you just can't teach that! intro
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Can speed be taught? The answer is YES! Kenneth Taylor, Speed Specialist and Chicago Bears Super Bowl Champion, will take you through an in-depth and unique approach to speed training. Whether you are age 10 or 60, Ken can help any athlete run faster than ever before.TRANSCRIPT
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Preface 1
Where It All Started 7
Introduction to Speed – Using the Physics of Earth 19
1) Psychology of Speed 21
2) The Greatest Secret Weapon 25
3) The Power of 10,000 31
4) Visualize, Imagine, & Dream Your Way to Running Faster 39
5) The "Aha" Moment: The Athlete’s Epiphany 45
6) Confidence and Self-Concepts 49
7) The Psychology of Words 57
8) How Athletes Learn and Think 61
9) “Oh No! Not Running!” 69
10) Get Out of that “Stupid State” 75
11) Just Relax… and RUN! 81
12) Hmmmm… Thoughts While Running 85
13) How to Communicate with the Athlete 87
14) The 3 Speeds: Teaching the “Feeling” of Speed 93
15) Ratio Separation Point (RSP)© 101
16) Physiological Processes of the Body - For EveryBody! 105
17) Myelin Skill Training 109
18) “You Just Can't Teach That. . .” 111
19) Right Brain vs. Left Brain 115
20) Male and Female Speed 119
21) What about Strength? Strength vs. Speed 123
22) Summary 133
Bibliography 137
Works Cited 139
About Kenneth Taylor 143
1
My goal in writing this book is to enlighten young athletes, parents and
coaches and open their eyes to unseen possibilities in the world of speed,
sports and athletics.
This book is designed to touch the psychological, physiological and
sociological aspects of speed. It looks at the paradigm of coaching,
teaching and parenting styles. It is designed to discuss and bring to light
the possibilities of becoming a faster athlete regardless of genetics.
Through research, experience, and real athletic examples, it will examine
the spiraling events and positive results that commonly occur when
athletes run faster. It will also touch on how that resulting positive
confidence carries over into other parts of the athletes' lives.
The Positive Spiral Example:
An athlete gets faster, which increases his confidence, which
makes him feel better about himself because he knows he can get
to the ball or make the play. This leads him to volunteer or even
tryout for important positions, which leads to more quality
repetitions, which leads to more possible opportunities for
success. This further leads to others giving him praise, which
makes him feel good about himself, so his communication skills
get better with parents and teachers, so his grades improve, and
so on and so on.
It is a positive spiral chain of psychological, physiological and
sociological events.
Unfortunately, there is also another side - the negative spiraling chain of
events.
Whether positive or negative, I examine, through real life and fictitious
scenarios, how the "spiral" can influence and ultimately determine one's
athletic possibilities, and life outcomes.
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Although more scientific studies and research is still needed regarding the
psychological, physiological and sociological influences that affect an
athletes‘ ability to run faster, it is known that the athletes‘ ability to think
and process information, their physical limitations and the environment
can all have a positive and/or adverse effect. Here, we look at and apply
the current findings to current teaching trends. We discover that the vast
majority of us have experienced the positive and negative spiraling chain
of events in our past.
There is a psychological journey that all of us athletes travel through from
good and bad coaching. Which path we take as youth can depend on the
positive or negative coaching styles that influenced us during our life.
Ever see a coach yell harshly at a kid who already made a bunch of
mistakes, only to watch that kid go deeper into confusion, frustration,
depression and hopelessness? Ever see what happens to a kid's life when a
coach constantly gives him lots of praise? What about the influence this
has on his peers? Yes, being a faster athlete can help you make the plays,
but it is much deeper than that. Over time, it can influence who you are
and who you become.
But why, if we know this, do we know so little about how to become a
faster athlete? Who really helps you get faster?
Our youth become interwoven in a pattern of coaching that leads them to a
habitual pattern of thinking and results, thinking and results and so on. It
is a perpetuated spiral that can lead down many negative or positive roads.
