MHR Online Performance Resource Hub

The Training Effect
The Training Effect explains why training can temporarily mask progress by improving capacity and tolerance before visible changes appear. Understanding this response helps prevent premature program changes and overreaction. Read more...
How Training Adaptation Actually Works
Training adaptation doesn’t happen session by session. It builds quietly through repeated exposure to the right load over time. This article explains why progress often feels slower than expected, why early phases can feel underwhelming, and how to stay consistent long enough for results to actually surface.   Read more...
Soreness & Tightness in Training
Soreness and tightness are normal responses to training load, especially when volume or structure changes. This article explains what they usually mean, when they matter, and how to respond without changing direction too early. Read more...
Fatigue & Low Drive During Training
Fatigue and low drive are normal responses to accumulated training load. This article explains why they show up, how to interpret them, and how to adjust without forcing intensity or changing direction too early. Read more...
Why Not Every Training Session Feels Good
Not every training session is meant to feel great. This article explains why session quality naturally fluctuates, why single workouts don’t define progress, and how to stay consistent without overreacting. Read more...
Why Recovery Can Feel “Behind” During Training
Recovery can feel slower when training becomes more structured or demanding. This article explains why recovery often lags behind load early on, and how to respond without overadjusting or changing direction too soon. Read more...
Feeling Flat or Uncoordinated During Training
Feeling flat or uncoordinated during training is often a system level fatigue response, not a technical problem. This article explains why it happens and how to respond without overcorrecting or changing direction. Read more...
Motivation Dips During Training
Motivation naturally rises and falls during structured training. This article explains why motivation dips often reflect accumulated load, not a lack of discipline, and how to stay consistent without chasing novelty. Read more...
Redefining Exercise: The 5 Types of Fitness That Actually Improve Your Life
Redefining Exercise: The 5 Types of Fitness That Actually Improve Your Life
Most people think exercise just means going to the gym, but real health comes from five different types of “exercise” that challenge your body, mind, emotions, and lifestyle. This blog... Read more...
How to Balance Life and Training: Why the Middle Ground Is Where Real Progress Happens
How to Balance Life and Training: Why the Middle Ground Is Where Real Progress Happens
Finding the balance between training and life isn’t easy, even for experienced coaches. This blog breaks down why the “all or nothing” mindset burns people out, why rest is just... Read more...
The Balance Between Strength & Conditioning
The Balance Between Strength & Conditioning
We talk about balance like it’s something we’re supposed to find. But in training, just like in life, balance is something we build. Strength gives us structure. Conditioning gives us... Read more...
The Science Behind Training Styles (How to Make Them Work Together)
Strength and conditioning often get pitched as opposing forces, lift heavy and you’ll lose your fitness, run too much and you’ll lose your strength. The truth is, it doesn’t have to be that way. With the right structure, both styles can complement each other, building strength, muscle, and conditioning that all work together instead of fighting for recovery. In this article, we’ll break down the science behind how different training styles affect your body, why they sometimes clash, and how smart programming can blend them for maximum results. Read more...