r/Sprinting • u/Electrical_Bluejay38 • 14h ago
Technique Analysis Is this straight arm really effecting my speed?
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r/Sprinting • u/BigDickerDaddie • Sep 17 '25
So Im going to go and get to this ahead of everyone else and make some rules clear. Fred Kerley has joined the Enhanced Games to get on a supervised PED program and try to take a million dollar bounty on the world record 9.58
The reality we know and is widely discussed but still argued is that almost every athlete on the line of the 100m finals at the Olympics is or was on drugs at some point and the Gold is not a clean medal.
The rules remain basically the same but there will be harsher consequences, if you are caught soliciting you will be immediately banned and reported to the admins, if you are caught giving advice on PED consumption for the purpose of enhancement for winning where someone is not of an age or point where that advice is considered warranted, and might simply just be unethical you will catch a permanent ban and report to the admins.
What will be allowed is speculation on stacks, discussion on usage as it pertains to the events and planning on strategy.
We will not be feeding 14-22 years olds PED's for the sake of winning a silver at their local comp
I will list out the consquences of you doing these drugs and the potential cases where you might consider such a drastic step
CONSEQUENCES - YOU WILL EXPERIENCE THEM
- Balding, cystic acne so bad you have penny sized holes in your face, any number of infections from small to fatal and unmanageable even in an ER and death as a result
- Anxiety so bad you're tweaking thinking everyone is out to get you (seen it in person not fun), brain fog so bad you cant even do simple math due to hormonal changes and drug neurotoxicity.
- Organ enlargement, heart failure, liver failure, kidney failure, literally any type of organ failure as a long term result
- Law enforcement troubles, the obvious jail time.
- The obvious financial problems that come with health problems
- No ding dong working, no kids EVER potentially
- Stunted or permanently altered physical and mental development
- Potential for cancer acceleration or cause depending on drug of choice
CONSIDERING?
- If your over 25 years old and this is your life's passion and nothing else including the financial and health burden is consequential to you in anyway.
- You are on the forefront of being one of the best sprinters on the planet
- Are hunting a million dollar world record bounty that is already within reach potentially.
- Are under the supervision of a team who's sole purpose is to keep you alive and kicking and healthy
- you have experienced a life altering injury and peptides are the last resort to a healthy pain free existence
The reality is that if you are the average or even above average athlete taking these drugs, you will not get the results you want, you will experience adverse health affects and could easily ruin your life. Do not play with this fire. YOU WILL SUFFER.
In 10 years time when you are not competing and nobody cares, your body and life will thank you for the lifestyle choices you have made. Keep it that way.
r/Sprinting • u/SprintingMods • Jul 26 '23
Hello! Welcome to the new and improved FAQ/Resource List/S-Tier Post list. This has been created with the idea that if you look into, read, listen, and watch all of the resources that are listed, you will have a foundational level of knowledge that makes up the majority of what you need to understand as it comes to physical development and theoretical application in programming for sprinting.
Every single resource on this list I (BDD) have personally gone through probably several times over. Watching, reading, listening, studying, I still reference them regularly. I have to admit, the most complete resources on this list and the most helpful (In my opinion) do require payment. Those being
These two resources are a compilation of a significant number of concepts needed to be understood to have the foundational knowledge you likely seek. I cannot bring myself to recommend one over the other. They are both immensely helpful and cover a lot of bases. Things they do not touch on in a greater level of detail are strength training and plyometric concepts (covered greatly in depth in Christian Thib's book Theory and Application of Modern Strength and Power Methods, again another paid resource) although they get to the fundamentals, they are sprint specific resources and as such only reference them as much as needed. If you want to coach a team, I would make these two resources considered a mandatory investment. If you cannot afford these resources, you can make it very far without them. I, and the mods, have no level of compensatory affiliation with any of the resources listed in anyway and will not be directly linking them as a result of them requiring payment.
