
- Jason Shea ’01.
The pain begins immediately. It’s a Saturday morning and I, along
with 10 others, are stationed in the back of the exercise area of Athletic
Performance Enhancement (APECS), a three-year-old corporate gym, owned
and operated by Jason Shea ’01. It’s Shea, a lean, 32-year-old Franklin,
Massachusetts, native who’s leading the hour-long workout that will
eventually have us slamming our bodies into a football
sled, sliding
40-pound weights across 30 yards of fake turf, and pounding a retired
160-pound tractor-trailer tire with a sledgehammer.
“Okay, I want some burpees,” he says. We throw ourselves onto the floor for a pushup, jump to a squat position, then from there leap into the air. Twenty times. “Very nice,” he says, inspecting a portion of the group that does not include me. For good reason: as we near the 20-count mark, I’m stumbling more than jumping, moving as though I’ve downed a fifth of scotch. Shea leads the class through more jumping, a series of lunges, and plenty of abdominal work. After a good 10 minutes, Shea calls it a wrap. The warm-up has concluded.
Now it’s on to the workout.
“Feel free to quit anytime and take a breather,” he says sympathetically,
as I make my way to the first of 12 stations scattered around the small
cinderblock facility.
Sweat pours profusely down my face, and my shirt is drenched. “I’m good,” I say, doing my best to lift, rather than drag my feet to the football sled. It’s an obvious lie, but I’m still in denial. Only 15 minutes before, when I strolled in here, I thought I was in pretty good shape.
That’s evidently not the case as I venture deeper into the workout,
a regimen that includes even more lunges—this time with weights!—and
something that involves clipping two spring-loaded ropes that come
out the floor to a belt. Its purpose: to offer resistance as I jump
straight up into the air. Or at least try to. After several poor attempts
at scaling the gym’s rock wall, I move to the tire; there, my arms
can barely raise the sledgehammer thatI’m supposed to slam down against
it.
“I’m done,” I announce to nobody in particular. Over the next 20 minutes,
I watch rather than participate, with little guilt. When class concludes,
Tony Leland, a Medway resident with a shaved head and a thick Massachusetts
accent, who has worked out under Shea for the last two years, offers
some advice about adjusting to the trainer’s program.
“You feel like crap after the first few days,” says Leland. “Then you
still feel like crap, but you feel great afterward.”
If Shea’s gym sounds a bit like Romper Room, that’s because it sort of is. Clean and organized? Yes. Fancy? Not really. Shiny new elliptical joggers, treadmills, and stationary bikes aren’t a part of the inventory. Instead you’ll find things like Russian kettle bells, 25-pound rubber balls, and unusual-looking devices such as the Versaclimber, an upright machine with pedals and handles that requires its user to move his or her legs and arms as fast as they can. “We call it the ‘Versakiller,’” quips one of Shea’s clients.
Shea’s approach is called functional training, and within the $15-billion-a-year
health and fitness industry, it’s becoming an increasingly popular
way for Americans to work out. At its core is a focus on short, intensive
exercises and drills that stress power, speed, and agility, rather
than such numbers-driven activities as bench pressing and running.
Some of the props may be old school, but it’s based on an intricate
understanding of how the body’s various muscle groups work together
to produce specific movements. In a sense, it’s a blending of established
workout practices (Shea, for example, is a big fan of plyometrics,
the once-popular Soviet exercises that work to stretch and contract
the muscles) with 21st-century science.
“We’re focusing on the intangibles,” says Shea, who has an exercise-science
degree. “It’s about working multiple muscle groups and building on
aggression. It’s not about doing reps and counting pushups. How do
you measure how hard you hit a tire?”
Or not being able to, in my case.
Professional athletes, football players in particular, have been working
out this way for years. Arguably the best at his position, San Diego
Chargers running back LaDainian
Tomlinson mixes in the requisite amount
of off-season weight lifting with functional training, developing,
according to one recent Sporting News story, “specific areas of [his]
body—the small muscles of his feet so he can have more strength to
cut; his hips so he can spin equally as impressively in either direction;
his shoulders and groin and eyes and every other element essential
to elevating performance.”
Now not just millionaire athletes are turning to this method to get
into better shape. In recent years, thanks to Shea and others in the
field, it’s begun to catch fire with those who have more modest incomes.
At Shea’s gym, a cross section of people—30- and 40-somethings, families,
and teenagers—regularly sweat and grunt their way around his facility.
It’s the high school athletes that Shea and his staff of eight have
a particular fondness for. And those who come here represent a curious
mix from competing schools. At one point during my visit, Shea works
closely with Amy Festa, a forward on the Medfield High School soccer
team, while a few of her rivals on the Holliston club trained under
the direction of Donna Godino, the gym’s general manager.
As Festa works on strengthening her hamstrings by doing a series of
exercises that can best be described as reverse sit-ups, Godino has
her clients trying to lift and flip the giant tractor-trailer tire.
“Fire from the butt,” she keeps repeating to the girls.
When they finish, Andy Kurtz assumes ownership of the tire and works
with Ryan Donovan, a 17-year-old senior All-American wrestler at Franklin
High School. Donovan’s task: to pull the tire across the length of
the gym.
“I’ve got so much confidence now,” says Donovan, a wiry 140-pound kid
who’s been training at APECS for more than a year “The things he puts
you through,” he points to the tire. “There’s comparison to what I’ll
get in a match.”
A half hour later, Kurtz is back at it again, this time with 16-year-old
Rory Cellucci, a junior defenseman on the Medway High School soccer
team. Facing a wall seven yards away, with his back to his trainer,
Celluci waits for Kurtz to throw a small rubber ball, with some 10
knobs on it, against the wall. The trick is to not only correctly anticipate
when the ball will be thrown but how, with its odd surface, it will
come off the wall. As Shea explains, this kind of work, unlike running
several sprints, will directly help Celluci become a better defenseman.
And there’s the rub. It’s not that Celluci and others abstain from
the weight room—APECS has a full-fledged selection of free weights
to work out with—but trainers like Shea reason that success on the
field or floor comes in greater doses if the workouts mimic the kinds
of movements they’ll do during competition. It’s exacting work, though,
with Shea and his trainers carefully watching their clients to make
sure that, say, when they jump, their knees aren’t pulling in, causing
their glutes to misfire.
“We’re always looking for imbalances and movement deficiencies,” he
says.
Put another way, Shea and other functional trainers aren’t in the business
to create better bodies; they’re trying to create better athletes,
be it the captain of the Medfield lacrosse team or the 40-year-old
father of three who’s started to feel his back or knees a bit more
than he used to. And for those muscular gym-goers who think they may
be able to keep up with one of his workouts, Shea offers some advice.
“You need to check your ego at the door,” he says.
That’s one part of the workout I quickly got right.


