My high school and college
sports participation was exclusively in the field events. I threw only
the shot put in high school and graduated to throwing the discus and
hammer in college.
In 1967, prior to my senior year of
high school, I was privileged to work out with two world-class throwers, Dave
Davis and George Woods. Woods would be the silver medalist in the 1968 Olympic
shot put.
My only connection to sprinters at
that time was my brother, Steve, who was a Division II All-American sprinter at
what was then called San Fernando Valley State College. It was in his senior
year that he improved his performance most dramatically. His sprint coach had
not changed his workout over the previous three years, but in my brother’s
senior year I introduced him to the weight room. Truly I cannot recall which
lifts he was doing, but certainly nothing I showed him would have been designed
specifically for sprinters, especially since I didn't know the difference
between what a shot putter required to improve performance versus the sprinter.
Skipping ahead a few decades, I was
enjoying coaching shot put at Los Angeles Baptist high school, located in the
San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles.
Track season had just finished. I was
looking forward to a summer without any coaching responsibilities, when a young
female sprinter on our team approached me with a request, "I want to work
with you in the weight room." There were three other teammates of hers
nodding their heads as a sign of their desire to participate in the training as
well.
I asked the sprinter, Allyson Felix, why she wanted to strength
train since many, if not most, high school females would rather not take the
chance of looking like a male bodybuilder.
Wes Smith, the head coach of the track
team, filled in the blanks as to why Felix wanted to lift weights.
Felix was invited to participate in an
elite athlete performance assessment because of her finish in the USA National Junior
Championship.
She was tested by Tony Wells, an
excellent coach himself, representing USA Track and Field. Coach Wells tested
all of the sprint athletes on behalf of USATF. Wells told Felix that she had
the ability to achieve world record performances from 60 meters to 800 meters
if, and only if, her strength improved dramatically.
A battery of tests on Felix showed
that while her running performances were nothing less than phenomenal for a
freshman competitor, her performance was subpar in virtually every method used
to test a sprinter’s strength as it pertains to running fast.
From both Allyson and Coach Smith, it
was clear that I had been given the job of making this talented young lady
significantly stronger.
The narrative I've just given should
make it clear to anybody that I did not have any knowledge of the specifics of
strength training for sprinters. The reason I didn't know it was because I
didn't care.
All of my attention over the previous
four years have been focused on another athlete, who I had begun to work with
in her freshman year and had just completed her senior year as the number three
shot-putter in the nation.
I do recall watching Allyson run in
her freshman year, because she was beating athletes that were as much as three
years older than her and with a lot more experience behind them. I had no
knowledge of the importance of stride length or stride rate. I had no idea of
what sprinters did for practice. I had no idea what form drills they may have
been using.
One thing that did stick out in my
mind was that Allyson seemed to be able to carry her speed over a much longer
distance than those whom she raced. In other words, she did not have any explosive
power out of the blocks but she would run at a pace that seemed to bring the
other racers back to her as they began to fatigue.
She had a relatively small build and no muscle mass to speak of. It seemed to me that it would be to her advantage
if we could make her stronger without increasing bodyweight. I did not think
that increasing strength would make her run at a faster pace but that it would
allow her to carry her speed longer.
It turns out of course that I was only
partially right.
She did not show a consistent reaction
to the starting signal. Once clear of the blocks, Felix’s acceleration exceeded
that of her competition, allowing her to move into contention early.
It was Tony Wells, a highly respected
and knowledgeable track coach that recognized the need for strength and not
Barry Ross. The protocol that we use today is significantly shorter than what
we did that first year with Allyson Felix because we recognize that the basic
need of the sprinter is improvement in mass-specific force. The same training
needed for improving mass-specific force also decreases rate of speed
decrement. It was not Barry Ross that recognized the need for improvement in
mass specific force and decreases in rate of speed decrement; rather, it was
Barry Ross reacting to the findings of various scientists researching the
mechanics of high speed running. Their research is available to anyone truly interested
in improving performance. This goes for both coach and athlete.
Certainly there are many coaches who
have their own "secret sauce" for enhancing speed training. Just as
certainly they feel that their methods are as viable and valuable as any other
method. Following them may result in improved performances similar to what we
see.
The difference is, most likely, how
much less time and effort we can get to the same (or better) result.
Barry Ross