Call Directions Email
Heisler Training Systems
10 Thoughts: Lacrosse Edition
Posted: March 30th 2019

1) I had always believed that acceleration, the first part of a sprint where the athlete has a forward body angle and force is applied horizontally, was where most games were played. After watching some high school lacrosse this week it has become clear that top-end running is also important.

2) Top-end running, from what I have learned, is supposed to be the part of a sprint where the athlete has achieved his or her maximum speed. The athlete stands tall, the knees drive forward before the foot strikes back directly under the athlete, the foot contacts the ground and the glutes and hamstrings drive the foot back, helping the athlete maintain their top speed. From the sidelines, I saw this exact posture often although it did not seem like the athletes had reached their top speed, it seemed more like they were running and maintaining roughly 85-95 percent of their maximum speed. I had always assumed that on a given “play” the athlete always accelerated to maximum speed. That was a very dumb assumption.

3) Not all athletes exhibited the same patterns. Some athletes received a pass and immediately attempted to run full speed ahead, only to lose the ball. The 3 or 4 athletes who controlled the play seemed to run in that 85-95 percent range.

4) Top-end running requires strong feet/ankles, a well developed elastic system, flexibility and a strong posterior chain (Hamstrings, glutes, back).

5) To run at a high rate of speed AND control the game around you requires relaxed running. This is another area I need to work on with my athletes.

6) I did not see any ankle breaking dekes. The athletes who cut through triple coverage repeatedly did not display breath-taking skill, they displayed confidence. When they went for it, they went for it with full speed and an attack mindset. Whether they were successful or not in previous attempts did not matter. I never had that when I was a competitive athlete. That, to me, is the big difference between the top athletes and the rest of us.

7) Confidence can be improved with proper training. In fact, training is probably the best place to help athletes build the confidence to attack challenging situations because there are no consequences of failure in the gym. If you lose a 1 on 1 in the gym, you did not cost your team a win, you can simply figure out what you did wrong and work on fixing the issue. The gym is a great place to grow without consequences.

8) No more ladder and cone agility drills. Athletes need to be able to cut in various directions, apply force in various directions, control their speed based on game context and actually use their minds to perceive and act on what is happening around them. Ladder and cone drills dampen these abilities.

9) I will keep banging my head against the wall until I have the top training facility in Cape May County AND Atlantic County.

10) It is fun trying to cheer for a sport where you have no idea what is happening most of the time. I have much to learn.

Last 10 Postings

Fill The Buckets
Posted: January 17th 2024

Just Get Started
Posted: February 23rd 2023

Nutrition Tips
Posted: January 24th 2023

3 x 10
Posted: January 19th 2023

How To Train Like A Savage
Posted: January 5th 2023

2022 Sucked
Posted: December 31th 2022

Coaching in Vancouver
Posted: December 10th 2021

10 Thoughts
Posted: November 19th 2021

How To Stay Healthy In College
Posted: November 4th 2021

Adult Athletes and Booze!
Posted: October 14th 2021

Life of a College Athlete
Posted: October 7th 2021

Vertical Jump Training for Volleyball
Posted: September 24th 2021

Good Athletes vs Great Athletes
Posted: September 17th 2021

How to Gain Weight in College.
Posted: September 15th 2021

Question 9/3
Posted: September 3rd 2021

You got a question?!? 8/28
Posted: August 28th 2021

Train Like The Pros.....
Posted: June 21st 2021

The (sometimes) Top 5 (sometimes more) Of The Week 8/17
Posted: August 20th 2020

Top 5 of the Week
Posted: August 15th 2020

The (sometimes) Top 5 (sometimes more) Of The Week 8/2
Posted: August 8th 2020

The (sometimes) Top 5(sometimes more) Of The Week 7/27
Posted: August 2nd 2020

The (sometimes) Top 5 (sometimes more) Of The Week 7/20
Posted: July 24th 2020

The (sometimes) Top 5 (sometimes more) Of The Week 7/12
Posted: July 18th 2020

The (sometimes) Top 5 (sometimes more) Of The Week 7/6
Posted: July 12th 2020

The (sometimes) Top 5 (sometimes more) Of The Week Of 6/29
Posted: July 5th 2020

The (sometimes) Top 5 (sometimes more) Of The Week 6/28
Posted: June 28th 2020

The (sometimes) Top 5 (sometimes more) Of The Week 6/20/2020
Posted: June 20th 2020