This is normal and a part of life. In fact, when we look at our young
athletes we will see that it is a delicate and tenuous response to our
psychological, physiological, and sociological culture. We, as parents,
coaches, and teachers frequently must make decisions at different levels in
this paradigm of athletic cultures and chains of thoughts and results (or
non-results). These decisions then directly determine a young athlete's
direction in life. However, if we have the ability to influence our athlete‘s
outcome towards the more positive path, wouldn‘t we do it?
Parents and coaches are charged with making decisions that guide our
youth. Our findings show that most parents and coaches, or even athletes
themselves, do not have all the information needed to make the most
educated decision regarding speed. The fact that most athletes and parents
still think that speed can not be taught is a perpetuating cycle of decisions
made with incomplete experiences, results, repetitions and opportunities.
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A young athlete does not know, what he does not yet know. Over and
over again I will hear an athlete, parent, or coach claim “I already know
what speed training is.” But do they? Do you? Probably 99% of the
time athletes and parents are confusing speed training with
conditioning or agility exercises.
This incorrect characterization of speed training and of training overall, is
further exasperated through our social culture of how we, as a general
coaching and teaching community, guide and instruct our youth.
Often our community, teachers and coaches instruct through the negative
spectrum and even through penalty and threat. The focus is on the reward-
punishment model. Deserve and don't deserve. However, when it comes
to sports, it is hard for a child to become deserving if he can't get an
opportunity. And so the negative spiraling chain of events begin: if he
doesn‘t get an opportunity to become faster, he doesn‘t get noticed, so he
doesn‘t get in the game, so he doesn‘t make mistakes, so he can‘t learn
how to become a great player.
Millions of athletes are left behind to never discover their true genetic
potential. We know that the vast majority of athletes will never become
Olympic sprinters or professional athletes. However, the true spirit of
striving and achieving may be undiscovered and untapped through the
experiences that produce unsupportive thoughts, reactions, results and
decisions. This is different for the elite and genetically gifted athletes.
They don't live in this world and usually have a hard time relating to the
kid ―on-the-bubble.‖ However, the kid ―on-the-bubble‖ represents the
normal or average athlete.
News Flash: there are millions more average and below average athletes
than not. And most get left behind.
We now know through quantifiable research it is physiologically possible
to become a faster runner and all around faster athlete. Throughout this
book, we will take a brief look at what it takes physiologically to become
a master at any activity. We will examine the 10,000 hour rule so
eloquently researched and examined by Malcolm Gladwell. We will also
look at some of the research done by Daniel Coyle and his examination on
the findings of Myelin building within the body: how the physical
activities we engage in day to day is largely skill based and Myelin Sheath
building is at the core of building a skill. If "it" is a skill then most any
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human can learn and then master "any" activity when rehearsed for 10,000
hours.
We, as humans, are non-unique in how we learn. Like most mammals, we
learn by creating and making mistakes. It isn‘t the only way we learn or
teach ourselves, but it is the most biological and primal way. In fact, as
we will discuss, when training for mastery, we are looking to find that
"zone" where we actually make mistakes. This is the zone where the
deepest learning takes place. This is where we get better. Better at
running! Sociologically our society and up-brining has taught us to not
make mistakes. "Mistakes are the enemy" is a common notion that we
hold as a hard rule on the inside. This not only limits us as we train
athletes, but it limits our thoughts and ability to think towards a path that
helps us develop and improve our skills and positive thought patterns.
In addition, I will bring to the surface the spiraling effects of bad
coaching, bad thinking, and how bad decision making can destroy an
athlete's future. I don't mean his professional or Olympic future, but an
athlete‘s right to strive, discover and enjoy his or her athletic life.
By following the rules of the body and the rules of physics on earth, you
can run faster! Just this fact alone should bring forth and improve your
psychological confidence, and thus willingness to examine and try the
tools, techniques and regiments that help athletes run faster. Once an
athlete discovers not only what is honestly possible, but the clear road to
get there, then the positive results start to become the norm. And that is
the positive spiraling effect that I want for all athletes!
