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How To Train Correctly For A Sprint

Preparing For Sprinting

Sprinting, as an activity, requires excellent mobility, great tissue quality, and adequate strength to tolerate high levels of ground reaction force and varying joint angles. This increases the likelihood of injuries too if done without proper preparation. Hamstrings are most susceptible to injury during the early phase of sprinting.1

How To Prepare For A Sprint?

The methods of preparation vary depending on the surface you choose for sprint training—whether it’s a flat surface like running track, sports field, or flat turf or an uphill track.

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Sprinting On Flat Surfaces

Sprinting Uphill

Short-Term Preparation For Sprinting

When it comes to short-term preparation for sprinting, what you do hours or even minutes before sprinting can affect your performance drastically. The process involves raising the body temperature gradually with a general warm-up, which can include squats, push-ups, chin-ups, and jumping jacks, and then getting into fast-paced dynamic stretching.

Heavy Lifting

Lifting weights just a few minutes prior to sprinting has been found to improve performance as it helps sprinters engage their muscles better and move in better alignment with load, torque, and posture. Heavy lifting, followed by a 10-minute resting period, and then a sprint for up to 10 seconds is the perfect way to go.2

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Dynamic Stretching

Dynamic stretching before sprints is effective as it increases the muscles’ ability to store elastic energy and work toward better coordination. It warms up your muscles, thus preparing them for short and powerful bursts of energy. A 20-minute dynamic stretching before a 20 m sprint has been found to improve performance.3

Key Dynamic Stretches For Sprinters

Long-Term Preparation For Sprinting

If you are fairly new to sprinting, the best bet to avoid injury is, no doubt, preparation. A long-term preparation could help develop coordination between your arms and legs, build strength over time, and develop muscle tone. It would also help your body get used to the demands of the workout as structured preparation helps improve the lactic acid threshold, too. In this way, your muscles will not fail you when you go hard on it.

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Plyometric Exercises

Research suggests that rather than a single type of jump training, what’s most effective in improving your sprinting is a combination of sprint-specific plyometric exercises along with jumps with horizontal displacement4.

Types Of Plyometric Exercises

Plyometric exercises are intensive and should not be done more than two days a week. You also need to give your body ample time to recover. Here are some basic plyometric exercises for beginners:

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Yoga

Yoga is an excellent method to enhance speed and endurance for both sprinters and long-distance runners. A study on the effect of yoga on aerobic and anaerobic capacities of individuals showed that just three months of continuous yogic exercise could improve anaerobic capacity of individuals.5

Best Yoga Asanas For Sprinters

Sprinting provides your body a total workout. The main body parts that sprinting targets are your butt, hips, hamstrings, quads, calves, and abs. It is a great way to stay in shape, as it ramps up fat loss and increases the metabolic rate of the body. Whether you take the long-term or short-term route to prepare for sprints, the key here is to ensure that the method suits your style, form, and strength threshold so as to help you steer clear of injuries.

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References[+]

References
1 Orchard, John W. “Hamstrings are most susceptible to injury during the early stance phase of sprinting.” British journal of sports medicine 46, no. 2 (2012): 88–89.
2 Thatcher, Rhys, Rhys Gifford, and Glyn Howatson. “The influence of recovery duration after heavy resistance exercise on sprint cycling performance.” The Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research 26, no. 11 (2012): 3089–3094.
3 Turki, Olfa, Anis Chaouachi, David G. Behm, Hichem Chtara, Moktar Chtara, David Bishop, Karim Chamari, and Mohamed Amri. “The effect of warm-ups incorporating different volumes of dynamic stretching on 10- and 20-m sprint performance in highly trained male athletes.” The Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research 26, no. 1 (2012): 63–72.
4 de Villarreal, Eduardo Sáez, Bernardo Requena, and John B. Cronin. “The effects of plyometric training on sprint performance: A meta-analysis.” The Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research 26, no. 2 (2012): 575–584.
5 Saha, M., O. S. Tomer, K. Halder, and A. Pathak. “Aerobic and anaerobic performance improvement through yogic practice.” British Journal of Sports Medicine 44, no. Suppl 1 (2010):i68–i68.
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