The (sometimes) Top 5 (sometimes more) Of The Week
Posted: June 14th 2020

Speed Week 1
Posted: June 8th 2020

Much Needed Progress
Posted: June 6th 2020

5 Things We Can Do
Posted: April 8th 2020

If I was a Lacrosse Coach Part 2
Posted: April 4th 2020

If I Was A Lacrosse Coach
Posted: March 31th 2020

ACL Prep to Prevent Part 1
Posted: March 11th 2020

Aggressively Purposeful vs Passively Purposeful
Posted: January 24th 2020

Stop Stretching...
Posted: December 18th 2019

Unbreak Your Bench
Posted: December 13th 2019

Is Your 7 Year Old Ready To Lift
Posted: December 1st 2019

Quality vs Trash
Posted: November 23rd 2019

“How does THIS help me” - Agility
Posted: September 18th 2019

How is THIS helping me?!?
Posted: September 11th 2019

Summer 2019 Training- 4 Speed Tips
Posted: June 12th 2019

Supplements That Don’t Suck- Beta-Alanine
Posted: May 19th 2019

Endurance Training Improved
Posted: May 15th 2019

Creatine for High School Athletes
Posted: May 8th 2019

9 Things
Posted: May 4th 2019

Responsible Weight Gain
Posted: May 1st 2019

Training Without Your Trainer
Posted: April 22nd 2019

Leg Day
Posted: April 17th 2019

Improving Game Speed
Posted: April 13th 2019

How to “Up Your Intensity”
Posted: April 9th 2019

10 Thoughts: Lacrosse Edition
Posted: March 30th 2019

10 Thoughts
Posted: March 27th 2019

8 Thoughts
Posted: March 13th 2019

How Much Do You Need
Posted: March 7th 2019

The Number 1 Speed Training Exercise for High School Athletes
Posted: February 24th 2019

The Fast Feet Fallacy
Posted: February 20th 2019

Build the Bench
Posted: February 13th 2019

Fun vs Results
Posted: February 12th 2019

Squats and Low Back Pain
Posted: January 29th 2019

Agility Musings Part 2
Posted: January 26th 2019

Escalating Density Training
Posted: January 23rd 2019

Agility Musings
Posted: January 19th 2019

3 Simple Fixes
Posted: January 11th 2019

Upper Back Training for Health and Aesthetics.
Posted: January 2nd 2019

Resolutions
Posted: December 30th 2018

3 Failures from 2018
Posted: December 27th 2018

1 Habit That Stalls Progress
Posted: December 22nd 2018

Your Boy is Top 24
Posted: December 19th 2018

Strength Training: More Than Looking Great Naked
Posted: December 15th 2018

Vegan Sharks and Sprints
Posted: December 13th 2018

Stop Forcing Exercises
Posted: December 11th 2018

Conditioning That Doesn’t Suck
Posted: December 7th 2018

A Quality Instagram Fitness Celebrity Trainer is...
Posted: December 4th 2018

The 20 Rep Workout
Posted: November 30th 2018

Less is More
Posted: November 28th 2018

NWA and Stimulating Reps
Posted: November 25th 2018

Ask Drew- Holiday Workouts
Posted: November 20th 2018

Ask Drew
Posted: November 16th 2018

When To Back Off
Posted: November 13th 2018

Return to Play
Posted: November 7th 2018

Be Like The Basketball
Posted: November 2nd 2018

3 Pec Poppin Push-up Varaitions
Posted: October 30th 2018

HTS Launches New Web Site
Posted: December 15th 2017

VIEW ALL POSTS


Email Alerts
Home Why HTS Blog
Testimonials Directions
Contact Social Media
Full Site
Mobile Site Designed By Square 1 Design