Tag Archives: Reactions

#ReindeerTraining episode one: Crazy Catch fitness boot camp with Gail Emms

Ever wondered what Santa’s reindeer get up to outside of their one evening a years hard graft, pulling the sleigh and delivering presents all around the world to all the good girls and boys???

Well let us let you into a little secret … they don’t do much at all!!! Well they eat too much and slob around the North Pole and generally become very overweight and lazy!! That is why Crazy  Catch have been enlisted to get them all into shape and ensure their reactions and skills are up to scratch with the help of our celebrity elf trainers. First up is badminton Olympic silver medallist and winner of Eternal Glory,  Gail Emms who will be supervising a very tough boot camp for our reindeer’s … Watch our first #ReindeerTraining animation below!

As you can see the Crazy Catch can be used to develop the strength, speed, agility and reactions of athletes and its the perfect piece of kit for gyms, PT’s and anyone looking to improve their general fitness. Develop your hand eye co-ordination and use the Crazy Catch to add something different to your circuits or to sharpen your reactions … its a great piece of kit and great fun to use plus its the perfect sporting gift this Christmas

A gruelling boot camp to kick of #ReindeerTraining

A gruelling boot camp to kick of #ReindeerTraining

The Crazy Catch comes in 4 sizes, the Professional, Wildchild, Upstart or the Freestyle… choose the classic range for small ball sports like cricket and hockey or the double trouble range for big ball sports like football and netball and for multi sport use. Whatever your age or ability, test yourself and improve your game with the INSANE rebound of the Ultimate Rebound Net. Available from all leading sports retailers … shop on-line or in-store.

The Ultimate Fielding Test | Test 1 – The One Minute Challenge

With the #Ashes2015 starting today in Cardiff and continuing a great summer of sport, its time for Crazy Catch to launch its Ultimate Fielding Test. We pit England’s Nick Compton against Aussie batsman Joe Burns in a series of fielding challenges to see which country will come out on top!

Our first test is the Crazy Catch one minute challenge – a test of speed and reactions using the unpredictable INSANE side of the Ultimate Rebound Net. Joe and Nick line up at a distance of 2 metres and compete to see who can take the most catches in a minute and thus an early lead in our fielding battle. Watch the video to see how unpredictable the netting is and then have a go yourself to see if you can beat the Joe or Nick’s score!

If you do, drop us a Tweet @CrazyCatchUK or find us on Facebook and Instagram

Products - Final slideThe Crazy Catch Classic range for Cricket is available from all leading cricket retailers … they are great coaching aids for clubs and schools and also perfect to improve your skills at home in your garden so that maybe one day, you could be taking an Ashes winning catch!

#EvolvingGK – Training with Crazy Catch

The 2nd annual FA goalkeeping conference is taking place at St Georges Park over the 13th/ 14th April with the theme of the #EvolvingGK … Unfortunately due to existing FA partners, Crazy Catch are unable to be involved directly however we wanted to share our thoughts on the topic and how training aids too are evolving and are now common place in a coaches armory.

Keylor Navas training with Crazy Catch

Keylor Navas training with Crazy Catch

It goes without saying that the modern goalkeeper needs lightening quick reactions and Crazy Catch is a great way to develop those skills. The INSANE rebounds produced enable an infinite number of drills to be developed, improving hand eye co-ordination and getting the key muscle in this process, the eye, trained and in shape. The earlier a goalkeeper can see the ball, the more chance they have to prepare the rest of their body to make the save and of course there are generally lots of obstacles in the way of this so sometimes the time to react is very small.

Perhaps the most famous coaches in this area are Spanish where Jose Sambade and Luis Llopis focus on developing reaction speeds and use the Crazy Catch now in their training, after seeing the product on a trip to England. Prior to that they had innovated with their own rebound devices which can be seen in these amazing videos below – but the unique element to the Crazy Catch- the highly random netting and the portal nature of these quality devices meant that they were quick to purchase and use with their current teams… Jose is now at Galatasaray and Luis at Levante (in fact the Levante number 1 is Keylor Navas from Costa Rica who will be one of England’s opponents in the summer). For all Crazy Catch football videos – just visit our You Tube channel where you can see the Ultimate Rebound Net in action for yourself #fun

At Crazy Catch we too have evolved and our latest model is a handheld coaching aid – seen here with the Spanish Futsal coach – again this product is a great way to improve reactions with now the coach in control of the pace and direction of the rebound making it suitable for all ages and abilities.

