I know some guys that can squat 400+ pounds. But honestly, they were much more naturally inclined to do so. As in, it wasn’t like they were consistant squatters 3x week, 5 straight years— or whatever-- and they didn’t drop in weight drastically if they skipped workouts for a week or two like I would.
Which is why i wondered if improving your squat was essential. I don’t think everyone has to improve in the same sense. Some athletes have big squats by default IMO. Sure they squat- and go hard and all that, but I think you know what Im getting at.
I wanna know if increasing squat strength makes you faster. Or is it arbitrary?
Can athletes A & B both be very fast… if athlete A has a very weak squat and athlete B has a strong squat? Will athlete A’s speed surpass athlete B if his squat improved significantly? Will B pass A if his squat improves significantly?
Im asking all of this because I have a weak squat, but I only have 3 months to develop my speed. I don’t want to be spending the time it takes to bump my squat up 50 pounds if it isn’t necessary. But obviously I would, if proven to be effective.
Like I said, I personally would spend 8 months-year developing great core strength, doing sprints & become good at jump rope, before even touching a weight & see where my speed was at first.
ok. i want to drop my 40 yard dash from 4.8x to 4.6x. I think its very possible to do in 3 months. I have made great gains in the past without hardly any speed training knowledge whatsoever. Now that I am getting a grasp of what Im doing, I believe the gains will come a lot more smoothly.
“Thus, have your entire program revolve around speed. The squats can help me get faster, as can the core exercises… but really, the vast majority of my time and energy should be spent running.”
I can not believe how many people lose sight of this. Almost all time spent “training” should be spent on speed exercises. In my opinion in this order:
Sprints
Sprint variations (sprints/plyo hybrids, fly’s, hills, speed bounds)
Granted, this exact order should not be used for everyone. Beginners especially should probably be hesitant about the plyos until a good strength base is built.
However, I think weight training has a limited role in sprinting. In my opinion, weight training should be used only as a means to an end for one of these purposes:
To decrease risk of injury for more high impact exercises.
To build exercise volume without stressing the cns from main sprint related exercises, i.e everything higher in the order above. This can be used for tapering purposes to peak for major meets and also to avoid plateauing.
To spend additional low cns time working on very specific event weaknesses, and this should be a rareity due to lack of carryover.
How leg weights are worse than squats for speed training is beyond me. Especially the amount of emphasis on double legged supposed ass to the ground squats on this site. I know the discussion would go round and round so this will be my only comment on it at this time. But 90 degree or lower two legged squat is as beneficial to sprinting as bench press (ok that is a bit of an exaggeration (only a small one), but I bet if you take a large enough sample the correlation between sprint speed and either of those two exercises would be about the same) Yes, yes correlation is not causation, I know.
And for those looking for an additional stimulus Strength Endurance exercises.
That is the spectrum of the f-t curve. As Charlie has said, an increase on one part of the curve has effects everywhere on the curve. I interpret this as meaning that Stre End. will not necessarily improve you’re max strength, but it will affect the dynamics of the max strength training effect (say you can produce near maximal force for longer, this will intensify a lift without having to be stronger). In that respect, we train weights not for their ability to make us faster but to intensify the dynamics of training. It is a competition between adaptation resources to intensify or to adapt specifically. For some the intensification is necessary for others it only takes away from the specific adaptation.
lol you honestly think bolt does some hardcore ab work? and really heavy weighted abs?
The core/hip flexors are the powerhouse to limb speeds (IMO). Not glute, quad & ham strength (Squats etc).
The core’s primary job is stabilizing you
If your running sub 10’s, your qualified to say that.
The CFTS involves tons of high rep ab work, not heavy abs. From what I’ve read about Powell’s training, it’s been some of the basic ab stuff + some med ball ab work. Bolt’s training has had a quick mention of core work. John Smith did not use heavy abs (at least not primarily) in his program.
How many sub 10 guys do you know, that are doing tons of heavy ab work/hardcore core exercises? and… they have made improvements in their speed only due to that?