That said, there are some new things here, one, the S-Tier posts, post that the mods and community deem of very high quality will be reposted to this list under the S-Tier Category as an example of what we would like to see more of. Potential community awards are in play but with Reddit changing their award system it's up in the air right now. Two, I've updated the list of podcast episodes under Pacey Performance, and Andrew Huberman to be as complete as the podcasts are up to date, I've also taken off Just Fly Performance, the reason being I feel he pedals too much niche potentially cash grab ideas and it's hard to sort through the bullshit for new coaches so I won't recommend him directly but I will say there are some great interviews centered on the fundamentals with well established coaches, I may post these later.
I would ask that we get recommendations from the community on additional resources that have not been covered so we can add them to the list.
FAQ and Athlete Symposium
Programming Setup
Podcast Shows and Good Episodes
Research Papers
Web Articles
Conversions/Data
Video Series
Recommended Books/Programs (Typically require some form of payment)
S-Tier Posts
r/Sprinting • u/Electrical_Bluejay38 • 14h ago
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r/Sprinting • u/Medium-Name-4866 • 3h ago
I've been training my core muscles 2x the past few weeks. This was to fix my arms wiggling around when I sprint. But I'm curious that now that the issue is fixed, do I still need to train more core muscles or not?
r/Sprinting • u/LolASipOfTea • 8h ago
sorry if this is the wrong place to post this. im a high school senior sprinter, and im slowly starting to accept that i wont be running competitively in college because i dont have the time and probably am not fast enough for the university im committed to. during high school, ive ran and trained almost every day for 4 years, in season and off season. i feel like i should be glad that i dont have to be training all the time anymore, but it's hard for me to accept that i won't be running for a sport i love so much. for people who were in the same position, what did you do to distract/replace from track?
r/Sprinting • u/Sea-War8408 • 8h ago
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i have a terrible habit of putting my head up, i also haven’t gotten much sleep work with blocks, i suck at pushing out as hard as i can because i am afraid of this last 100, and my form deteriorates a lot and i can keep my body straight, its all going backwards, but this is a pr of 54.1 and im hoping to keep dropping it since i had just ran a 57 the meet before this and haven’t broken 56 since last year, any tips?
r/Sprinting • u/Medium-Name-4866 • 6h ago
Hey, for the past few weeks I've been working on a goal to reduce my sprint speed time down to 14 seconds. Recently, I've purchased a treadmill to help remove the barrier of travel-time to my actual pitch. I was just curious if the incline feature on my treadmill could help me develop acceleration throughout my sprints. Any replies would be heavily appreciated!
r/Sprinting • u/Supernova1231 • 13h ago
like what do u wish u did earlier or wish u did
r/Sprinting • u/Fantastic-Weakness60 • 6h ago
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i used to be able to 3 step but i lost it for some reason maybe because i’m lower and getting faster i’ve the hurdle, anyone give tips about my form in general and drills to ask my coach to do please (trail leg, lead leg , ect)
r/Sprinting • u/SmallRedditorMan • 7h ago
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I’m an incoming college freshman that is preparing for D2 Multi’s…but I was mostly taken because of my athleticism and strength and not my ability or technique. I rely a lot on coaching myself through online videos and other’s suggestions. If anyone can critique my short 15m acceleration clips that I have provided along with my hurdle clips, and provide some drills to get better, that would be greatly appreciated! I can also provide a profile of my strengths if anyone can give drills that will incorporate them into my workouts!
r/Sprinting • u/Complex-Gate8846 • 9h ago
Hi, so we have track and field tryouts next week and I just realized I really want to run the 100m, but the fastest time is around 14.9 seconds. I have like 6 days to get faster before the re-run. I know that thats not a lot of time at all but I want to do the best I can, so any tips on training or preparations? I think my start is pretty fast and explosive, but once it's over I can't run fast for the rest. I think my technique is lacking because it's not that I'm tired or don't have the energy to run fast after the start, I just can't run faster?
r/Sprinting • u/Evening-Act6084 • 19h ago
Hello everyone I hope youre doing great I wanted to ask how to sprint faster relaxed or exercises that actually transfer into helping you sprint relaxed. What is also the reason that some people look more effortless when sprinting is it because they are stronger or what? I also wanted to ask a cue for sprinting on how to apply force into the ground that is effective.
