  | 
     
 | 
      | 
    
     
    Quality Strength for Human Athletic Performance: A Guide to Speed Strength 
    Training
    by Charles Staley BS, MSS 
    Please send us your feedback on this 
    article. 
    Although most athletic skills and events depend upon a variety of 
    physical qualities, speed strength (also called power) certainly rates among 
    the most important. Whenever you need to accelerate yourself (as in running, 
    cycling, swimming, skating, or skiing), an external object (such as a ball, 
    a barbell, a javelin, or another person), or both (such as pushing a bobsled 
    or driving through an opposing lineman in football), your ability to 
    generate force with speed will be a primary determinant of your success. 
    As the duration of the event or skill becomes reduced, the need for speed 
    strength (I'll abbreviate it as "SS" from this point on) increases. However, 
    even triathletes rely heavily upon explosive strength as they sprint to the 
    finish line. It's not a matter of whether or not you need to develop SS, but 
    to what degree you need to prioritize it in your training. 
    SS is also a vital quality during emergency situations, such as when it 
    becomes necessary to quickly dodge a car when walking across the street, or 
    duck to avoid being hit by a stray ball. In fact, SS is the body’s preferred 
    method of force generation— the last time you had to lift a heavy object 
    from the floor to a high shelf, did you accelerate the load to make the task 
    easier, or did you make a concerted effort to lift the object with a 
    constant speed?! 
    For bodybuilders, SS training methods are immensely valuable for their 
    ability to improve intramuscular coordination (the ability to recruit high 
    threshold motor units), which has significant payoffs during later training 
    phases utilizing lower intensity loads. In other words, a two week training 
    phase emphasizing accelerative training techniques will potentiate the 
    ability to lift greater loads during a subsequent phase utilizing more 
    "traditional" bodybuilding lifting technique (i.e., constant tension, 
    avoiding joint lock-outs, etc). 
    Strength: the Multi-faceted Motor Quality
    Of course, SS is simply one expression of force output, and strength as a 
    bio-motor ability has many expressions. The following list briefly describes 
    the types of strength available to athletes: 
    Absolute Strength (maximal strength) 
    Absolute strength is defined as the amount of musculoskeletal force you 
    can generate for one all-out effort, irrespective of time or bodyweight. 
    This form of strength can be demonstrated or tested in the weight room 
    during the performance of a maximal, single repetition lift. While only 
    powerlifters need to maximize and demonstrate this type of strength in 
    competition, all athletes need to develop absolute strength as a foundation 
    for other bio-motor abilities such as SS, strength endurance, agility, and 
    others.1 For this reason, absolute strength is brought to high 
    levels in the preparatory period, and then "converted" to more 
    event-specific forms of strength later in the macrocycle. Absolute strength 
    can be displayed through three types of muscular actions: 
    1) Concentric Strength: the ability to overcome a resistance through 
    muscular contraction, i.e., the muscle shortens as it develops tension. 
    2) Eccentric Strength: displayed when a muscle lengthens as it yields to 
    a resistance. Eccentric strength is normally 30-50% greater than concentric 
    strength, meaning that you can lower significantly more weight in good 
    control than you can actually lift. This may be the result of increased 
    intra-muscular friction (a concept not yet validated by science) during the 
    eccentric portion of a lift. In eccentric muscular encounters with external 
    resistances, there are two possible scenarios which can occur:2 
    a) The resistance encountered is less than one’s maximal isometric 
    strength. In weight training applications, this applies to any load less 
    than 1RM. 
    b) The resistance encountered is more than one’s maximal isometric 
    strength. In weight training applications, this applies to any load more 
    than 1RM (commonly called "eccentric training"). 
    3) Static Strength: muscular contraction which does not cause external 
