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RCMP Fitness Expert Warns Applicants Against Late-Stage Overtraining Ahead of PFA
eTradeWire News/10837291
Vancouver-based kinesiologist Alex Morgan identifies the most common reason candidates miss their fitness assessment date
VANCOUVER, British Columbia - eTradeWire -- Alex Morgan, a NASM-Certified Personal Trainer and Bachelor of Kinesiology graduate from the University of British Columbia, is cautioning RCMP applicants against a training pattern that routinely derails candidates in the final weeks before their Police Fitness Assessment (PFA): abrupt, high-volume training spikes driven by pre-test anxiety.
Morgan, who has coached more than 150 clients through RCMP fitness preparation over seven-plus years at JoinRCMP.ca, says overuse injuries sustained in the final month of prep are among the leading reasons applicants miss their target assessment date — not lack of fitness, but poor timing.
"Most candidates have done the work," Morgan said. "The mistake is adding volume when they should be tapering. Recovery is where adaptation happens, not in the sessions themselves."
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The PFA and what it actually demands
The RCMP replaced its decades-old PARE test with the Police Fitness Assessment on April 1, 2024. The PFA consists of four back-to-back stations — foot pursuit, physical control, emergency assistance, and a high-priority sprint — completed in full duty uniform. One standard applies to all candidates regardless of age or gender.
Morgan notes the test's design has direct training implications. Because stations are sequential and cumulative, candidates need functional conditioning across strength and cardiovascular capacity, not specialization in one area. A cardio-only prep block leaves the physical control and emergency assistance stations undertrained. A gym-strength-only block leaves the aerobic component exposed.
A three-phase approach built for working applicants
Morgan's preparation framework, published through JoinRCMP.ca, structures training in three stages: general conditioning baseline, specific capacity targeting PFA station demands, and a taper in the final weeks before assessment. The model is designed around the reality that most RCMP applicants are working, studying, or managing families alongside their preparation — not training full-time.
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For applicants with six or more months before their assessment, Morgan recommends building the aerobic base first, adding functional strength in the middle phase, and reducing volume in the final three to four weeks. For those closer to their test date, the priority shifts: get to assessment day healthy and at current peak rather than attempting a last-minute fitness transformation.
Detailed training guides, PFA station breakdowns, and women's-specific programming are available at JoinRCMP.ca, where Morgan contributes fitness content.
About Alex Morgan Alex Morgan is a NASM-Certified Personal Trainer (CPT) with a Bachelor of Kinesiology from the University of British Columbia. He has specialized in RCMP fitness preparation since 2021, coaching candidates through PFA readiness, Depot conditioning, and injury-free progression. Morgan contributes fitness guides to JoinRCMP.ca
https://joinrcmp.ca/team/alex-morgan/
Morgan, who has coached more than 150 clients through RCMP fitness preparation over seven-plus years at JoinRCMP.ca, says overuse injuries sustained in the final month of prep are among the leading reasons applicants miss their target assessment date — not lack of fitness, but poor timing.
"Most candidates have done the work," Morgan said. "The mistake is adding volume when they should be tapering. Recovery is where adaptation happens, not in the sessions themselves."
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The PFA and what it actually demands
The RCMP replaced its decades-old PARE test with the Police Fitness Assessment on April 1, 2024. The PFA consists of four back-to-back stations — foot pursuit, physical control, emergency assistance, and a high-priority sprint — completed in full duty uniform. One standard applies to all candidates regardless of age or gender.
Morgan notes the test's design has direct training implications. Because stations are sequential and cumulative, candidates need functional conditioning across strength and cardiovascular capacity, not specialization in one area. A cardio-only prep block leaves the physical control and emergency assistance stations undertrained. A gym-strength-only block leaves the aerobic component exposed.
A three-phase approach built for working applicants
Morgan's preparation framework, published through JoinRCMP.ca, structures training in three stages: general conditioning baseline, specific capacity targeting PFA station demands, and a taper in the final weeks before assessment. The model is designed around the reality that most RCMP applicants are working, studying, or managing families alongside their preparation — not training full-time.
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For applicants with six or more months before their assessment, Morgan recommends building the aerobic base first, adding functional strength in the middle phase, and reducing volume in the final three to four weeks. For those closer to their test date, the priority shifts: get to assessment day healthy and at current peak rather than attempting a last-minute fitness transformation.
Detailed training guides, PFA station breakdowns, and women's-specific programming are available at JoinRCMP.ca, where Morgan contributes fitness content.
About Alex Morgan Alex Morgan is a NASM-Certified Personal Trainer (CPT) with a Bachelor of Kinesiology from the University of British Columbia. He has specialized in RCMP fitness preparation since 2021, coaching candidates through PFA readiness, Depot conditioning, and injury-free progression. Morgan contributes fitness guides to JoinRCMP.ca
https://joinrcmp.ca/team/alex-morgan/
Source: joinrcmp
Filed Under: Education
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