Call Directions Email
Heisler Training Systems
Vegan Sharks and Sprints
Posted: December 13th 2018

Get in your car and start driving towards California. No maps. No directions. Get into your car and just start driving without thinking too much about how to get to California. When you arrive in Canada instead of California, it will probably become clear to you that you should have had some sort of focus on what you where you were trying to go.

 Improving sprinting speed needs to be approached with a similar focus. Running and hoping it makes you faster is along the lines of swimming with sharks and hoping they are going vegan this month. You need to focus on improving specific aspects of sprinting in order to run faster on the field. This requires a laser like focus on what you are doing.

 Your muscles and tendons have this ability to stretch, store energy and snap back to normal length. Think of what happens when you stretch a rubber band. That snap back after the muscles and tendons have been stretched can help produce force. Force production is crucial in order to improve your sprinting speed. This is known as elastic energy. Hold your right palm on a table and pull the index finger back and release. When your finger snaps back down to the table, that is elastic energy doing its thing. Pull your finger back further this time and watch as it snaps back faster and harder. The greater stretch caused a faster, more forceful reaction.

 When you sprint, your body is angled forward at around 45 degrees from the ground.  Your hips drive your lead leg forward and up, knees first while your back foot is in contract with the ground behind your center of gravity. As your lead leg moves from the ground forward and up, elastic energy is stored. As the muscles drive the leg back down toward the ground, muscular effort and elastic energy are used to punch the ground and propel the body forward with the stride. Muscular effort is voluntary, meaning you actually have to try to exert force.  Elastic energy is a naturally occurring part of human movement. No extra effort required.

 As we noted earlier with the palm on the table experiment, a big stretch will store more elastic energy and release much more elastic energy than a small stretch. You need to make sure your strides are creating as much elastic energy as possible.

 The easiest way to improve this ability is to perform sled sprints or sled pushes with a weight that is heavy enough to allow you to maintain a 45-degree body angle over a 10 yard distance. Focus your efforts on punching your knees forward and up on every stride while keeping your shin angle similar to your body angle.

 It doesn’t matter how strange or goofy it might feel at first. It does not matter how slow it might make you feel at first. Sometimes you need to slow things down in order to speed them up.

 You need to train this quality 2 or 3 times per week until it feels natural. Take video of yourself and check your technique regularly. Perform 4-6 sled sprints with about a minute of rest in between each sprint. After your sled sprints, perform 3-4 additional sprints without a sled. This is important because you won’t have a sled on the field and you want to keep the normalcy of un-resisted sprints.

 Please don’t hesitate to reach out if you would like to dive a little deeper into the world of sprints. I love talking about this stuff. I like chatting about vegan sharks too. Either way.



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