    movement of the resistance, either because the athlete has chosen to produce 
    exactly enough force to prevent the resistance from lowering, but not enough 
    to lift it; or because the external resistance is immovable. Static strength 
    is also observed during the momentary pause between the eccentric and 
    concentric portions of a movement. 
    Absolute Strength Forms the Basis for Speed Strength
    Despite the current preoccupation with plyometrics, specialized shoes, 
    and the like, improving absolute strength remains the most efficient way to 
    improve SS.3 
    In fact, Romanian strength & periodization specialist Tudor Bompa 
    suggests that "No visible increments of power are possible without clear 
    gains in maximal (absolute) strength."4 
    To appreciate the importance of absolute strength on SS, imagine a rocket 
    weighing 1000 pounds, with an engine capable of 1200 pounds of thrust. 
    This rocket has only 200 pounds of reserve force to propel itself. The 
    same rocket, when equipped with an engine rated at 3000 pounds of thrust, 
    will have 2000 pounds of reserve thrust that can be used for propulsion. 
    Now back to the gym: a 200 pound man capable of squatting 250 pounds for 
    a single rep will have a mere 50 pounds of reserve strength available to 
    propel his body upward during a vertical jump. Contrast this with a 200 
    pound elite-class powerlifter capable of squatting 600 pounds. Now we’ve got 
    400 pounds of strength reserve available, and all things being equal, will 
    have a vastly superior vertical jump compared to the novice squatter. 
    Relative Strength 
    Whereas absolute strength refers to strength irrespective of bodyweight, 
    relative strength is a term used to denote an athlete's strength per unit of 
    bodyweight (his or her "pound for pound strength"). It can be used as a 
    modifier for other categories of strength, such as speed strength or 
    strength endurance. So, if two athletes of different bodyweights can power 
    clean (a display of SS) 275 pounds, they have equal speed strength for that 
    lift, but the lighter athlete has greater relative speed strength. 
    Athletes who compete in weight-class events depend heavily on relative 
    strength, as do athletes who must overcome their bodyweight to accomplish a 
    motor task (i.e., long jump, sprinting, etc.). Further, sports which have 
    aesthetic requirements (figure skating, gymnastics, etc.) demand the 
    development of strength without a commensurate gain in bodyweight. 
    As a side note, in the World of sport, lighter athletes have better 
    relative strength than heavier athletes, whereas the heavier athletes get 
    the nod for absolute strength. In Olympic weightlifting for example, 
    elite-level athletes in light weight classes have lifted triple-bodyweight 
    from the floor to an overhead position. World-class competitors in the 
    superheavyweight division are unable to lift even double-bodyweight; 
    however, the absolute poundages they lift are far greater than that of their 
    lighter peers. 
    Since strength training targets the neuro-muscular system, strength can 
    be developed through two very different means— by applying stress either to 
    the muscular or to the neural aspect of the system. The former method is 
    usually accomplished through the application of "bodybuilding" methods 
    (repetitions between 6-12 to exhaustion, using continuous tension 
    techniques), and results in strength gains through an increase in muscle 
    cross-section. The latter method employs higher intensity training 
    (repetitions between 1 and 5 using accelerative technique and full 
    recoveries between sets), and increases in strength are the result of the 
    body's improved ability to recruit more of its existing motor unit pool. 
    Contrary to conventional wisdom, athletes who depend upon relative 
    strength or SS should not completely avoid bodybuilding methods, which, when 
    used judiciously, can be used to facilitate recovery between periods of 
    intensive nervous system training. And, as you might expect, I strongly 
    recommend that bodybuilders keep an open mind with regards to SS methods as 
    well. 
    Speed Strength 
    Now to the topic du jour: SS is defined as work divided by time, where 
    work is defined as force x distance. Therefore, SS is defined as force x 
    distance, divided by time. SS is characterized by three distinct components:
     
