Recovery Programs Can Be the Boost Your Gym Needs

Health clubs are introducing post-exercise programs, equipment, and spaces to protect members and improve performance.

Recovery programs and dedicated recovery areas—spaces outfitted with equipment appropriate for post-workout regimens—have long been utilized by professional sports and high-end college athletic programs.

The Dallas Cowboys, Kansas City Chiefs, Boston Red Sox, Brooklyn Nets, and the Las Vegas Golden Knights ... and Ohio State University (OSU), in Columbus, OH, and Texas Christian University (TCU), in Fort Worth, TX—take a close look at just about any pro or top-performing college team, and you’ll find that they’re utilizing recovery protocols to great effect.

And they have, in fact, been doing so for years.

Equipment Triggerpoint Roller Column

TriggerPoint offers a range of foam rollers.

Recovery sessions help athletes prevent future injuries and ensure that they’ll be able to continue performing well.

“Elite and college athletes have long known that the workout doesn’t end until the recovery part is complete,” says Mark Murdock, a managing partner of CryoUSA, an IHRSA associate member company based in Dallas. The firm manufactures cryotherapy chambers, equipment commonly employed in recovery zones.

Recently, however, recovery concepts and tools have begun to proliferate in health clubs.

Chains such as Crunch, UFC Gyms, and Life Time Fitness have launched their own initiatives, and countless other fitness service providers are following in their footsteps.

If there’s a significant new trend emerging in the industry today, recovery may well be it.

Recovery and the Rise of HIIT

Initially, this development was seen as a direct response to the explosion of interest in high-intensity interval training (HIIT) and the physical stress it places on the body.

While recovery clearly has value for HIIT enthusiasts, it was being employed—and was delivering benefits—ages before anyone came up with that acronym.

In “Exercise Recovery on the Rise: Is It Part of Your Programming?,” an article that appeared in Certified, a publication of the American Council on Exercise (ACE), Janice Hutton, M.A., a sports performance coach, insists that recovery is a vital training tool in and of itself.

“Recovery primes performance,” she explains. “The effectiveness of today’s workout is directly impacted by how we recovered from yesterday’s. I don’t just train a body for 60 minutes and then leave the rest, repair, and recovery to chance.

“I don’t just train a body for 60 minutes and then leave the rest, repair, and recovery to chance.”

Janice Hutton, M.A., Sports Performance Coach

“I view my clients as human machines that require proper stimulation for performance gains and proper recovery for physical and mental gains ... and recovery lets us stay healthy and fit over the long term.”

Murdock, who was a college basketball coach for 17 years and has been involved in the recovery industry for seven, says, “I’d never underestimate the importance of recovery as part of training. ... What’s changed is that, in the past, athletes used to train, and then wonder whether they had the time or energy for recovery. Now, most of them realize that it’s part of the training, including ‘prehab’ before, and recovery after.”

Equipment Compression Aids Column

NormaTec's compression sleeves promote post-workout recovery.

ACE highlights recovery in each of its four main certifications—Group Fitness, Personal Training, Health Coach, and Medical Exercise Specialist—and offers a variety of recovery-related modules across its certification and specialist offerings. It’s even created a recovery-specific program called F.I.T.T., with the letters representing:

  • Frequency of recovery (the number of days devoted to recovery per week)
  • Intensity of recovery (the client performs an interval session of four four-minute repetitions at 90%-95% of maximum heart rate, interspersed with two minutes of active recovery bouts)
  • Time of recovery (which refers either to the recovery time between interval bouts or to the duration of the entire session)
  • Type of recovery (between each session, either active or passive)

Though, as Murdock points out, this form of training is broadly applicable, its worth to HIIT practitioners is obvious. Jacque Crockford, MS, CSCS, ACE’s exercise physiology content manager, regards recovery as an integral part of HIIT.

“Exercise professionals have long known that the recovery period is when the body heals and actually makes improvements,” she explains. “However, the additional focus on higher intensities has made recovery of increased importance, allowing individuals to continue to take part in the type of activities they enjoy.

“Proper recovery allows the gains and improvements to actually occur,” she says. “Without adequate recovery time, the body will move into overtraining, where injury and burnout can occur, minimizing improvements in performance.”

Recovery: An Added Value to Members

Equipment Dreampod Column

Floating helps boost relaxation and recovery.

It’s no surprise that IHRSA-member clubs have been quick to recognize the added value that recovery initiatives provide—for both their business and their members. Club owners, operators, personal trainers, and other fitness professionals are always looking for better ways to do things. In many cases, that means turning to academia, or the healthcare industry, or, as in this case, to sophisticated sports organizations.

“Clubs are clearly in tune with how pro athletes train, which has now led them to introduce recovery-themed classes and dedicated recovery spaces,” says Gilad Jacobs, the CEO of NormaTec, a recovery system provider based in Watertown, MA, and an IHRSA associate member.

“In the past, training, gear, and nutrition have all been looked at closely, and leveraged for opportunities to improve performance. Right now, recovery is a huge focus for athletes of every sort, because they see a clear correlation between proper recovery tactics and top performance. Clubs recognize that they can remain on the cutting-edge of fitness and offer their members new opportunities by becoming part of the recovery movement.”

“It’s a way to differentiate the club experience, and create more value for members,” says Jim Huether, the CEO of IHRSA-member Hyperice, which, based in Irvine, CA, manufactures massage and vibration therapy products. “If you’re facilitating their recovery—improving their mobility, increasing their energy level, and, simply, providing them with a more rewarding overall club experience—they’re going to keep on coming back.”

Rest, Repair, and Recovery Equipment

There’s a large and growing number of tools that clubs can employ when offering recovery activities. For a complete list of recovery-related products, visit Club Business Exchange.

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Jon Feld

Jon Feld is a contributor to Club Business International.