Track Throws Performance Training in Portland, Oregon | Shot Put, Discus, Javelin, Hammer | APEX PWR

Track Throws Performance Training in Portland, Oregon | Shot Put, Discus, Javelin, Hammer | APEX PWR

APEX PWR  |  Athlete Angle

Track Throws Performance Training in Portland, Oregon

By The APEX Team  |  Featuring Dr. Jon van den Boogaard, DPT, OCS, USATF Level 2  |  Tigard, Oregon  |  Serving Beaverton, Tualatin, Lake Oswego & the Portland Metro  |  June 2026

Key Takeaways

  • APEX PWR is launching Track Throws Performance Training, a specialized small-group program for shot put, discus, javelin, and hammer athletes. It starts June 22nd in Tigard.
  • The program is led by Dr. Jon van den Boogaard, DPT, OCS, USATF Level 2, a USATF Level 2 throws coach and Doctor of Physical Therapy with over 10 years coaching high school throws.
  • Training is built around the three things that move a throw: strength, power, and durability, with individualized plans for each athlete's event, strengths, and weaknesses.
  • A throw is powered from the ground up. The legs and trunk generate most of the force, so smart strength and power work, plus shoulder and trunk durability, is what drives distance and decreases injury risk.
  • Spots are limited. Throwers across the Portland metro can reserve a spot through the APEX sports performance team.

Throwing is one of the most underserved events in track and field when it comes to real, specialized coaching. Most throwers get a few minutes of technique work at practice and are left to figure out the strength and power side on their own. That is exactly the gap APEX is built to fill.

This summer we are launching Track Throws Performance Training, a specialized program for shot put, discus, javelin, and hammer athletes in the Portland metro. Throw farther, move better, perform stronger. It starts June 22nd, and spots are limited.

APEX PWR Track Throws Performance Training flyer for shot put, discus, hammer, and javelin athletes, starting June 22nd, coached by Dr. Jon van den Boogaard, DPT, OCS, USATF Level 2
Track Throws Performance Training at APEX PWR, starting June 22nd.
Portland Tigard Beaverton Tualatin Lake Oswego West Linn Hillsboro

Where Can Throwers Train in the Portland, Oregon Area?

Right here in Tigard, central to the Westside metro and an easy drive from Beaverton, Tualatin, Lake Oswego, and Southwest Portland. APEX PWR is a performance wellness and rehab facility with the space, equipment, and coaching to train throwers the way the event actually demands, which is rare for this niche. Most throwers in the area simply do not have access to a dedicated throws strength and power program led by someone who knows both the lift and the throw.

Coached by Dr. Jon van den Boogaard, DPT, OCS, USATF Level 2

What makes this program different is who runs it. Dr. Jon van den Boogaard, DPT, OCS, USATF Level 2, is APEX's Director of Rehab and the throws coach behind the program. He brings a combination you almost never find in one person: a USATF Level 2 throws coaching certification, a Doctorate of Physical Therapy, and over 10 years coaching high school throws.

That blend matters. A throws coach knows the technical model. A physical therapist knows how the body produces force and where it breaks down. Dr. van den Boogaard does both, which means athletes get technical coaching, performance programming, and an expert eye on durability all from the same person. His throwers were on display this spring, including athletes who competed at the state meet, which we covered in last week's feature on throwing physical therapy.

How Does Strength Training Help Throwers?

Here is the part most throwers misunderstand. A throw is powered from the ground up. The legs and trunk generate most of the force, and the arm simply delivers what they create. Train only the arm and the throw stalls. Build the engine, the legs, hips, and trunk, and the implement goes farther.

Diagram showing that the legs and trunk produce most of a throw's force while the shoulder contributes a small share, with three training pillars: strength, power, and durability
The engine is the lower body and trunk. The program is built around three pillars.

The program is organized around the three things that actually move a throw:

  • Strength. Heavy, structured lifting to build the raw force production a big throw requires. This is the foundation everything else sits on.
  • Power. Rotational and explosive work to express that strength fast. A throw is over in a fraction of a second, so the ability to produce force quickly is what separates good from great.
  • Durability. Targeted shoulder, hip, and trunk work. The throwing motion places real stress on the shoulder and elbow, and building the strength and stability around those joints is one of the most effective ways to decrease injury risk in a sport built on repeated maximal efforts.

This is also where having a Doctor of Physical Therapy running the program pays off directly. Programming for strength and power while proactively protecting the shoulder, elbow, and back is exactly the intersection of skills APEX is built on.

Coordination, flexibility, power, speed, and strength are the qualities a thrower needs to throw farther. The program builds all five, in a structure tailored to each athlete.

What Does the Program Include?

Track Throws Performance Training

  • Built for performance: improve the coordination, flexibility, power, speed, and strength needed to throw farther.
  • Personalized training: a small-group setting with individualized plans tailored to your event, your strengths and weaknesses, and your long-term athletic development.
  • Expert coaching: led by Dr. Jon van den Boogaard, DPT, OCS, USATF Level 2, with over 10 years coaching high school throws.
  • Events: shot put, discus, hammer, and javelin.
  • Starts June 22nd. Spots are limited.

Reserve Your Spot for June 22nd

Spots are limited. Throwers across the Portland metro can get started with our sports performance team.

Explore Sports Performance Start With a Sports Science Assessment

Already Dealing With a Throwing Injury?

If your athlete is throwing through shoulder, elbow, or back pain, the place to start is not a performance program, it is our clinical team. The same expertise that runs the throws program also leads our throwing-specific physical therapy, so an injured thrower can rehab and return to the circle or runway under one roof. Start with our physical therapy team, and read more about our approach to throwing injuries in last week's throwing PT feature.

For healthy throwers who want a baseline before training begins, the Sports Science Assessment establishes an objective picture of an athlete's strength, power, and movement, then anchors a plan built around what they actually need.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where can throwers train in the Portland, Oregon area?
APEX PWR in Tigard, Oregon offers specialized Track Throws Performance Training for shot put, discus, javelin, and hammer athletes across the Portland metro, including Beaverton, Tualatin, and Lake Oswego. The program is led by Dr. Jon van den Boogaard, DPT, OCS, USATF Level 2, a USATF Level 2 throws coach with over 10 years coaching high school throws. It starts June 22nd.
How does strength training help throwers?
A throw is powered from the ground up. The lower body and trunk generate the majority of the force, which the arm then delivers. Building strength and rotational power in the legs, hips, and trunk is what lets a thrower put more force into the implement and throw farther. Structured strength work also supports the shoulder, elbow, and trunk, which decreases injury risk in a sport built on repeated explosive efforts.
When does the APEX track throws program start?
The Track Throws Performance Training program at APEX PWR starts June 22nd. It is a small-group program with individualized plans, and spots are limited. Throwers can reserve a spot through the APEX sports performance team.
Program details per the APEX PWR Track Throws Performance Training program. Strength, power, and injury-risk context per the published track and field throws and overhead-athlete training literature. This article is educational and is not medical advice; athletes with pain or injury should be evaluated by a qualified provider.

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