    
      - Starting strength: Defined as the ability to recruit as many motor 
      units (MU’s) as possible instantaneously at the start of a movement.4  
      Common examples include the lunge in fencing, coming off the line in 
      football, and the start in short sprints.
 
      - Explosive strength: This quality refers to acceleration or rate of 
      force development. In other words, once you’ve recruited a maximal number 
      of MU’s, how long can you keep them recruited? In his seminars, Dr Fred 
      Hatfield, co-founder of the 
      International Sports Sciences Association and the first man to 
      officially squat 1000 pounds, compares starting strength to the flash bulb 
      of a camera, and explosive strength as a flash that stays on and becomes 
      brighter and brighter the longer it stays on.
 
     
    With regards to above distinctions, different sporting skills and events 
    can be classified as either starting or explosive strength events, depending 
    on the relative proportion of speed and strength required. The javelin event 
    in track and field would be classified as a starting strength event because 
    the implement is very light, which permits the athlete to impart a great 
    degree of speed during the throw. Conversely, the shot is relatively heavy, 
    which means that less speed can be achieved. This makes the shot put an 
    explosive strength event. Thus, it logically follows that starting strength 
    athletes emphasize relatively lighter weightloads in strength training than 
    do explosive strength athletes.  
    
      - Stretch Shortening Cycle (Reactive Strength): Although traditionally 
      classified as a component of SS, reactive strength is more accurately 
      thought of as an independent motor quality.5 It involves the 
      storage of potential kinetic energy during the eccentric portion of a 
      movement, which is then converted to actual kinetic energy during the 
      subsequent concentric phase— much like stretching and releasing an elastic 
      band.
 
     
    During many skills (jumping rope, for example), the working muscles 
    attempt to maintain static contraction, with force output being provided by 
    the storing and release of elastic energy through the tendons. Since static 
    muscular activity requires less energy than dynamic muscular activity, 
    reactive strength is an extremely energy-efficient way of moving— you can do 
    more work with less calories. This is why novice exercisers can always be 
    seen doing exercises in the easiest possible manner, using quick, choppy 
    movements, whether it’s on the bench press or the stair climber. Reactive 
    strength is also the method of choice when someone who is tired and/or weak 
    gets up out of a chair: instead of simply standing up, they will actually 
    lean back first, and then quickly reverse this action, springing out of the 
    chair. If you ask someone to rise out of a chair using pure concentric 
    movement, it looks very unusual.  To appreciate the effect of reactive 
    strength on force production, perform a vertical jump in a normal manner, 
    where you first crouch, and then rapidly switch and jump upwards as 
    explosively as possible. Next, crouch, but pause for five seconds (this 
    pause will dissipate most if not all of the stored potential kinetic 
    energy), and then jump upward. You'll find that the jump where the crouch 
    (or eccentric phase) was IMMEDIATELY followed by the jump results in a more 
    successful attempt. The key to preserving as much potential kinetic energy 
    as possible is to switch from eccentric to concentric as rapidly as 
    possible. 
    How Muscles Produce Force
    1) MU recruitment (intramuscular coordination): All muscle fibers are one 
    component of what physiologists call "motor units." A MU is defined as a 
    motor neuron (or nerve cell) and all the muscle fibers it innervates or 
    "recruits." Without going into excruciating detail, there are several 
    essential bits of information that athletes and coaches should understand 
    about the functioning of MU’s:  
    
      - All the fibers of a MU tend to have the same characteristics.5  
      When all the fibers are type II, the motor unit is said to be a high 
      threshold or "fast" MU. If the fibers are Type I, it is a low threshold or 
      "slow" MU. See Table 1 for an in-depth 
      description of fiber types.
 
      - The all or none principle: When an action potential is sent from the 
      cell body to the muscle fibers, one of two events will occur. If the 
      action potential is strong enough, all the fibers of that motor unit will 
      contract maximally. If the action potential is not strong enough, nothing 
      will happen. In a nutshell, muscle fibers either contract all the way, or 
      not at all. When the body needs to apply more force, it simply recruits 
      more MU’s. Generally, untrained people have limited ability to recruit 
      high threshold MU’s because they are unfamiliar with high-tension efforts.
 
      - The size principle: MU’s are recruited in order of size— small to 
      large. This explains why we can use the muscle to pick up something light 
      (a pencil) or heavy (a dumbbell). As resistance increases, the body 
      recruits more MU’s.
 
     
    2) Intermuscular coordination: 
    the ability of different muscles to cooperate during the performance of a 
    motor task. Muscles can function in several different ways depending on the 
    task at hand. The most fundamental roles that muscles assume are listed 
    below:  
    
      - Prime Mover: The primary muscle responsible for a movement around a 
      joint at any given point in time. For example, during the bench press 
      exercise, the pectoralis major is the biggest and strongest muscle 
      involved, and as such it provides the most force during most of the 
      exercise.
 
