's eating healthy foods.
I think nutrition is anything you consume. Good or bad or neutral. Good nutrition is the positive aspect.

The taking in and use of food and other nourishing material by the body.”
 
Two months later, Cabiles is still listed on the directory with a bio and everything:

Ryan Cabiles - Director of Strength & Conditioning (basketball) - Men's Basketball Support Staff - Syracuse University Athletics

Just a model organization being run from top to bottom!
IMG_4722.jpeg
 
From 2022:

"Austin Peay State University men's basketball head coach Nate James announced the hiring of Robert Harris as the men's basketball strength and conditioning coach, Thursday.

Harris comes to Clarksville after spending eight years with the University of Kentucky, serving as the Kentucky men's basketball strength and condition coach. In his eight seasons with the program, the Wildcats won four SEC regular-season and tournament titles.

In his first season at Kentucky, he helped the Wildcats maintain peak physical condition as they reeled off an unprecedented 38-straight victories to start the 2014-15 season. He was also responsible for the skills and athletic testing at Kentucky's annual pro day, where scouts and general managers across the NBA attend two days of UK practice for a basis of physical measurements for future professional evaluations.

Prior to Kentucky, Harris served as an assistant strength and conditioning coach for football at the University of Arkansas. Before his stint at Arkansas, Harris worked as an assistant strength and conditioning coach for the NFL's Cincinnati Bengals for three years. With the Bengals, Harris was responsible for assisting in the development of the programs and weight room operations.

Harris is a 2009 graduate of Kentucky State University with a bachelor of arts in physical education. He earned a master's degree at Eastern Kentucky University in sports administration in 2010. He and his wife, Maria, have two daughters: Anaya and Alaya."
 
"Back in late April, it was announced that the men’s Kentucky basketball program and former strength coach Rob Harris had parted ways.

Harris had been with the program for eight seasons and while no reason was ever officially given for his departure, it can be attributed to a combination of recent lower-body injuries, receiving a technical foul for a scuffle at Tennessee back in February, and a public video of him having an outburst at his daughter’s basketball game."
 
Harris had been with the program for eight seasons and while no reason was ever officially given for his departure, it can be attributed ...receiving a technical foul for a scuffle at Tennessee back in February, and a public video of him having an outburst at his daughter’s basketball game."
I mean who among us haven't received a technical foul for a scuffle and had a public video of them having an outburst at their daughter's game? Amirite?
 
Watching the video it did not seem like a lot of strength weight training. It may be because it was during the season. Hopefully more muscle building through the summer until October.
 
Watching the video it did not seem like a lot of strength weight training. It may be because it was during the season. Hopefully more muscle building through the summer until October.
I agree, watching that video wasn’t that interesting… I really wanted to see his off season work. Watching a video where he broke down how he sustains players through the season was ok, but not really what I wanted to know.

My major complaint with the previous S&C program was that our guys never got bigger and stronger, faster or more explosive. Basically we watched decades of S&C failure.

I was pleased to hear that our new guy has many years of experience coaching both football and basketball, including SEC football program Arkansas.


I would be hugely interested in a similar video about William Kyle’s training regimen the last 8 weeks where he had measurable gains in several key areas of athletic movement for a basketball player, and supposedly gained ten pounds of muscle while he was at it.
 
but how much can he bench brah? Seriously though hopefully these new guys are hungry.

I really feel like we had too many black clouds in the locker room last offseason. Bell and Eddie were not close to game shape early on and ready to play. Then with the backcourt there was only so much to be done with a bunch of undersized dudes. JJ played 196 mins in 5 games before his injury in the noncon, that's 39.2 mins per game. Colgate he fouled out and that brought his #'s down but given that close game likely he would've been in all 40 in that game too.

Donnie, Choppa, Petar were freshman and doubtful learned much from the upperclassmen before the season started. Davis was the only one playing physical in November and in shape and it showed.
 
but how much can he bench brah? Seriously though hopefully these new guys are hungry.

I really feel like we had too many black clouds in the locker room last offseason. Bell and Eddie were not close to game shape early on and ready to play. Then with the backcourt there was only so much to be done with a bunch of undersized dudes. JJ played 196 mins in 5 games before his injury in the noncon, that's 39.2 mins per game. Colgate he fouled out and that brought his #'s down but given that close game likely he would've been in all 40 in that game too.

Donnie, Choppa, Petar were freshman and doubtful learned much from the upperclassmen before the season started. Davis was the only one playing physical in November and in shape and it showed.
For starters, it seems we take a different approach to the offseason from many other schools. Seeing summer workouts and team building going on at other schools for the last two weeks. I think we’re starting soon, but wondering if anyone can enlighten us on why we start getting ready for the season later than many other programs. Do they take a break in the middle of the summer that we don’t take?
 
For starters, it seems we take a different approach to the offseason from many other schools. Seeing summer workouts and team building going on at other schools for the last two weeks. I think we’re starting soon, but wondering if anyone can enlighten us on why we start getting ready for the season later than many other programs. Do they take a break in the middle of the summer that we don’t take?
Could just be the academic calendar timing with summer seasons etc.
 

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