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Just imagine, if one static picture is worth a thousands words, how much more useful is a video-clip of a 100m heat or rugby line-up! You can run the same clip again and again, as often as you like, until you’re satisfied you – or your coaching subjects – have fully understood every nuance of the activity being demonstrated.

You save time and money, which puts you in a stronger competitive position. By avoiding the traditional book printing, book binding and distribution process, we can get this information to you so much faster, and charge you less for the privilege. You won’t have to wait the three- to six-month delay that’s all too common with traditional textbook publishers, or pay anything for postage & packing.
As the author, John Shepherd, points out speed matters to virtually every competitive athlete, not just the most obvious candidates like 100m sprinters and speed skaters.

Think about it: who’d want to be in the shoes of an ultra-marathoner runner who, in the closing stages of a race, lacks the necessary ‘kick’ to break clear of the leading group and claim victory? Second place is second place whether your event is 100 metres – or 100 miles…

Speed can take a variety of different forms, depending on the sport and the event.

How many of them should you master?

John Shepherd’s comprehensive analysis of the phenomenon that is ‘speed’ identifies no fewer that eleven different types – and tells you what’s the best way to train for each of them. So there’s something of considerable value in this book for every competitor and coach, regardless of your sport.

Here’s a quick preview of what’s in John’s new book.

Optimum speed/skill speed
Think about it. Too much speed can sometimes be a disadvantage. If a long jumper, for example, builds up too much speed on the runway, he may not be able to take off into an effective jump. This is because he will have too little time on the take-off board to generate the force needed to convert speed into height and distance.

Similar problems occur in many other sports. In Rugby Union, Jonny Wilkinson knows his range when it comes to place kicks. He has developed his rhythm with painstaking practice over many years and inevitably slots the ball between the posts. The England half-back could swing his boot faster at the ball in an attempt to gain additional metres, but would probably sacrifice accuracy as a result.

So it is important for athletes to determine with their coaches an appropriate speed for their particular sports skills that does not compromise technical execution.

Out-and-out speed
There are obviously some activities that demand full expression of speed, sprinting being the most obvious example. But it is important to note that, while the sprinter needs to move his limbs as fast as possible during parts of the race, he must do this in a relaxed manner, since the effort involved in ‘trying too hard’ will tighten muscles and slow performance.

Out-and-out speed therefore calls for mastery of technique plus the ability to relax while the body is operating at maximum intensity. You’ll find a full discussion of this in Chapter 5, along with a ‘key tips’ guide on how to achieve optimum sprinting technique.

Acceleration speed
In order to achieve out-and-out or optimum skill/sports speed, a period of acceleration is often required. A sprinter, for example, must leave his blocks from a standing start, a footballer may need to turn and sprint to get onto the end of a pass from an equally static or off-balance position, while a tennis player must deliver his serve from a stationary base.

Developing this accelerative ability calls for different training methods and practices from those used for out-and-out speed and other speed types.

Endurance speed
Speed training is often neglected by endurance athletes, such as marathon runners and triathletes. Yet speed is crucial to their success. For the faster an athlete is:

The easier it will be for him to cruise at slower speeds during training and competition;
The more power he will have for hill climbs;
The better he will be at surging during a race to burn off the opposition;
The more he will have in reserve for a killer sprint finish.
Endurance speed is the ability to sustain repeated powerful and fast muscular contractions over predominantly aerobic race and training conditions. Ask yourself: do you have sufficient reserves of it for your event?

Speed endurance
Speed endurance can be defined as the ability of the body to perform an activity at a very fast speed under conditions where a high level of anaerobic energy production is required. Examples include 800m running and tennis match play involving long rallies. It differs from endurance speed in that the training methods used to develop it are usually more short-lived and focus on the anaerobic energy system. Interval training is a key training method for speed endurance.

Response speed
In many sports, a skill has to be performed in response to a cue. This cue could be aural, as with a sprinter reacting to the starting gun, or visual, as with a boxer avoiding a punch, a footballer responding to a change in the opposing team’s formation, or a cricket batsman reacting to a ball.

Reaction speed is key; a fraction of a second can be the difference between a gold medal and no medal at all. Read [BOOK TITLE] and you’ll know how to train for speed and make sure you’re first out of the blocks.

Body part speed
For some sports a particular limb must move as fast as possible - to throw an implement, for example, as with the javelin. Although speed and power is needed throughout the thrower’s body, his arm is the crucial link in the speed chain as it will advance the implement to optimum velocity at the point of release.

If your throwing arm or racquet arm is not fast enough, your performance will obviously suffer.

