Doesn't look like they have an indoor facility. So that would mean conditioning early in the morning and/or at night, when it's cooler.
There's a difference between mental toughness ... and just plain dangerous. Forcing your players to condition in blazing sun, with actual air temps in triple digits, won't make them tough ... it will give them heat stroke.
There's a difference between mental toughness ... and just plain dangerous. Forcing your players to condition in blazing sun, with actual air temps in triple digits, won't make them tough ... it will give them heat stroke.
There's a difference between mental toughness ... and just plain dangerous. Forcing your players to condition in blazing sun, with actual air temps in triple digits, won't make them tough ... it will give them heat stroke.
Air quality/ozone level hazardous. Not best conditions for Summer workouts.
The Maryland football player who died of heatstroke in June would agree with you if he could. Coaches and trainers have a responsibility to protect their athletes.
Still not nearly as bad as the heat and humidity in Murfreesboro. That's the place where football players melt away.
Wildfire by Yosemite near Fresno is now over 17,000 acres...5% under control...Oregon State had to deal with this last year, smoky air shut down some of their practices/moved them inside, threatened game vs Minnesota...Beavers were unprepared and Gophs rolled them.
Las Cruces (NMSU) 7 day: 103, 104, 104, 105, 106, 101, 100.
The Maryland football player who died of heatstroke in June would agree with you if he could. Coaches and trainers have a responsibility to protect their athletes.
I’m in Fresno right now. It is really, really hot. Today was 106 with 12% humidity. Assuming the Fresno coaches aren’t complete idiots, they’ll practice in the morning and in the evenings. This morning was 75 and right now it’s in the mid 90s. Plenty of time to get work in before it’s dangerously hot.