Randy Huntington Answers Listener Questions on Speed and Power Development

Today’s show welcomes back track coach Randy Huntington, a track coach who has spent his recent years as the national track and field coach for the Chinese Athletics association.  Randy has coached numerous Olympians, gold medalists, and world record holders in his time as a track coach, and one of his recent successes was training Su Bingtian, Asian record holder in the 100m dash.  Bingtian, en-route to his 9.84 second run, covered 60m in 6.29 seconds and 40 yards in 4.08 seconds as per NFL combine timing.

The past shows with Randy have been loaded with the wisdom of an elite coach and have been very popular.  For this episode, Randy took listener questions, and gives his answers on a variety of topics.  Some particular trends for this show included his specific speed training workouts and intensities, his thoughts on traditional strength and hypertrophy methods for speed and power, coaching relaxation and sprint technique, as well as Randy’s thoughts on the ever-debated Nordic hamstring exercise (and hamstring injury prevention training in general).  This and much more is covered on this tremendous Q&A episode.

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Randy Huntington Answers Listener Questions on Speed and Power Development

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4:11 – The importance of intuition in coaching and performance

7:33 – How understanding the response of animals can help coaches gain better intuition with training human athletes

11:27 – How to “rig” a seated calf machine to attempt to replicate the Keiser seated calf machine

15:23 – Randy’s thoughts on strength development for speed

22:49 – Randy’s favorite top speed and acceleration sessions

28:25 – How does Randy teach relaxation in sprinting, and his thoughts on mini-hurdles/wickets

31:03 – Why Randy doesn’t have his athletes train flying sprints at their maximal speed

37:02 – Considerations in how Randy uses “time of task” sprints, versus simply sprinting a distance for time

42:35 – A recap of how Randy uses water and general strength based recovery methods

45:17 – More thoughts on how and why Randy doesn’t train his flying sprints at maximal velocity each week

48:09 – How Randy’s training has evolved over his years as a coach

52:46 – Teaching acceleration mechanics to young athletes who don’t have much physical strength yet

54:56 – What key data points does Randy use to assess his athletic process

1:00:00 – Randy’s thoughts on overspeed “wind-shield” training such as used by Marcell Jacobs

1:06:39 – How Randy alters strength training when sprinters are in-season

1:07:51 – How Randy would train an athlete who is naturally weak, and if he plays to an athlete’s strengths, or works primarily to bring up weaknesses

1:11:38 – Randy’s thoughts on hamstring injury prevention and Nordic hamstrings


“I try not to do too hard of strength training, until people can execute the technical (speed) component I want them to, unless that technical component needs strength to happen.  I don’t look at strength training as a way to create anything, because I first want them to be able to get them to move through the (skill) positions that are necessary, and then we add strength on top of that”

“We still interpret power as force only… mostly because we haven’t had very effective ways to test it”

“My basic pattern is heavy sled, 50% of bodyweight or higher, then 1080, using 15-20% of bodyweight, then unloaded”

“We mostly use 6” mini-hurdles”

“I rarely go above 95% (of max speed) (in flying sprints in training)”

“I use (time of task) sprints specifically for testing”

“I only test the 30m fly (max) at most every 6 weeks, and usually every 2 months”

“Flying 30 is my big (“data oriented”) test”

“I don’t look at the weight of the clean, I look at the power of the clean”

“100 guys get the 40 (second test), 200 guys get the 45 (second test)… I won’t take Su past the 20 second test”

“The horse trailer behind a car (overspeed) gives the opportunity to run so relaxed”

“If I am doing (hypertrophy) I would do 1 day a week, over a 3 week cycle, if we did two cycles.  It’s not a steady diet of it; you substitute one with a little more hypertrophy stuff to get this kid to get a better cross sectional area to express more force along with the elasticity he has”

“(Nordic hamstrings) are too much for a track athlete unless you are barely doing any running at all”

“If (Nordics) were the key for being fast and performance, Su would have trouble with 15 kilos and my female long jumper would knock out 30 kilos… I like it for injury prevention, but the Keiser moving fast and powerfully; you got a really nice injury prevention going on there”

“I use the Keiser leg curl, really fast (for hamstring training)”


About Randy Huntington

Randy Huntington is currently the national track and field coach for the Chinese athletics association and has over 45 years of coaching experience.  Huntington is rated as a USATF Master Coach in the jumps – one of only five in the U.S. He has been the coach for many world-class athletes over the years, including eight Olympians and seven World Championship Team members. Mike Powell and Willie Banks set world records in the long jump and triple jump, respectively, while under his tutelage. Six of his athletes have been in the U.S. all-time top ten in their respective events.  Randy has coached Su Bingtian, the Asian record holder in the 100m dash who ran a time of 9.84 seconds, and recorded the equivalent of a 4.08 40-yard dash en route to that 9.84 second time.

Huntington coached Powell to the Olympic Games in 1988, 1992 and 1996, where Powell won a pair of silver medals in the long jump. On Aug. 30, 1991 in Tokyo, Powell broke Bob Beamon’s 23-year-old long jump record that was expected to never be broken, leaping 29-4 1/2 (8.95m) – a record that still stands. Willie Banks, who Huntington coached to the 1988 Olympics, broke the world triple jump record with a mark of 58-11 1/2 (17.97m), June 16, 1985 in Indianapolis, and under Huntington’s coaching twice jumped over 18 meters, which is the longest in American history.

Huntington has also coached Olympians Joe Greene (long jump bronze medal in 1992), Sheila Hudson (American indoor and outdoor record-holder in the triple jump), Al Joyner, Darren Plab, Tony Nai and Sharon Couch. At least one of his athletes has competed in every summer Olympic Games since 1984. Powell, Greene, Hudson, Couch and Nai were all World Championship team members that he coached, along with Kathy Rounds and Kenta Bell.

Huntington has also worked with professional athletes in other sports, notably football. He has worked as a conditioning and/or speed consultant for several teams including Indianapolis, St. Louis, Miami, Denver, Philadelphia and Cincinnati, and has worked with numerous individual players including Trace Armstrong, Terry Kirby, Henry Ellard and Ed McCaffrey. He has also worked with college football programs at Florida, Oklahoma and Notre Dame including training for the NFL combine, working with athletes such as Kyle Turley and Grant Wistrom.

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