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Associated Press 8y

Pros to joes: Elite athlete training for regular folks

NFL, Minnesota Vikings, San Francisco 49ers

MINNEAPOLIS -- Tight end Kyle Rudolph's two most productive seasons for the Minnesota Vikings were those in which he played every game.

After all the surgeries, crutches and rehab, Rudolph has found a training program to supplement team-supervised workouts and improve his durability. The sturdiness of his body at 26 has become as important as the agility and strength needed to thrive in the NFL.

"It's all about playing 16 games," said Rudolph, who has overcome operations on his hamstring and both hips, plus a broken foot and a sprained knee.

He enjoyed an injury-free season in 2015, his first since 2012. Rudolph found his happy place in downtown Minneapolis at the Mayo Clinic Sports Medicine Center through a joint venture with the specialized performance training firm EXOS.

Jennifer Krogman's goal was just to do some pushups again after a wrist injury.

"It was a thrill," she said. "This was the first progress I'd ever made."

After eight surgeries in nine years on her broken left wrist, Krogman has finally discovered a way to work out at an intense level without neglecting or damaging the joint that has troubled her.

The activities this former high school basketball player and track sprinter has been engaging in at Mayo's EXOS site in Rochester, Minnesota, actually aren't that all dissimilar from what Rudolph has done to prepare for the football season.

"The elite athlete is the beacon that gets all the attention, but those same principles trickle down to how we treat every athlete," said Dr. Ed Laskowski, the co-director of Mayo's sports medicine operation.

Founded in 1999 in the Phoenix area as Athletes' Performance, Inc., EXOS has used its experience training first-round draft picks and Olympians as a springboard into the corporate world. EXOS has more than 100 business clients, strengthening employee wellness programs or helping business travelers seeking healthier lifestyles.

Call this the combine for the common folks.

"Obviously, the stakes are a little bit different. There may not be an audience. It may not be televised, but it still has a great internal impact on you," said Alex Lincoln, an EXOS vice president and a former linebacker at Auburn and with the San Francisco 49ers.

EXOS is far from alone in the fitness marketplace. But the program is based on four pillars: mindset, movement, nutrition and recovery. Personalized, sustainable and measurable are parameters for implementation, blending high technology with sports science.

Trainers can pull out an iPad to evaluate an athlete's stride in attempt to correct a mechanical flaw or prevent further injury.

"A lot of exercise is based on tradition. We're going to do something because that's what Arnold did to get stronger or a coach has told us stuff. Very well-meaning coaches, but a lot of stuff they told us was based on tradition and not based on the rules of the body," Laskowski said. "So as we've developed those areas, we've found that there are biomechanical patterns that need to be optimal. Perfect practice makes perfect. We want you to be doing it right from the first time."

Even with a wide range of costs, the individualized workout isn't cheap. Krogman's five-times-per-week sessions break down to about $20 apiece, though, a fee she's says is as worthy as the 5:45 a.m. starts.

Now that she's mastered techniques for the deadlifts and other weight-bearing exercises without compromising her wrist, Krogman has set her sight on a more ambitious cardiovascular goal: the 7-minute mile she once could run.

"Everyone else has always told me, `No, you can't do this. You just have to get used to walking, running, riding a bike. Lifting weights, you can't do," Krogman said. "I was like, `No, I'm pretty sure I can still do that."

College athletes have signed up for the program. Haley Nielsen and Stephen Kalina have taken part in small-group sessions at the Mayo-EXOS site in Minneapolis this summer, pushing sleds on the artificial turf and sweating through plyometric box jumps.

Nielsen, a hockey player for Wisconsin-River Falls, came in search of more explosiveness on the ice. Kalina, a middle infielder at Purdue, wanted to stay in shape and add strength and weight while many of his teammates were playing in summer leagues.

"I'm hoping to come back and show how beneficial it is," Nielsen said.

Another key to the program is sports-specific movements that work the muscle groups needed to perform in game time. Kalina envisions stealing a base during crossover drills as he tries to explode out of his first three or four steps. Then there are the core muscles and leg muscles that generate the power in a swing.

"It's great to have the big biceps and all that," Kalina said, "but you need a stronger base, so we really focus on that."

Rudolph finished his second summer at EXOS before the Vikings reported to training camp. These days, his focus is efficiency and agility drills to mimic route-running down the field.

"A lot of times the guys who are covering me are much faster than I am," Rudolph said, "but if I'm moving efficiently, not wasting any motion, it gives me an advantage to get open."

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