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Press Articles about PlyoCity

Plying the Plyometric Trade
Brian Pearce
L.A. Times
July 10, 2000

 
   
If someone would have approached Mike Rangel three years ago and told him that he would be operating his own business and training just under 1000 athletes a week – from the local AYSO Team to the NBA- he would have laughed out loud and disregarded the statement as if it were a joke.
Only it wouldn’t have been. What began innocently enough as a father helping his son train for volleyball season on a grassy field at Aliso Niguel High School has turned into Plyo-City Youth Development program, operating out of nine facilities in Orange County.
   

With the average class size of 50 to 75 athletes and a maximum of 115, it’s not uncommon for Rangel to conduct classes where an 8 year-old will be working out next to a college athlete.

“I love the variety of ages and sports that I can combine in just one class,” Rangel said. “The young athletes learn from the older ones, the older ones try to keep up with the younger ones, and the guys are all in there working extremely hard trying to impress the girls. It makes for a great workout environment.”

Rangel’s son, Steffin, has been participating in the Plyo-City program for the past three years trying to increase his vertical jumping ability. After playing just two years of high school volleyball, Steffin, who is now 6 feet 6, can jump and touch 11 feet 9 inches. He’s been ranked as one of the top five high school volleyball players in the country and is being heavily recruited by universities from around the nation.
“He’s my son, but he’s also my poster boy for the program,” Rangel said. “We live in a society that will only believe in a program and try it if they can physically see the results. I just have him jump a few times and I’ve got new customers.”

The first set of classes Rangel held were at the Laguna Beach Volleyball Club because it was centrally located and it was close to his house in Laguna Niguel. And despite the fact that Rangel moved to Huntington Beach last January so Steffin could attend Marina High School, it’s still his most popular facility.

“It doesn’t matter if you come from San Juan Capistrano, Mission Viejo, San Clemente, Irvine, Dana Point or Coto, you’re still there in 20 minutes,” Rangel said. Rangel admits that though Plyo-City has been extremely lucrative for him, it never has been about money.

“I feed off the results and get a charge when I see the kids seeing results,” Rangel said. “I make my living exercising, working with kids and making athletes better at what they do. If I wasn’t making anything, I would still love what I do.”

Rangel has 50 athletes he trains free of charge because they just couldn’t afford it otherwise.
I offer partial and full scholarships to my program,” Rangel said. “Nobody should ever be denied reaching their maximum potential because of a lack of money. I like working with those kids because those are the ones who tend to work the hardest for me.”

Rangel gave us a Up Close look at his Plyo-City Youth Development Program and what it’s meant to him and his son:

PLYO WHAT?

Usually done in a group setting, plyometrics is a series of hops, skips, jumps, cone hops and mat work designed to increase and athlete’s foot speed, quickness and vertical jumping. The word plyometrics, in the original Greek form, means “measurable increases,” which is exactly what the aim of the program is.

JUMP START

While trying out for the Junior National volleyball team in 1978, the coaches had us performing some drills that they said would help us jump higher. Well, as it turns out, I injured both my quadriceps running and was the last person cut from the team that year. But I started trying the drills on myself at home twice a week and I noticed my vertical jump increased after two months. Fast-forward three years ago when I have a son who wants to be a volleyball player. A group of kids we knew came over to us while we were jumping on the grass at Aliso Niguel High School and asked to train with us.That group saw increases in their jump after just a month, and parents wanted to pay me for it. It just exploded from there.

Building

The Bobby Knights of the world are now considered archaic because the athletes are smarter today. They don’t care about how much you know; they want to know how much you care. Once they learn that, they will run through a wall for you. My program is a success not because of visible results in the fast twitch, quick feet or vertical jump, but because people leave feeling better about themselves than when they came in. We build self-esteem by being positive and encouraging, by making it hard work but fun at the same time. I get three to four calls a week from parents saying that their son or daughter doesn’t want to miss a workout because of the way the classes make them feel.

OC SPORTS

An Orange County sport is phenomenal right now. In fact, it’s the hotbed for the future athletes in the country. Parents are committed to the success of their children and want to give them every competitive edge possible. Many of the elite athletes in America right now come from Orange County, and there are a couple of reasons ways. First of all, look at the sheer number of kids in Orange County playing sports at the moment. Secondly, we’re talking about an extremely affluent area of the country, enabling parents to afford paying for extra training and competition. Athletics are so competitive these days that if you don’t do something aside from the regular season, then you won’t play at the next level. Kids are playing sports year-round at a higher level of competition, raising the bar for Orange County sports.

GOING PRO

In my business, I train athletes ranging in age from youth sports all the way up to the professional level. And as far as athletes skipping out on college to pursue a professional career in sports goes, be it early or altogether, there is not one thing that I like about it. They miss out on four years of education, maturity, life experience, and there’s nothing you can ever do to replace those years or get them back.

COACHING HIS SON

He came to me three years ago wanting to play volleyball, and I have absolutely loved the ride ever since, even though coaching Steffin has been tough at times. Tough because he’s the only person that gets to point where he thinks he knows everything and he’s the only one who likes pushing my buttons, like stopping short on certain drills, which he knows drives me nuts. It’s because of little things like that, that he’s the only athlete that I’ve ever had to discipline during a workout. But on the whole we’ve had a great relationship, and I think it’s been a phenomenal experience for both of us. For me, it’s been fantastic because I’m one of these fathers whose life revolves around his son.

KEYS TO SUCCESS

I think that an athlete is able to achieve success when they have prepared themselves to give a 100% effort during any given game situation. Persistence and determination define a person’s success more than their win/loss record. As long as an athletes refrains from ever giving up, then they’ll be successful regardless of the game’s outcome. As a trainer and a coach, I’ve been greatly affected by the coaching philosophy of John Wooden, who never used the word “win” while coaching. I just tell my players to use everything they’ve got, stay positive and let the results take care of themselves.

 

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