      - Synergist: A synergist is a muscle which dynamically assists the prime 
      mover. Going back to the bench press example, the front deltoid muscle and 
      triceps would be considered synergists in this exercise.
 
      - Stabilizer: Stabilizers are muscles which anchor or stabilize one part 
      of the body (through static activity), allowing another part to move. In 
      other words, they assist the prime mover and synergists through static or 
      "isometric" muscular contraction. The stabilizer role of muscles can be 
      trained with exercises conducted in an unstable environment, which might 
      involve dumbbells, Swiss balls, wobble boards, or other devices designed 
      for this purpose.
 
     
    For clarification, be aware that prime movers, synergists, and 
    stabilizers are not different types of muscles— they are ways in which 
    muscles perform. A single muscle might be a prime mover in one situation, 
    and a stabilizer in another situation.  
    
      - Agonist/antagonist relationship: (Not to be confused with the roles 
      described above). For every muscle in the body, there is another muscle 
      capable of resisting its force. If this were not the case, controlled 
      human movement would not be possible. When you throw a punch for example, 
      your tricep is one of the primary agonists (you can distinguish between 
      these two terms by remembering that "the agonist is the one inagony"), as 
      it is the muscle which extends the elbow. The primary antagonist during 
      punching is the biceps, which acts eccentrically to control the extension 
      force created by the triceps so that you don’t hyper-extend your elbow at 
      the end of the movement.
 
