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BREAKING: Panthers continue to make changes to coaching staff


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Joseph Person of TheAthletic.com reports that they have parted ways with strength and conditioning coach Jeremy Scott. They are set to hire Vikings director of performance Josh Hingst to take over the role.

Hingst spent the last four seasons with the Vikings. He was the strength and conditioning coach for the Eagles from 2013-2020 and worked for both the Jaguars and the University of Nebraska before heading to Philadelphia.

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Josh Hingst begins his fourth season with the Minnesota Vikings in 2024 as director of player performance, as he embarks on his 16th NFL season. Hingst was a part of the 2022 Vikings team that finished 13-4 and claimed the NFC North title. From 2013-20 Hingst was head strength & conditioning coach with the Philadelphia Eagles, part of a team that won the first Super Bowl title for the franchise, Super Bowl LII over New England, in Minneapolis at U.S. Bank Stadium. Hingst implements a holistic program to address all areas of athletic development, utilizing a variety of strength, speed, and power methods to individualized to each athlete.

In 2013, his first year with the Eagles, Hingst played a major role in the implementation of one of the NFL's first data-driven training systems, introducing technologies such as Catapult-GPS Tracking, Omegawave and Eliteform – Velocity Based Training, that culminated in an NFC East Championship that year. Hingst strives to remain at the forefront of progressive and cutting-edge performance training methods, recently utilizing Forcedecks, Nordboard, Blood Biomarker and Microbiome testing and Zebra Tracking Systems.

 

 

This was the guy chip Kelly picked, Im in love now!!

holistic?!?!?

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24 minutes ago, TheSpecialJuan said:

Joseph Person of TheAthletic.com reports that they have parted ways with strength and conditioning coach Jeremy Scott. They are set to hire Vikings director of performance Josh Hingst to take over the role.

Hingst spent the last four seasons with the Vikings. He was the strength and conditioning coach for the Eagles from 2013-2020 and worked for both the Jaguars and the University of Nebraska before heading to Philadelphia.

(thank you for the copy-paste. super appreciate it)

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8 minutes ago, Basbear said:

Josh Hingst begins his fourth season with the Minnesota Vikings in 2024 as director of player performance, as he embarks on his 16th NFL season. Hingst was a part of the 2022 Vikings team that finished 13-4 and claimed the NFC North title. From 2013-20 Hingst was head strength & conditioning coach with the Philadelphia Eagles, part of a team that won the first Super Bowl title for the franchise, Super Bowl LII over New England, in Minneapolis at U.S. Bank Stadium. Hingst implements a holistic program to address all areas of athletic development, utilizing a variety of strength, speed, and power methods to individualized to each athlete.

In 2013, his first year with the Eagles, Hingst played a major role in the implementation of one of the NFL's first data-driven training systems, introducing technologies such as Catapult-GPS Tracking, Omegawave and Eliteform – Velocity Based Training, that culminated in an NFC East Championship that year. Hingst strives to remain at the forefront of progressive and cutting-edge performance training methods, recently utilizing Forcedecks, Nordboard, Blood Biomarker and Microbiome testing and Zebra Tracking Systems.

 

 

This was the guy chip Kelly picked, Im in love now!!

holistic?!?!?

quite impressive 

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Just now, TheSpecialJuan said:

quite impressive 

 

This is a super underrated type of hire that gets overlooked, but with have a profound effect. 

 

He's a open minded and cutting edge, that's a great combo in strength training. Like other fields, the strength industry has changed greatly over the last 20 years. Sooo much is now understood and still more to learn. Glad this guy is leading the Panthers.

No one spends more time with the players than the strength coach. It's a uber important role for football. 

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This guy could literally be the difference between 5 wins and 10 wins any given year. Glad to see we acknowledge something was wrong and made a change. 

Also to note, the Vikings play on artificial turf as well. 

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