Team speed
The need for team speed is obvious in the case of a sprint relay team but, in fact, it is crucial to the success of virtually all other team sports, where players must move quickly and in concert in order to score a try or defend as a unit as in rugby. Developing this shared speed should be a training requirement in team sports. However, as you find out in chapter 7 of [BOOK TITLE], maintaining the speed of individual players can be difficult, particularly over a very long season with numerous matches.

Rotational speed
Rotational speed is key to many sports. Footballers rotate their bodies to turn and chase down opponents or the ball, while tennis players have to ‘wind’ up their body to hit a serve, a baseline forehand or backhand pass. In track and field, discus throwers spin with almost balletic grace before releasing their implements with the incredible force needed to achieve huge distances. Rotational speed can be vastly improved by the use of appropriate drills and training methods, as set out in chapters 6,8, and 9 of [BOOK TITLE].

Agility speed
Agility is another key sports speed requirement, characterised by quick feet, body co-ordination and fast reactions. Its execution depends on a mixture of balance, out- and- out speed, acceleration speed, strength, flexibility and co-ordination. Although a performer’s agility, relies heavily on the possession of optimum sports technique and ‘match sense’, it can be enhanced by the specific agility speed conditioning outlined by John Shepherd in his book.

Over-speed speed
This is the term used to describe training efforts that allow athletes to perform a speed skill to a level beyond what is normally achievable. It can involve the use of such specialist equipment as elastic chords, which literally drag you along to higher velocities. Lower-tech options include downhill sprinting and throwing lighter implements or balls than those used in competition.

To order your copy of [BOOK TITLE] at our discounted, pre-publication price click here.

Or read on for more details of the workbook’s contents.

What makes [BOOK TITLE] such an invaluable training resource for coaches and serious athletes alike is the consistent emphasis is on practical, usable and accessible information – training tips and techniques you can put together right away.

This is no academic, jargon-heavy textbook. It’s a how-to manual written by an experienced former international athlete who’s ‘been there and done it’ himself, and now wants to help you achieve your sporting goals as well. Coaches and self-coached athletes alike will benefit from John Shepherd’s step-by-step approach to training for speed.

So make sure you’re one of the very first to find out:

What’s the best single method that master athletes should use to offset theage-related decline in speed?
Why is the concept of ‘born fast’ little more than a myth – and what can you do to prove it to your competitors?
How can you ‘innoculate’ yourself against muscle soreness arising out of hard, downhill training?
Which exercises should you avoid, when doing eccentric contraction training, to minimise your chances of longer-term muscle damage?
Which pre-conditioning exercises can you use to ‘bullet-proof’ your body against potential injury?
Why, when performing a bench press, is it essential to concentrate on the lowering phase of the exercise?
What’s the best method to analyse the Range of Movement that’s appropriate for your event?
When constructing a weight-training regime, how do you select the exercises that provide the best preconditioning outcomes?
Which single exercise has proven to be the most effective in curing a range of Achilles tendon problems?
Why is it a good idea, when warming-up, to remove your shoes during the activity?
Why is jogging a more effective way of raising your body temperature, in the warm-up phase of a speed training session, than either skipping or cycling?
For runners, which preconditioning exercises are best to ‘innoculate’ you against shin splints, knee and ankle problems?
How should you go about integrating stretching into a speed training programme?
How can you bring down your sprint times simply by changing the type of spikes you wear?
How can speed training shoes reduce a track athlete’s likelihood of injury during training?
What are the limitations of medicine ball drills in plyometric training – and can do you overcome these?
Why is weight training is better performed with dumbells than barbells – and which weights device is even better than either of these?
How can you beat the ‘interference effect’ that puts many coaches and athletes (wrongly) off using weights to enhance speed?
How do you adapt the guiding principles of speed training to meet the specific requirements of your event?
It’s this practical, down-to-earth approach to speed training that make [BOOK TITLE] such value for money for coaches and serious athletes. It’s essential training and conditioning information that you can put to work for you right away.

To order your copy of [BOOK TITLE] at our discounted, pre-publication price click here.

Or read on for more details of the workbook’s contents.

[BOOK TITLE] concludes with a lengthy chapter that puts into practical effect all the explanation of preceding chapters. You’ll find concrete training programmes for a variety of sports and situations: preconditioning workouts for all kinds of speed; acceleration workouts for sprint athletes, rugby and football players; speed endurance workouts; endurance speed workputs; overspeed workouts for those requiring out-and-out speed; rotational/agility speed workouts; weight training for swimming; and more.

In short: everything you ever needed to know about gaining more speed – all in one practical, easy-to-use training manual.

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