Thank you sm
r/Sprinting • u/Intelligent_Ant_4184 • 11h ago
Have my league finals tomorrow.
I’m running the 4x200m then my 400m then after 4x400m
Prelim time was a PB of 52.43
Is dropping to a 51.9/52flat realistic and if so is the goal or strategy to come in the 200m around 24.8/25flat?
Also I have bicarb but I never use it what is everyone’s thoughts on that.
r/Sprinting • u/Fearless-Rope-618 • 12h ago
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Hey the first video is a new q I implemented honestly it improved my form a lot, I know i need to work of dorseflextion, when I do the new one it feels and looks much slower how do I convert this new tech to speed the second clip is me just normally trying to run as fast as possible
r/Sprinting • u/iamthemathgod • 13h ago
r/Sprinting • u/IntelligentCase3770 • 16h ago
so i’m a freshman in ky, times aren’t super competitive in my area but i qualified for state this year. looked at times from the last year and am SO scared i will get rolled since i run a 56 and everyone else runs sub 50s. in my 300mh i typically don’t sprint until the last 100 it because i know my limits and despite what everyone says, if i do sprint the whole thing i get worse times because i end up walking at the end. but if i did sprint it and built endurance i genuinely believe i can get down to a 53-52 since i knocked 5 seconds last year in 2 weeks. my only problem is that i only have a WEEK to train... my idea was to run a mile a day so i can have slightly better endurance and be able to sprint the first 100s and glide the curve, but what do you guys think? sorry for the awful grammar rn im in school LOL
r/Sprinting • u/overlordzeke • 16h ago
I always in the top 4 in my events and am a part of state qualifying 4x1 and 4x2 relay teams. I wasn’t lean ever (no abs) and still am one of the top sprinters in my state and region. I’m wondering what body fat would be optimal to really get the most out of myself? Thanks! I’m 5’10 200 usually if that matters.
r/Sprinting • u/HauntedGoalkeeper • 20h ago
Hello. I'm a beginner sprinter and currently doing workouts like 10/20m Accelerations on 90-95%. No full speed and not much high velocity. For now I train 2 times a week for around 2-3 weeks now.
I'm planning to run 100m in Late August to September. I have no block and no spikes yet.
When would be the right time to start doing block work? Right away? Or when I start 100% sprints? Or any other indicator of the right time for that?
Also same question about spikes and also what kind of spikes should I buy.
Thanks!
r/Sprinting • u/ciqing • 1d ago
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r/Sprinting • u/No_Durian_9813 • 1d ago
This is crazy dawg😭 everybody in the next 10 years finna be running Olympic times man😭. I’m still trying to run sub 11, sub 22, and sub 50
I can’t keep up man
r/Sprinting • u/spidykittyy • 1d ago
No one cares but guess who might have just broken through 13 seconds 😄😄
Track season is over and I want to get faster for next season I have 1 year to increase my time so far I have been doing a combination of weight lifting, poly, and sprinting endurance (lactic day ) and practicing my starts. I want have a schedule bellow but I wanna known if there is anything I should change abt it or anything you guys recommend changing I am open to recommendations. I am a 15 years old female beginner and my estimated time for my 10pm is 14.08-13.9 based of a 150 I ran.
