The Connection Overhead Principle
Speed, Balance & Game-Changing Athleticism
“The moment you lose position, you lose power.”
Where Power Starts to Leak
Watch an athlete go overhead—especially under fatigue—and you’ll usually see the same pattern:
Ribs flare
Lower back arches
Shoulders lose position
It doesn’t look like a big deal.
But it is.
Because the moment you lose position, you lose force.
And in sport, small energy leaks create big differences.
Strength Without Connection Falls Apart
Most athletes train their shoulders.
But they train them in isolation.
They focus on feeling the muscle—
Not on staying connected through the system.
So when the game speeds up:
They lose control
They compensate
They can’t maintain position under pressure
Because they never trained it.
Real performance isn’t just about being strong.
It’s about being connected.
Train the Position, Not Just the Muscle
If you want your strength to carry over to sport, you need to train positions that demand control.
Here’s a go-to movement:
🎥 Single Arm Overhead Press (Banded – Tall Kneeling)
This setup changes everything.
Tall kneeling removes your legs from the equation.
Now it’s just you versus your ability to stay in position.
If your core isn’t engaged, you’ll feel it immediately.
What This Exercise Really Trains
This isn’t just a shoulder exercise.
It’s a connection exercise.
When done correctly, it teaches you to:
Control your pelvis
Keep your ribs down
Maintain core tension
Stabilize the shoulder under load
Most importantly, it trains your ability to create force without losing position.
That’s what carries over to sport.
Train for What Happens Under Pressure
When fatigue hits and the game speeds up, you fall back on your habits.
If you’ve only trained strength, you’ll lose position.
If you’ve trained connection, you’ll maintain it.
Focus on:
Staying level through your pelvis
Keeping your ribs down
Controlling every rep—don’t rush it
Because this isn’t about lifting more.
It’s about holding position while producing force.
Final Thought
Power isn’t just about output.
It’s about how well your body works together.
Train control.
Train connection.
Train positions that hold up under pressure.
Because that’s where real performance is built.
— Coach Shelby & The Shelby Trained Team