Freestyle - Spain Futsal

Freestyle – Spain Futsal

We hope to be helping future generations of goalkeepers to improve their game for many years to come. You can find Crazy Catches a plenty at St Georges Park – read our blog from 2013 on their session with the disability squad goalkeepers as well as now working with Tony Elliott and the Futsal squad, where we hope to have a video produced later this year.

Agility – the most misunderstood fitness component?

Andy Allford from Kings College London and former Speed and Agility coach for GB Badminton has written us an article on agility…and how training with Crazy Catch can help!

Search for ‘Agility Training’ in google and you may be surprised what the search engine throws up! It won’t surprise me that the most popular hits relate to with dog training! Having browsed a few of the sites and seeing many a dog weave its way through an assault course I was disappointed when I found that  many of the human agility sites had pretty much the same thing! Although often looking extravagant and ‘agility like’ the drills are patterned movements and that’s simply not agility.

Perhaps the problem with agility is that it isn’t the purest of fitness components and isn’t easily measured but perhaps it’s the closest fitness component to actual performance in Open skilled sports?

Improve your speed in Football 1

Okay so what is Agility?  The best definition of agility I have come across is:

“A rapid whole body movement with change of velocity or direction in response to a stimulus” Shepherd and Young 2006.

The key aspect of this definition is ‘the response to a stimulus’ part which relates to the cognitive element of agility rather than the pure physical aspect of this type of training.  To me this made perfect sense and started to explain how some of the less physically gifted athletes were able to compete as they simply reacted to stimulus much better than their physically superior counterparts (think of the ‘old pro’ being in the right place at the right time).

If you drill down further there are actually 3 very simple stages that need to happen until a movement outcome takes place.

  • Input     – Detection from senses e.g. eyes
  • Cognitive – Where your brain interprets what it has seen and makes a decision
  • Action – your physical response

With this staged process there in fact 3 staged in which things can go wrong:

Input – You could simply not see, hear or feel the right thing.  There are 2 things to consider here, firstly are your senses up to the job, for instant are your eyes capable of taking in the right information – have you had your vision checked? Secondly, you are focussed on the wrong part of the picture (or Game) and therefore missing the relevant cues.  Over the years this has been a growing area of research and training with a number of Vision specialists working with Elite level sport to understand how we can train the eyes better in relation to sports performance. An example here would be a player misjudging the flight of a ball

Cognitive – After you receive the information from your senses it goes into the brain for processing. At this point if you have seen the right information your ability to make the right decision is the aspect that can go wrong. Experience or rather how well you learn from experience plays it role here so you recognise patterns in play or movement cues from an opponent and respond accordingly.  An Example here being a player wrong footed by an attacker

Action – If you have survived the first 2 processes and so therefore have seen the right input, reacted to it in the right way the last part of the process is to move. Therefore if your movement mechanics aren’t up to scratch you will fail with your agility movement. An example here being a forward winning a foot race to the ball.

Okay, so how do we train it?

The key here is identifying what part of the process actually needs training. In my experience athletes who read the game very well tend to be poorer athletes who may benefit from more physical training. Those athletes who have speed tend to need more ‘brain’ training as their physical abilities often get the out of trouble for not reading the game well enough.

Turning your drills into practices where decision making needs to take place is a great way to intertwine the agility elements. In sports where you have to react to opposition simple mirroring drills are good sources of the right kind of stimulus. I often vary the drill every rep to create a random practice approach to ensure you get cognitive engagement similar to a game e.g. reacting to the same way as your opposition vs reacting in the opposite direction.

Another tool I use which helps with the first stage of the process is the Crazy Catch. This is a rebound net where a ball is thrown against it and reacts in a random way ensuring good eye tracking. The Crazy Catch can also be used in developing movement as well by playing a similar game to squash where you are having to detect the input of the ball and opponent, as well as having to involve tactics and movement.

CC Wildchild Classic

Training agility – is playing your sport good enough?