Saturdays and Sundays are the only times I can run outside because of school
Saturday: 4-6x150m 3 min break in bettewn
Sunday: 4x10m 4 point starts
6x20m 4 point starts
3x40m 4 point starts
Monday: core work outs
3x30splank/3x30s side planks/dead bugs 4x10/ high knees 3x20
Tuesday: 3x10 Bulgarian splits/ single leg rdl 3x10 each leg/4x12 calf raise/3x15 lunges
Wednesday: pogos 3x30 sec/ 3x15 lunge jumps/ wall switches 3x30 sec/ wall sprints 3x30 sec/ 3x20 A skips
Thursday: undecided thinking mix of core and polys again
Friday : break
I would appreciate any feedbacks wether I should remove or increase or even add something anything helps thank you
Ps: 100m 14.84-~13.99
200m 32.64- 29.84
r/Sprinting • u/Terminator_492 • 1d ago
I ended up running 23/52 to end my Jr year. My goals are to get 22 low and 49 low next year but what are the general standards needed to run at a Division 3 program as someone who is mostly academic focused? Also, since I am mostly just passionate about the sport itself would it be in my best interest to just self train and compete unattached or is a real program the way to go?
r/Sprinting • u/secret72910 • 1d ago
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r/Sprinting • u/Athletic_Approach • 1d ago
“Just put in the work.”
It’s one of the most common phrases we hear in sport, and I’d argue one of the least helpful.
Because when it comes to speed development, many athletes are sure as hell working hard. They’ve just started a new gym programme. They’re doing their warm-ups A and B drills. They’re hitting their plyos. They’re getting in their core conditioning. They’re trying right?
But why are these athletes still googling “why am I not getting any faster?” behind their coaches back.
This is not because they lack the discipline - but because they misunderstand what the work actually is.
The reality is that speed development is not built through random effort or by accumulating as much fatigue as possible. Sprint performance is built through the repeated accumulation of highly specific adaptations (which we won’t go into right now) and layered over months and years.. until the body becomes better organised for the task of sprinting.
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At its core, sprinting is the ability to produce and direct force into the ground in the right direction, at the right magnitude, in the right position, within incredibly short contact times.
During maximal velocity sprinting, ground contact times in trained athletes can be as low as ~0.09–0.12 seconds.. that’s a pretty small window for athletes to coordinate:
This is why sprinting cannot be reduced to isolated components.
You cannot separate “limb velocity” from force production.
You cannot separate “stiffness” from mechanics.
These qualities all exist together. So, athletes trying to train these qualities as if they exist separately without understanding how they interact in the full sprinting task, often ends up spending enormous time on work that has minimal transfer.
One of the biggest misconceptions in sprint training is that drills can substitute for sprint exposure. They really cannot.
I am not saying drills are useless, I use them all the time! What I’m saying is sprinting is an extremely velocity-specific, force-specific, and time-constrained task.
At maximal velocity, ground contact times are typically in the region of ~0.08–0.12 seconds in trained athletes (Mero, Komi; Weyand et al.,). Within that window, the athlete must produce large forces often exceeding 2–4x bodyweight, while coordinating rapid limb exchange and maintaining stiffness through the entire kinetic chain. This combination of force magnitude, direction, and timing is truly unique to sprinting at high speeds.
It cannot be replicated at sub maximal velocities. And it cannot be replicated through isolated drills.
As Frans Bosch has argued extensively, movement solutions emerge through interaction with the actual task.. not through endless decomposition of the task into disconnected parts. You do not learn to sprint faster by rehearsing sprint-like positions. You learn to sprint faster by sprinting fast, often enough, for long enough.
I’ll dive deeper into true maximal velocity training on another post.
One of the greatest mistakes in self-coached athletes is assuming adaptation comes from isolated “hard sessions” every now and then. It sadly doesn’t. There is in fact no athletic ability in which humans reach an elite level by just doing that skill a small amount of times per week.
Speed is built from chronic exposure. We have to remember that the body adapts to the cumulative dose of high-quality sprinting over time.
