Lifting weights, jogging on
the treadmill, trudging up and down stadium stairs
- that type of traditional offseason workout plan
can get a little monotonous for even the most
dedicated NFL athletes.
Washington Redskins wide receiver Santana Moss was
looking for an alternative way to stay in shape this
summer, and a friend from his old neighborhood helped
him out - using mixed martial arts.
Moss spent a few days a week with Lonny Intorn, an
instructor at Punch Fitness in Deerfield Beach, Fla.
Intorn showed Moss the same training techniques used by
mixed martial arts fighters, which included a heavy
dose of cross-training and kickboxing.
“Sometimes I go home in January and get crazy
about working out and football stuff,” Moss said.
“I wanted to take as much time as I can off and
do something different. [We did] tire squats, tire
throws, a lot of boxing and a lot of kicking until we
got the form down. Then some days we put all of the
combinations together - 30 minutes punching, 30 minutes
kicking, kneeing, abs - you name it, we did it
all.”
Moss was intrigued by the training regimen in part
because he had taken an interest in the career of
another Miami-based athlete, Kevin Ferguson - known to
most as the street fighter-turned-Internet
sensation-turned-MMA star Kimbo Slice.
So Moss started working with Intorn, who grew up in the
same part of Miami and also went to college at The U.
Intorn has worked out several NFL players, including
Houston Texans wide receiver Andre Johnson and
Santana’s little brother, Sinorice. He also
trains professional kickboxers.
“It is funny, but when I get some of these [NFL]
guys for their first workout with me, after the first
five or 10 minutes they are on the ground dying -
literally,” Intorn said. “They say,
‘I’ve never worked out like this
before.’ After they are with me I can see the
transformation. They are more cut, and they make it
through the workouts.”
Moss isn’t alone with his new-wave training
techniques. The team’s other starting wideout,
Antwaan Randle El, also incorporated some mixed martial
arts training into his offseason.
How the alternative methods affect Moss and Randle El
long term remains to be seen, but there have been some
immediate effects.
“If it was just run, run, run - that’s
something I could do, but I was losing some of my
muscle mass. But I’m not losing as much this
year,” Randle El said. “I think the
grappling [helps]. When you are on the ground wrestling
with a guy - that’s how it is when you catch a
ball and you’re tussling with a guy and trying to
get out.”
Added Intorn: “I think it definitely gives them
better movability and more flexibility. I’m one
of those guys who doesn’t think you have to just
always lift a ton of weights.”
One thing that is certain about Moss - he has been
healthy during this camp. After being injured for much
of last summer and slowed during camp, he is off to a
much better start to the 2008 season.
Health has been an issue for Moss for the past two
years. He set the team record for receiving yards with
1,483 in his first season with the Redskins in 2005 but
has barely eclipsed that number in the past two seasons
combined while missing a total of four games with
injuries and being less than 100 percent in several
others.
“This is my third camp with him, and I think this
has been his best one so far,” Randle El said.
There have been glimpses of the old Moss during camp -
the gamebreaker who averaged nearly 18 yards a
reception three years ago. In new coach Jim
Zorn’s offense, Moss could put his elusiveness to
work and turn quick timing patterns into long gains.
A more dynamic Moss could be the difference between a
solid Redskins offense and a great one.
“We feel that when we have him in the ballgame,
it might just take one play,” wide receivers
coach Stan Hixon said. “He has proven that
before. We’ve beat people with just one play that
he made. He’s a big-play receiver.”
(proathleteonly.com)