The Coach
20+ Years.
One Standard.
A lifelong athlete, competitive performer, and coach who has spent two decades helping people move better, feel stronger, and live without the limitations that hold most people back.
Nick · Prime Raleigh · Raleigh, NC
The Beginning
Built From the Ground Up
I grew up in Raleigh in a family where strength training was just part of life. My two older brothers were both lifting regularly by the time I was old enough to follow them to the YMCA. One had a personal trainer. Both took strength training as an elective in middle school. I was right behind them — and I never stopped.
In high school I took strength training as an elective and played baseball year-round. That level of competition shaped how I think about preparation, performance, and what the body is actually capable of. I competed alongside — and against — athletes who went on to play professionally, including future American League MVP Josh Hamilton, whom I faced in Little League, Pony League, and high school.
At UNCW, I competed in the Endurance Challenge and Powerhouse competitions, consistently placing in the top 3. I was also completing my senior research project on the ideal body image in American society — studying how culture shapes what we think we’re supposed to look like, and how damaging that can be. That research still influences how I coach today. I don’t train people toward an image. I train them toward a body that works.
The Journey
A Career Built on Real Experience
Began coaching clients professionally — building programs from the ground up with a focus on movement quality, not just results on a scale.
Started working alongside doctors, physical therapists, chiropractors, athletic trainers, and massage therapists to co-design programs for clients navigating injuries, surgeries, and complex health histories. That collaborative model became the foundation of how I coach.
Through a professional sports agent I was training, I was brought in to consult with his client — a #1 overall NBA Draft pick dealing with nagging injuries. That consultation took me to Washington D.C. and courtside at a Heat vs. Wizards game during the LeBron James era in Miami.
Continued pursuing the highest level of continuing education available — PRI, EXOS, Biomechanics, Precision Nutrition, Integrated Human Movement Science — building a credential stack that most trainers never pursue, applied to every client every session.
Competed in over a dozen half marathons in addition to 10Ks and 5Ks. Regularly trains on Raleigh’s local greenways and trails. Brings the same standard to personal movement that I bring to every client’s program.
Worked with clients from age 5 to 85 — through injuries, pre and post surgery, pre and post cancer treatment, chronic pain, and major life transitions. Every one of them shaped how I think about programming, communication, and what it really means to coach someone.
Philosophy
How I Think About Coaching
My senior research on body image taught me something most coaches never question — that the fitness industry is often selling people a picture instead of a result. A body type instead of a life. I’ve never been interested in that.
What I care about is how your body functions. Whether you can squat without pain. Whether your shoulder moves the way it should. Whether the program you’re following actually accounts for your history, your structure, and your goals — or whether it’s just a template with your name on it.
That’s why I invested in education that goes well beyond a standard personal training certification. Postural Restoration, biomechanics, corrective exercise, integrated movement science, sports performance — these aren’t buzzwords. They’re tools I use every session to understand why your body moves the way it does and what to do about it.
And when a client is navigating something complex — a surgery, an injury, a cancer recovery — I don’t work in isolation. I pick up the phone and talk to their doctor, their physical therapist, their chiropractor. That collaboration isn’t optional for me. It’s the standard.
Education & Credentials
The Education Behind the Coaching
Issued by the American College of Sports Medicine — the most respected body in exercise science. This isn’t a weekend certification. It’s a university-level credential held by the top professionals in the field.
Issued by the NSCA — the same credential held by strength coaches at Division I programs and professional sports teams. It means I program like an athlete’s coach, not a gym floor trainer.
Specifically trained to identify why your body moves the way it does and fix the root cause. Most trainers work around pain or dysfunction. This certification means I’m trained to address it directly.
Dozens of courses in one of the most advanced movement science systems in existence — used by NFL teams, MLB organizations, and elite physical therapy clinics. PRI addresses how the body’s natural asymmetries drive chronic pain, limited movement, and injury. The average trainer has never heard of it.
EXOS trains NFL Combine athletes, Olympians, and Special Forces operators. Their system integrates mindset, nutrition, movement, and recovery into one framework. This is elite sports performance methodology — applied to everyday people who want extraordinary results.
Advanced assessment of genetic structural predispositions and compensation patterns that most coaches completely miss. This certification teaches how to identify the hidden imbalances that cause chronic pain, limited range of motion, and recurring injuries — and exactly what to do about them.
Coaching the full picture — what you eat, how you recover, and how your lifestyle supports or undermines your training. Results in the gym are only part of the equation. Nutrition and recovery complete it.
Evidence-based, research-backed assessment tools to identify postural dysfunction and movement impairment at the root level. This approach integrates the best of orthopedic sports medicine, corrective exercise, and performance training into one cohesive system.
Ready to Start?
Let’s Build Your System
If you’re ready to train with a coach who actually understands how your body works — reach out. I personally respond to every message.