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Speed Report: Off-Season Speed Development - A Dilemma For Small Schoolsby: Dale BaskettFootball Speed Specialist © More from this issue As I write this column each month, I receive more and more replies from coaches at smaller schools. It’s become apparent that most of them have something in common – that the off-season presents a challenge for speed and lifting development. The problem is that athletes at these schools need to be multi-sport athletes. The bulk of the football team plays two to three sports in a small school, so it’s almost impossible to fill the rosters on other sports if they were only playing football. This crossover process is a must for every small school that I’ve encountered. How do you train as a team in the off-season for speed when you only have a small core group remaining once football is complete? That‘s a question that requires creative thinking and collective cooperation. The truth of the matter is that it’s more of an issue compared to what larger schools face, in most cases. It can clearly be a disadvantage. However, on the other hand, you can take the situation and make it work positively for your program if you have a plan. The plan is realizing that the number of athletes remaining becomes your core nucleus for development. They can become the model for a later time frame when you get the group back together prior to the start of the next season. Coach Freuchte has been very successful, with an overall record of 113-28. He has also won three state championships and a runner-up over the last four years. Carl carries about 70 players, 9th grade through 12th. About 55 athletes play other sports year-round. With only 15 core kids remaining, he is faced with a dilemma of developing the other athletes who are busy with other sports. How do you handle this situation and build your athletes? Freuchte said that the coaching staffs must work together. He leaves the basketball team and wrestlers alone during the winter months. He takes the core that is just football, and then brings baseball, track, and soccer kids to a 6:00 am to 6:45 am training class for off-season lifting and speed development. The basketball and wrestlers will join in when spring arrives. When track and baseball season arrives in the spring, the athletes continue to train early except the sprinters are left alone. The non-sprint track athletes are a part of the morning training classes, Freuchte cuts back on the workload of the baseball, track, and soccer players during their season. This requires extra work for the coach but it’s what it takes to grow athletes during the off- season. To add salt to the wound, Freuchte lives in a cold climate and his school doesn’t have a field house. I asked him how does he do his speed work with three feet of snow and zero degree weather? “With our situation, we have to use the hallways before school to get it done,” said Freuchte. “Occasionally, we’ll go in the gym and do movement specificity work.” “We frame everything we’re going to do with the athletes each week,” said Fruechte. “Mentally, we teach them how they must visualize our tasks as a collective group. It requires a serious mental approach to each workout. The level of expectation is discussed all the time in a positive manner. Our job is to direct the kid’s mind-set and teach them how to control focus and energy, which is a valuable tool. This type of atmosphere and having the proper comprehension clears the pathway for better focus. We believe that less is more and more can be less. Often, quantity is less because of the lack of quality focused execution. We don’t substitute more when quality may be compromised.” The more often you take time each week discussing the mental side of training, the better the performances will be. Before long, the athletes will begin to take pride in the training atmosphere as a group. This will help your chances for developing speed to a higher level and your athletes will collectively buy in to your system. There’s nothing better than working with a group that feels mental togetherness. A directed mental atmosphere that’s consistently applied can result in both enormous production and group pride. Even though you are facing limited numbers in the off-season, you can get your athletes faster and moving better even though you’re pressed in various ways. The key is to be consistent with your quality focus towards production and mental guidance. You’ll be amazed at what you can accomplish by the end of the off-season. Last, but not least, remember that the core group you have will be instrumental as role models for the entire team. The athletes will see the value in the system and the way you have conducted the program which will expose it as a winner. |
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