     
    3) Rate Coding: The nervous system can vary the strength of muscular 
    contraction not only by varying the number of MU’s recruited, but also by 
    varying the firing rate of each MU, called rate coding. The tension that a 
    MU develops in response to a single action potential from the nervous system 
    is called a "twitch." As the stimulus from the nervous system becomes 
    stronger and stronger, the twitches per millisecond become more and more 
    frequent until they begin to overlap, causing greater amounts of tension to 
    be generated by the muscle fiber. The mechanism behind rate coding is very 
    similar to the way in which increased vibrational frequency of a sound 
    increases it’s pitch. 
    As an example, a muscle comprised of 100 MU’s would have 100 graded 
    increments available to it. In addition, each MU can vary it’s force output 
    over about a 10-fold range by varying its firing rate (e.g., from 10 to 50 
    impulses per second). For any set of conditions, the force of contraction is 
    maximal when all MU’s have been recruited and all are firing at the optimal 
    rate for force production. 
    The size of a given muscle may in part determines the relative role of 
    rate coding to total muscular force development.6 
    In small muscles, most MU’s are recruited at a level of force less than 
    50% of maximal force capacity.  Forces requiring greater tensions are 
    generated primarily through rate coding. In large proximal muscles (such as 
    the pectoralis and lats), the recruitment of additional MUs appears to be 
    the main mechanism for increasing force development up to 80% of absolute 
    strength and even higher. In the force range between 80% and 100% of 
    absolute strength, force is increased almost exclusively by intensification 
    of the MU firing rate. 
    Training Methods for Speed Strength
    Since SS is comprised of speed and strength, it becomes important to 
    consider what can be done to improve these two qualities independently, 
    since an improvement in either aspect will improve the whole. 
    "Traditional" Strength Training 
    Since speed is primarily a genetically-inherited characteristic of the 
    nervous system, it responds poorly to training, as compared to strength, 
    which is perhaps the easiest motor quality to improve. For this reason, and 
    because safer methods should be considered before more risky ones, the 
    starting point for all athletes who wish to promote SS is traditional 
    strength training. (I use the term "traditional" to refer to common weight 
    room exercises performed in a traditional bodybuilding manner using a 
    variety of intensities). 
    Compensatory Acceleration Training (CAT) 
    CAT training is a distinct form of accelerative lifting coined by Dr. 
    Fred Hatfield. It refers to compensatorily speeding up your movement in such 
    a way that improved leverages are compensated for. For example, when 
    ascending out of a deep squat position, mechanical leverage begins to 
    improve once you pass the "sticking point." This improving leverage reduces 
    the tension on the working muscles, and in turn, the training stimulus is 
    compromised. Deliberately accelerating through this movement path serves to 
    increase muscular tensions. CAT technique takes time to master, because the 
    acceleration must continue past the sticking point, yet end before the 
    antagonist muscles are triggered into decelerating the movement in an effort 
    to prevent joint hyperextension or loss of control. This "braking" action 
    would be detrimental to normal coordination patterns involved with common 
    athletic skills such as hitting, throwing, jumping, and kicking. 
    Ballistic Training 
    William Kraemer, perhaps this country’s most respected and prolific 
    strength researcher, uses the term "ballistic training" to describe 
    movements that are "accelerative, of high velocity, and with projection into 
    free space."7 Ballistic training involves plyometrics, modified 
    Olympic lifting, jumping, throwing, and striking movements (such as punching 
    or kicking a heavy bag). 
    Kraemer argues that, in traditional barbell training, a significant 
    portion of the movement path (specifically, the end of the concentric phase) 
    is spent decelerating the bar— a protective measure assumed by the 
    antagonists to maintain joint integrity (in upper body movements such as 
    bench pressing), or to prevent the athlete from leaving the ground in 
    exercises such as the squat. If Kraemer’s contention is correct, one would 
    choose to gradually reduce the volume of traditional barbell drills as the 
    training cycle progresses, in favor of ballistic exercises which lack this 
    deceleration phase, making them easier to learn and much more 
    coordination-specific for most athletes. 
    The modified Olympic lifts 
    The sport of Olympic weightlifting (sometimes called "weightlifting") 
    contests two separate lifts: the snatch, where the barbell is grasped with a 
    wide grip, and explosively pulled to an overhead position in a single 
    movement; and the clean and jerk, where the barbell is grasped with a 
    narrower grip, "cleaned" to the shoulders, and finally "jerked" to an 
    overhead position. 
    Competitive lifters reach very deep squat positions as they struggle to 
    get under ponderous weights prior to achieving the overhead position. But 
    when slightly lighter weights are used, the lifter can manage to get under 
    the weight without going below parallel, meaning that the top of the thighs 
    never goes past the point of being parallel to the floor. When a lifter can 
    accomplish this, the lift is called a power clean (or power snatch). The 
    term "power" indicates that the load was not maximal, since the lifter 
    didn't have to squat to rock bottom to get under it. Thus, a power clean has 
    less of a force component and more of a speed component than a competitive 
    "squat clean." 
    Arthur Dreshler, MSS, author of The 
    Weightlifting Encyclopedia, eloquently describes the benefits of Olympic 
    lifting and its derivatives for athletes:8 
    1) Olympic lifts teach an athlete how to explode (to activate a maximum 
    number of motor units rapidly and simultaneously). 
