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Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan
More isn’t always better. Sometimes, more is what’s holding you back.

We love to chase stimulus… more weight, more sprint volume, more reps, more days. But at a certain point, you reach diminishing returns.
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Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan
A lot of athletes aren’t breaking down because they’re “weak” or “not trying hard enough.” They’re breaking down because they live in a state of chronic fatigue.

The volume just keeps stacking, year-round seasons, back to back practices, skill sessions squeezed in between
Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan
lifts and games.

And yeah, there are definitely athletes who need more development, more strength, more skill exposure, more foundational work. But even those things only matter if you can recover from them. Your nervous system, tendons, and tissues don’t adapt in a vacuum.
Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan
They adapt between sessions, not during.

Fatigue alters mechanics. It drops force output and rate of force development. It disrupts coordination and joint stability. so it might feel like you’re doing everything right, but your body’s too beat down to benefit.
Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan
That’s why smart programming matters.
You need a plan that takes your full schedule into account, that classifies high vs. low CNS stress, that layers intensity instead of blindly stacking it, and that knows when to push and when to pull back.
Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan
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