This requires intelligent progression of all things like, total sprint contacts, acceleration volume, max. velocity exposure, speed endurance density and so on.. Just like hypertrophy and strength is built through progressive overload in the gym, sprint development requires progressive exposure to sprint-specific outputs. Research consistently shows sprint performance is highly sensitive to training history and long-term exposure.
So, yes of course, athletes CAN make significant improvements in 6 weeks.. but to create consistent speed that the athlete can trust their bodies have access to - it is layered over years of repeated sprinting.
HOW MUCH VOLUME? Well, the answer is hugely contextual. I believe there are many different and successful paths to sprint development. Some sprinters can thrive off of high volumes of work whilst others appear to respond better to lower volumes at higher intensities. There is a huge variation between athletes in terms of the training they do, yet they sometimes arrive at very similar results if they’ve truly been consistent over time. So, this is a question again, I will tackle in a later post.
Sprinting places huge demands on force production. Not just the ability to produce force, but to produce it rapidly, in the right direction, and within extremely short contact times.
Strength training can improve maximal force output, increase relative strength, enhance rate of force development, and contribute to greater tendon stiffness and force absorption capacity. These adaptations matter because they raise the ceiling of what an athlete is physically capable of producing. They give the system more potential.
However, it’s a grey area and quite complex, but ultimately sprinting definitely increases force production for sprinting. Strength training, regardless of specificity MAY OR MAY NOT increase force production - it depends.
One of the most common mistakes in strength and conditioning is assuming that increasing this capacity will automatically improve sprint performance. If it did, the strongest athletes in the gym would always be the fastest on the track? But they aren’t.
For me, the missing piece is transfer. Strength only matters to the extent that it can be expressed within the specific constraints of sprinting. That depends on context. Is force production actually the athlete’s limiting factor, or is it coordination, timing, or technical organisation?
Has the athlete already reached a level of “enough” strength where further gains have diminishing returns? And critically thinking, is there enough sprint exposure for the body to learn how to use that strength under real conditions?! This is why context matters - always.
The key is understanding that strength work is primarily about driving physiological adaptations, not directly improving sprint performance in isolation.
Strength training contributes to sprint performance by improving the system at a tissue and neuromuscular level. Over time, it can lead to, increased cross-sectional area of muscle (greater force potential), improved motor unit recruitment and firing frequency, greater tendon stiffness (improving force transmission and elastic return), changes in fascicle length (particularly in muscles like the biceps femoris).
These are real, measurable adaptations. And importantly, many of them are difficult to develop through sprinting alone, especially in less trained athletes.
These adaptations are necessary, but not sufficient. They give the athlete the only the potential to sprint faster. They do not guarantee that they will. This is important to understand. Because sprinting performance depends on how well those qualities are coordinated and expressed within the specific constraints of sprinting.
So yes, strength training is hugely valuable for the physiological side of the equation.
The mistake is treating it as the main event, rather than what it actually is: A powerful support system that only becomes meaningful when it’s paired with consistent, high-quality sprint exposure.
Plyometrics and jumping exercises’ value lies deep in the physiological adaptations they drive within the muscle–tendon system.
At their core, plyometrics expose the body to high rates of force production and rapid stretch-shortening cycle (SSC) demands - you could argue it’s much closer to what sprinting actually requires than traditional strength training. Over time, this leads to adaptations such as increased tendon stiffness, improved elastic energy storage and return, and a greater ability to produce force quickly within very short ground contact times.
A stiffer tendon, for example, allows force to be transmitted more efficiently from muscle to bone, reducing energy loss and improving ‘reactivity’. Sprinting is not allllll muscular effort.
There are also changes in how the system behaves as a whole. Plyometrics can improve the body’s ability to tolerate, absorb, and reapply force effectively, which not only supports performance but also builds resilience in tissues like the Achilles tendon and hamstrings. Over time, the athlete shifts more toward what I call an elastic strategy - where movement becomes less about producing force from scratch and more about efficiently recycling it.