    2) Olympic lifts teach the ability to apply force with his or her muscle 
    groups in the proper sequence (i.e., from the center of the body to the 
    extremities). This is a valuable technical lesson for any athlete who needs 
    to impart force to another person or object. 
    3) Olympic lifts teach how to accelerate objects (including other people) 
    under varying degrees of resistance. 
    4) Olympic lifts teach how to effectively receive forces from another 
    moving body. 
    5) The actual movements performed while executing the Olympic lifts are 
    among the most common and fundamental in sport. 
    6) The Olympic lifts are commonly used to measure an athlete's force 
    output capabilities. 
    If you are unfamiliar with the Olympic lifts and their derivatives. I 
    strongly suggest that you find either an
    ISSA-Certified Specialist in Sports 
    Conditioning, or a USA Weightlifting 
    Certified Coach in your area who can assist you with these exercises. 
    These lifts, though not beyond the capabilities of most athletes, are more 
    complex than the majority of strength training exercises. 
    Plyometric Training 
    Although "plyos" are overused by many athletes in their quest for the 
    "magic pill" solution to their training problems, plyometric drills 
    performed with bodyweight, weighted jackets, light resistances such as 
    medicine balls, logs, sand sacks and gymnastic equipment can be a valuable 
    component of a SS development program. 
    Plyometric training programs must be designed with sufficient recovery 
    periods to ensure that fatigue does not take the "elasticity" out of the 
    athlete’s movements, since it is this repeated elastic neuromuscular control 
    of impact which provides the training effect. 
    Testing Your Speed Strength: The Max Jones Quadrathlon.9
    Few athletes are aware of this unique and very useful testing implement 
    created by the English track & field coach of the same name. The MJQ can be 
    used to regularly monitor your level of speed strength, and can also used as 
    a fun competition several times a year. This test is very easy to administer 
    (you’ll need to do this at your local high school or college track) and 
    involves only a tape measure and a stop-watch. One note of caution, however: 
    The four test drills, although relatively simple, will take a toll on your 
    body (particularly your hip flexors) if you have never done them before, or 
    if it’s been years since you’ve done them. If you fall into this category, I 
    strongly suggest you practice these drills for before going at them "full 
    bore." Start with very low volume (just a few repetitions of each drill) and 
    progress gradually over a series of 4-6 sessions. 
    The test drills are as follows: 
    Three Jumps: Feet together, hop three times and land in a long jump pit. 
    Measure from your starting position to the closest disturbance of the sand 
    where you landed. 
    Standing Long Jump: Standing at the edge of a long jump pit, with toes 
    slightly over the edge of the board, perform a standing long jump into the 
    pit. Measure from the lip of the board to the closest disturbance of the 
    sand where you landed. 
    Thirty Meter Sprint: Using starting blocks (you may also have a partner 
    place his or her foot behind your lead foot to simulate a block), start on 
    the command of a timer at the finish line. The timer starts the watch when 
    your back foot makes contact with the ground on the first step, and stops it 
    when you break the finish line. 
    16lb Overhead Shot: Standing on top of a shot put stopboard (your back to 
    the pit), dip down (much like the preparatory crouch for a vertical jump), 
    swing the shot between the legs, and then extend and throw the shot overhead 
    backwards. It is not necessary to remain on the stopboard. Measure from the 
    lip of the stopboard to the first point of impact. 
    Please see Table 2 for the quadrathlon scoring 
    tables. Simply convert your scores into the numerical scores provided, and 
    total for your MJQ rating. 
    A Periodized Training Program for SS Development: The Rule of Thirds
    Since fatigue is specific to the motor quality being trained, when 
    microcycles with different objectives and varying demands follow each other, 
    it promotes enhanced recovery, allows for maintenance of maximal strength 
    and body composition during periods devoted to SS (and vice versa), and 
    protects against "overuse" types of injury. The "rule of thirds" is a 
    planning concept which partitions each mesocycle into thirds— the first two 
    thirds are spent training the targeted motor ability; the final third is 
    spent training a complementary motor ability to provide recovery and balance 
    to the program. 
    In this program, maximal strength is the targeted motor ability for the 
    first six weeks, while SS is the focus of the final six weeks. 
    Note: Before initiating this training program, complete the MJQ and 
    record your score. At the completion of the program, re-take the quadrathlon 
    to assess the effects of the training. 
    Citius, Altius, Fortius! 
    A Periodized Training Cycle for SS Development 
     
    References
    
      1) Hatfield, F.C. (Ed.)(1998). Fitness: The Complete Guide. 
      Santa Barbara, CA: International Sports Sciences Association.
      2) Dick, F.W. (1997). Sports Training Principles. London: 
      A&C Black. 
      3, 5) Komi, P.V., (Ed.) (1992) Strength and Power in 
      Sport. London: Blackwell Scientific Publications 
      4) Bompa, T. O. (1993).
      
      Periodization of Strength. Toronto: Veritas Publishing, Inc. 
      5) Hatfield, F.C. (1989).
      
      Power: A Scientific Approach. Chicago: Contemporary Books. 
      6) Zatsiorsky, V.M. (1995). Science and Practice of 
      Strength Training. Champaign: Human Kinetics Publishers. 
      7) Kraemer, W.J., & Newton, R.U. Muscle Power. Muscular 
      Development, March, 1995 
      8) Drechsler, A. (1998). The
      
      Weightlifting Encyclopedia. Flushing, NY: A is A Communications. 
      9) Dunn, G.D., & McGill, K. (1994). The Throws Manual 
      (2nd. Ed.), Mountain View, CA: Tafnews Press
      
     | 
      | 
    
    
        |