Don't swing. Pass with your legs.
A technique setup with A_Line athletes. The arm-swing habit makes passing inconsistent — here's what to do instead.
Adam coaches beach volleyball at Kitsilano Beach, Vancouver.
Before he coached, he played — five years in U Sports, five seasons with Team Canada Beach on the FIVB and NORCECA tours. Before that, he turned down multiple professional indoor contracts to chase the sand.
His sessions move slowly on purpose. You'll work one thing at a time, rep by rep, until it stops being a thought and starts being a movement. He calls it the long game because that's how skill actually gets built.
Live coaching from morning sessions at Kits. Each one a different fundamental.
A technique setup with A_Line athletes. The arm-swing habit makes passing inconsistent — here's what to do instead.
Adult A_Line athletes learning to read the play and pull off the net at the right moment. From a morning men's session.
Adult athletes working on timing, rhythm, and contact. The mechanics league players almost never get the reps on.
Every coach has a story. Adam's is a series of deliberate turns toward harder ground.
Grew up playing for 204 Volleyball, finishing 5th in Division 1 at nationals. Team Manitoba at the 2013 Canada Games.
Five seasons in the CIS/U Sports. In year four, ranked 3rd in the country for solo blocks. In year five, team captain with a .418 kill percentage.
Multiple professional indoor opportunities lined up in Europe. Adam turned them down — Team Ontario's beach program had called, and his coach had planted an Olympic dream in the sand.
Full-time sand training. A spot on the national program. Five seasons competing on the FIVB World Tour and NORCECA.
Two seasons alongside Garth Pischke and Arnd Ludwig. Clubs and programs across Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and BC. Podium finishes, plural.
Still competing. Coaching mornings on the sand — men's, women's, semi-private, bring-your-own-group. Every session starts at six-thirty.
For athletes and non-athletes working on the inner side of performance — habits, focus, the quiet stuff that decides what your body will actually do under load. Weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly cadence. Starts with a free 15-minute call.
Learn moreGood coaching is mostly getting out of the way. You set up the rep, you watch what the athlete does, you adjust one thing. Then you do it again. And again. Nothing clever. Nothing rushed.
"Adam was intentional, flexible, and personable. His support was invaluable."
"I was very impressed with Adam. His demeanour and intelligence was wonderful."
"I appreciate the time Adam took to listen and give constructive suggestions."
Morning sessions on the sand, year-round. Bring yourself, a partner, or your whole group.
Reach out to Adam