Published May 10, 2007 05:11 pm - While the hockey treadmill is the 6,000-square-foot facility’s centerpiece, the business will focus on many activities, with general and sports-specific programs that emphasize athletes’ speed, power and agility.
Sports Institute to keep athletes skating
Training facility focuses on fitness, performance enhancement
Shane Frederick
The Free Press
MANKATO
—
The machine almost looks medieval, with the racks and harnesses and all. But any torture taking place on southern Minnesota’s first hockey treadmill is strictly voluntary.
“Shane (Bowyer) hit it on the head when he found this,” said Craig Fritz, performance director for Sports Institute, an athletic training center opening this week at Madison East Center.
Bowyer, the Sports Institute’s majority owner, said he’s had an interest in starting a training facility in Mankato for several years.
“Finally, the timing was just right,” he said.
For one thing, there was a need for the hockey treadmill, he said. Several area hockey players have traveled to the Twin Cities to use similar treadmills in the offseason. The machine’s skating surface is made of synthetic material that allows users to wear their regular ice skates as they work on endurance and stride technique.
“One parent told me he spent over $400 just in gas going to the Cities last summer,” Bowyer said.
Several local hockey coaches got a demonstration recently of Sports Institute’s treadmill and programs.
“It’s going to be very nice to have around here,” Waseca boys coach Aaron Anderson said. “For high school athletes who have that drive or are thinking about being college athletes, it will be nice. ... If I were a hockey player, I’d be paying my money already.”
While the hockey treadmill is the 6,000-square-foot facility’s centerpiece, the business will focus on many activities, with general and sports-specific programs that emphasize athletes’ speed, power and agility.
This isn’t personal training, said Fritz, who was a trainer and physical therapist at Queen of Peace hospital in New Prague and put on performance camps in Le Sueur before joining Bowyer.
“It’s designed on athletic performance,” Fritz said. “It’s not about how your body looks; it’s about making you more powerful and quicker.”
Sports Institute has free weights, running treadmills, a batting cage, a half basketball court, golf swing platforms and artificial turf. It also features a video analysis program called Dartfish that gives before-and-after looks at various athletic skills.
Bowyer and Fritz said their programs are geared toward college and high school athletes, as well as “average Joes and weekend warriors.”
“We can analyze your golf swing or help you hit a softball farther,” Fritz said.
On May 19, Sports Institute will hold a High School Football Combine that will measure different benchmarks and send the results to college coaches around the Midwest.