Top 10 Speed Training Myths Revealed
Top 10 Speed Training Myths Revealed
Each day I receive different questions about training speed. So
I've taken those questions that come up the most and answered
them in a slightly different format.
1. Static stretching prepares you to compete/practice
Static stretching actually reduces power output. Athletes should
prepare for practice by doing a dynamic warm up that moves from
basic, low intensity movements to faster, more explosive
movements as the muscles loosen up. You want to simulate
movements that athletes will go through in practice or a game.
What happens when you try and stretch a cold rubber band? In a
way, you can think about your muscles the same way.
2. Strength training makes females too bulky
This is a popular mindset with many female athletes that we have
worked with. Simply look at some elite female athletes like Mia
Hamm, Lisa Leslie, etc. These athletes certainly train with
weights and no one would accuse them of having manly physiques.
Strength training will improve performance and reduce injury if
done correctly.
3. You can't train speed
For some reason it is a popular belief that you are born with a
certain amount of 'speed' and you can't improve it. Nothing
could be farther from the truth. Most young athletes are so
physically weak and mechanically out of tune that significant
improvements in speed can be made often just by working on
technique and form. Athletes at any age and any level can
improve speed when implementing a complete speed training
program designed to improve and develop the entire athlete.
4. Training slow makes you fast
I don't think coaches directly think this way, but their
training implies otherwise. This is especially true in sports
that involve a higher aerobic element such as soccer, field
hockey, lacrosse, etc. I see kids out running mileage and doing
long slow intervals of several minutes of continuous running.
And this will get them in shape. But in games I see kids
jogging, jogging and then sprinting at full speed for 20-30
yards, run, jog, sprint for 20-30 yards. If you want kids to
improve their acceleration and top speed so they can get to the
ball faster or get back on defense, then you have to train by
running at full speed in practice.
5. You can train hard every day
The workout itself is only a piece of the training puzzle. It is
the time between intense workouts, the recovery, where athletes
make their improvements. And generally it takes 36-48 hours to
recover from high intensity training. If athletes are doing too
much, too often they become over trained. Coaches can expect to
see an increase in injuries, kids complaining that they are sore
more often, decreased performance, higher levels of fatigue
earlier in games. It's always better to under train an athlete
than over train. Err on the side of caution to get maximal
results.
6. Strength training will stunt a young athlete's growth
This is another myth held over from a different time. On a daily
basis, kids as young as 7 years old are playing organized sports
year round, tackling, getting tackled, sliding, falling etc..
These loads on the body can have a much greater physical impact
than a well designed strength training program. Though we don't
usually begin training with weights with pre pubescent athletes,
they can benefit from body weight exercises such as push ups,
lunges, sit ups, etc. This will increase muscular efficiency,
speed up recovery, improve coordination and overall speed.
7. The harder the workout, the better the result
Some athletes (and coaches) have this mentality that if a
workout doesn't reduce them to complete exhaustion and/or make
them vomit, that it wasn't an effective workout. I can tell you
that those who have this mentality probably see a lot of
injuries and frustrating performances. The purpose of a workout
is to stimulate an adaptation by the body. If the body is forced
to do too much work in a given time period, it will break down.
The skill in coaching is to stimulate the adaptation in the
body, without reaching a point of diminishing returns.
8. Interval training is the same as speed training
Running repeat 100s, 200s, etc will not improve top speeds. Even
running repeat 40s with short recovery will not improve
acceleration and top speeds. Speed work is defined at 2-8
seconds of maximal intensity running with full recovery. That
means at least 2 minutes of light dynamic movement between each
effort. This goes against the experience of some coaches, but
simply put, is the only way to improve speed. An athlete must be
able to focus on proper form and maintain intensity in order to
get faster. If they do not recover properly from each interval,
they will not be able to replicate proper mechanics with
consistency and they can not improve.
9. Flexibility won't help you get faster
Both coaches and athletes spend so much time on the skills of
their sport, speed training and conditioning that they often
forget a fundamental component of success: flexibility. After
practice or a game, the muscles are warm and loose. Now is the
time to work on increasing flexibility. So many athletes suffer
injuries or compete below their capacity because poor
flexibility inhibits their range of motion and speed. We see
this often in the hips and hip flexors where athletes' stride
length appears conspicuously short. Most often we see this in
male athletes who will lift weights, train hard and then skip
out on their cool down and flexibility work.
10. Lift your knees
I hear so many parents and coaches yelling to their kids when
they want them to run faster or when they are beginning to
fatigue, "Lift your knees, Get your knees up". This is one of
the most backwards cues we can give to athletes. The way to run
faster is to apply more force to the ground. Every action has an
equal and opposite reaction, so the more force you apply to the
ground, the more the ground will give back. So when we cue
athletes to lift their knees we're doing two things incorrectly.
One, we're telling them to use their hip flexors to lift instead
of their glutes and hamstrings to drive down. Just think about
the size of your hip flexor versus the size of the glutes and
hamstrings. Now which muscles do you think can create more force
and therefore more speed?
Second, we're cueing them to do learn a movement that is in
opposition to what generates speed. If an athlete learns at age
7, to lift their knees when they need a burst of speed, that
improper cue will be hardwired into their brain. To unlearn that
as a teen and try to do the opposite and drive down, that
athlete will have a difficult time coordinating an entirely new
way of running and will potentially have to take a step or two
backwards. That's why it is critical to learn proper form early
and get an advantage over those who still aren't getting the
best instruction. So cue athletes to step over the opposite knee
and drive the foot down into the ground, with the foot landing
underneath the hip.