For the general, yeah squatting 400-500 will probably make them run faster. But from what I’ve witnessed this isn’t the case.
It’ll make the muscles involved in sprinting, stronger. Just over a long term, it will help in speed.
Just too conclude. I was doing weighted ab work for almost 2 years straight & I was in denial all along believing I was strong there.
how much did your time drop before and after? I’ve done heavy abs too, and saw no noticably more improvements than I did doing no abs lol. Same goes for squats basically.
Getting stronger over a long period of time will make you faster.
As for the athlete A/B, the answer can all depend. Three things can happen (I’ve actually seen all 3 happen, and that’s just in my high school alone)
the weaker athlete gets slower after improving their squat a lot
-the weaker athlete gets faster after improving their squat
the weaker athlete’s speed is unaffected by improving their squat
It can vary, and how much of which option ends up happening, varies as well.
I’ve talked to someone who swore by heavy ATG squats, and talked to someone who said he’ll never squat again as long as he does track.
As for your 3 months, stick to the running and plyos.
So if increasing strength helps a sprinter with horizontal propulsion down the track & where led to believe Bolt, Gay & Powell don’t supplement there training with big lifts, Where in there training is this horizontal propulsion being developed???.. Plyo’s? Genetics?. Greater core strength?.
No one says they don’t do some lifting, probably quite “heavy” in some peoples mind, but they aren’t doing a bunch of 1-3rm heavy lifts on a routine basis.
Where do they get that specific strength - 20x30-40m hills would do that I would think. At least that is what Powell has done and probably Bolt. Add sled pulls that Powell and Bolt do as well. I bet they get better specific strength from that than they ever would with weights.
If you want an excellent explanation of the what, why and how of different weight programs for different groups of athletes with different facilities / weather conditions etc, check out the Weights for Speed lectures, they are really fascinating and explain why the Jamaican lifting program is the way it is, among many other things.
I think people get too caught up in the absolutes of lifting. That is, it does not matter if athlete A can squat 300 and athlete B squats 500. What matters is what, if anything, that output represents for that specific athlete. If the weight performance, regardless of the actual number, creates a stimulus for gains in power production and most importantly improved performance than that’s the role of that max for that exercise.
We all know people who can’t necessarily put up big weights for their bodyweight or where WE THINK someone who can put out big performances in various athletic endeavors (sprints, jumps etc.) should be able to do. Whatever Bolt or Powell can lift for various exercises, if that lift represents an improvement over what they were previously capable and helps to improve or maintain strength/power levels then that’s the role of the inclusion of that particular lift and the weight program in general.
No matter where they are at right now with their weights, it likely represents a gain or at least a maintenance of output that permits the performances on the track in conjunction, obviously, with their track work.
The important point I feel is not whether or not the numbers are bigger than someone else. I think people are at times looking for the formula-just as Charlie pointed out-of which there is no formula that will fit everyone.
Just because a top athlete does not lift huge numbers does not mean that the weights don’t represent a means/tool for advancing their performances. Their maxes don’t have to be huge or bigger than that of their competitors to assist them in maintaining or improving high levels of performance.
When you refer to a gain in power production, What are you actually referring to?. Is it a gain/improvement in limb speeds (both sets)? regardless of what #'s you put up in the gym.
Power production as measured by various tests of of power output- force platforms, jumps tests, med ball throws etc. or most importantly in place of tests, just the max. performance as that is really the most important test.
I always thought that weights were used as an extra stimulus for the cns after the speed work and for strengthening the specific muscled without worrying about speed of movement as this is taken care of during the speed sessions.
But wouldn’t slow movements in the gym carry over to slow movement on the track?.
This is what I have found, particularly with the big lifts.
I’ve seen more HS guys go bigger & bigger in the gym (Bench/Squat/Dead/Oly’s) & get slower & slower on the track than guys who didn’t lift any barbell.
The fastest guys I’ve know where all core strength, basic bodyweight exercises & plyo’s all with great relative strength, & I’m talking guys who ran 4.3, 4.4 40’s (Electronically timed).