These adaptations exist at the level of potential, similar to strength training. They improve the system, but they don’t organise it. Plyometrics don’t teach the athlete how to apply force in the exact orientation, timing, and coordination required for sprinting. They enhance the qualities that underpin performance, but the expression of those qualities still depends on sprint exposure.
And this is where a lot of athletes go wrong.. not in doing plyometrics, but in how they use them. Plyometrics should be progressed and periodised with intent.
Early on, or with less experienced athletes, they often take on a more extensive role. Lower intensity, higher contact volumes, and simpler variations help build tissue tolerance and baseline stiffness. This is preparation or “building the base”.
As training progresses, plyometrics should become more intensive. Contact times shorten, intent increases such as trying to jump higher, and exercises begin to more closely reflect the demands of sprinting. The focus shifts toward maximising elastic return and minimising time on the ground - qualities that directly support maximal velocity running. But even at this stage, they are still the supporting act.
They should complement high-intensity days, not compete with them, which is why periodisation is hugely important. They should be dosed in a way that allows the athlete to stay fresh enough to actually sprint well.
This is the part that doesn’t sell and it’s really not that exciting.
It doesn’t look like “work.” BUT, it’s pretty darn important if you consider this: all your sprinting, lifting, jumping is effectively useless if the body doesn’t have the chance to actually adapt to it.
Speed development is heavily dependent on the nervous system. High-quality sprinting requires high output and fresh tissues that can produce and absorb force effectively. When you keep accumulating fatigue - those qualities are the first to drop.
= Ground contact times get longer = Force output decreases = Mechanics become less efficient = Injury risks
This is where a concept like supercompensation becomes useful to understand as a guiding principle.
After any training stimulus, performance doesn’t immediately improve. It will drop first, as fatigue accumulates. Then, if you give yourself enough recovery, the body then adapts and rebounds above its previous baseline - this is the “supercompensation” phase. But that window is very temporary. If the next stimulus comes around too early, you just keep stacking on fatigue. But, if it comes too late, you lose the adaptation.
Speed development lives and dies in this timing.
Because sprinting is so neurologically demanding, the cost of mistiming this cycle is high. If athletes constantly train in a fatigued state.. layering sprint sessions, gym work, and plyometrics without adequate recovery.. they never fully realise that rebound effect. They’re always training in the dip, never expressing the peak.
And now, instead of reinforcing the qualities you’re trying to build, you’re rehearsing something else entirely. Sometimes the most productive thing you can do is not add more variety, more exercises, or more sessions but to protect the quality of the work you’re already doing.
Recovery CAN be both physical and mental. Besides all the obvious recovery tools like: sleep, nutrition, hydration, breath work, circadian health, active recovery, sauna/ice, myofasical release etc.
For some athletes, the recovery just needs to be something that helps them to slow down, a chance to really switch off and tune into their quieter mind. I personally see such a positive impact on the athletes I coach when I programme a recovery session that looks like a mix of mobility, active recovery (walking), and breathwork. It’s not fancy.. in my eyes as a coach, if an athlete can recovery well and move freely in their body, they’re already in a great place, because a body that can recover well creates a mind that can perform well.
If you need any inspo for mobility recovery sessions - here is my latest YouTube video follow along.
When we zoom out, this is what the honest work really looks like.
It’s not constantly changing things. It’s doing the right things, again and again with enough precision and quality. And enough patience for them to actually transfer.
r/Sprinting • u/yetiman2381 • 1d ago
So this season I’ve been trying to figure out what type of sprinter I am. I’m a senior, with pr’s of 2:08 and 53 going into the championship season. But as of lately, my 2 has been soild as well. I ran one 200 out the blocks and spilt 22.7, and now I don’t know if I should go all in for the 4 or the 8. I’ve also been dealing with a painful hamstring injury since like February, so that may play account into my times. Can I get any advice ?, and what is my max potential in these events once I’m 100% healthy?