For some this a great source of learning but for others the training aspects of just playing your sport does not get the training results you need.  As with other fitness components you may need to amplify the training response by making it harder than the specific element within in a game.  As with other skills you may need to isolate the problem, amplify it and work on it and then work it back into real life game situations.

Agility can be a hard training concept to get your head around but the results if you can get it right are intangible! Good Luck!

Rugby Coach Weekly editor reviews the Crazy Catch

The Crazy Catch is the Ultimate Rebound Net and used to improve the hand eye co-ordination and reactions of top sportspeople. Today more and more Rugby teams are seeing the benefits of training with Crazy Catch and this video from Ram Rugby demonstrates some of the drills that you can do in your next training session…

In addition we have received this testimonial on the Wildchild Double Trouble and NEW HANDHELD Crazy Catch Freestyle from Rugby Coach Weekly…

Crazy Catch Wildchild Double Trouble – “Brilliant for hand-eye coordination – you can use it with all sorts of different shapes of ball, plus specifically with a rugby ball. It makes the player work hard on their hand catch, pass and balance in a competitive way. I particularly liked the way it returns the ball at variable angles, a game-like randomness you would find hard to replicate by just passing the ball to the player. My players were constantly asking for the next time we were using the Crazy Catch net.”

Crazy catch Freestyle-“I found the Crazy Catch Freestyle ideal for training because it was easy to carry and set up. We used it for scrum half catch and passes plus line out reaction work in particular. It was also good for injured players who were at training. They could practise their catching and juggling skills. Much better fun than just passing a ball back and forth.”- Dan Cottrell (Editor, Rugby Coach Weekly)

RCW Logo

RCW Logo

For more information on the Crazy Catch range (we recommend the double trouble versions for rugby) – take a look at the Ram website at http://www.ramrugby.co.uk/rugby-training-equipment/crazy-catches.html

The renaissance of Keylor Navas

The Costa Rican Keylor Navas has in his hand to play the next World Cup in Brazil. With Caparros; Levente could now find the confidence and stability they need. Article translated from AS.com

After two years in the shadow of Munua, the arrival of the new season must mean the consecration of Keylor Navas in goal for Levante. The Costa Rican has in his hand to play the next World Cup in Brazil, an appointment he will not want to miss for anything and with the arrival of new Levente manager Joaquín Caparros; he could find confidence and much-needed stability in goal to be the undisputed number 1. After his spectacular appearances last season in the Europa League in goal where he proved his creditworthiness and value, he should now be a fundamental part of the backbone of thegranotas“.

This summer the keeper adapts to new methods of Luis Llopis, the favoured goalkeeping coach of Caparros, and he competes with Javi Jimenez to win the seat. After the pre-season stay inIsla Canela” feelings are very positive and both goalkeepers are delighted with the new work proposal. Next Thursday they will receive the affection of the fans in the team’s presentation at the Ciutat.

Great catches at Wimbledon by the ball boys and girls

Like most of the country, team Crazy Catch were glued to the tennis these past two weeks and you can never fail to be impressed by the professionalism of the ball boys and girls at Wimbledon.

They go through hours and hours of training to be ready to go under the radar at the biggest tournament in tennis, just going about their work quietly, smartly and professionally. However sometimes their catching skills and reactions shine through… these two videos show their fantastic work this year! Obviously they have been training with Crazy Catch…

Raonic v Berlocq

Janowicz v Murray

New Instore Cricket Video

Take a look at the latest video from Crazy Catch – our new instore Cricket video for our cricket retailers showing the Classic range in all of its glory as well as the fantastic new handheld Freestyle which is receiving rave reviews.

The classic range each has 1 SANE and 1 INSANE side. The sane side is great for beginners and speed work whereas the insane side creates that unpredictability to work on your reaction catching. In addition for cricket you can use the Crazy Catch to improve your throwing accuracy, wicket keeping and batting and bowling – whatever your age or ability.

The freestyle is proving to be this season’s big success story –  its a hugely fun, portable product that is great for coaches to hold to enable them to change the pace and direction of the catch. It’s even being used by the England team with Joe Root being filmed on Sky Sports recently practicing his short leg catches… Don’t miss out get your Crazy Catch today – available from all good cricket retailers.