How successful can you be? The sky is the limit! Once you are given the
right tools, you never know what desire and inspiration can bring out of
the dark.
The Obvious Benefits of Speed:
Faster times mean more/better opportunities to play at the next level.
More opportunities to receive scholarships.
More opportunities to achieve personal records, school records, club
records, and maybe, just maybe, world records!
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The Benefits - Speed Helps You:
Accelerate before your opponent
When you are efficient with your speed, you can accelerate away from your
opponent before they can react to your speed. If you can accelerate to your
top-end speed before your opponent can get to your top-end speed, then you
will always break away even if someone is faster than you at their top-end
speed.
Decelerate before your opponent
When you are faster, your body will begin to adjust to that new speed. Your
old speed will begin to feel slower and, therefore, more controllable. This
control will help you decelerate and even come to a complete stop before your
opponent. This type of control will allow you the option to get quicker
accelerations...with control.
Have less fatigue than your opponent
When you are fast you don't get as tired as your opponent, because you are
more efficient doing the same movements. If you are 10% faster than the
average speed of your sport, then you can relax and just play the game with
extreme confidence.
Relax more than your opponent
When you are efficiently fast, you know when to raise and lower your
physical and emotional intensity so that your muscles are relaxed at the right
time throughout their motions. You end up with fewer muscle strains and
pulls, and less soreness.
Leverage and load your body before your opponent
When you are fast and efficient, your movements are smoother. This allows
you the option of making your movements sooner and more easily as well as
be able to gain leverage over your opponent before they get set.
Recognize and anticipate key plays and situations before your opponent
When you are fast, you simply get there first! When you are first, you have
the ability to anticipate, plays, and actions developing before they actually
happen.
Be more composed than your opponent
When you are fast, you create your own secret weapon. This leads to supreme
confidence because no one can get by you or no one can catch you. You will
be (and look) more cool and calm and composed.
Help your coach use your speed in more places
Your coach now has the flexibility to move you to many different positions
for the greater good of the team. This will ultimately help your team win.
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The Psychology of Speed is highly influenced by what is physically
possible. It is influenced by personal confidence in one's own abilities.
What is believable? What is believable is that no one is unique to the
challenges of being a human on this Earth. We all are dealt the same hand
when it comes to Earth physics. This fact is irrefutable. This fact alone
gives us the confidence that it is possible to run faster and more
efficiently.
Why can we do what we can do? We all must negotiate the physics
of Earth and the physiology of the human body through time and space.
And we do it very successfully. I will continue to assume this until I see
everyone in the mall asking the question, “Can you help me get up? I can't
handle gravity.”
Let's look at just some quick definitions in general physics. Our
knowledge of these general physics principles gives us the psychological
confidence about what we can do.
Physics: The scientific study of matter, energy, space, and time, and
of the relations between them. The behavior of a given physical
system...
-The American Heritage Science Dictionary
Definitions Related to Speed
- Energy: The ability to do work.
- Work: The act or actions of moving, lifting, warming, lighting
something.
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- Force: Any influence which tends to change the motion of an
object.
- Torque: An influence which tends to change the rotational motion
of an object.
- Inertia: The resistance an object has to a change in its state of
motion.
- Newton's' First Law of Motion: An object stays in motion or at
rest with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted
upon by an unbalanced force.
- Newton's' Second Law of Motion: Acceleration is produced
when a force acts on a mass. The greater the mass (of the object
being accelerated) the greater the amount of force needed (to
accelerate the object).
- Newton's Third Law of Motion: For every action, there is an
equal and opposite reaction.
- Power: The amount of energy put out or produced in a given
amount of time.
- Momentum: The product of the velocity and the mass of an
object in motion.
- Velocity: The rate at which an object changes its position.
- Speed: How fast an object is moving.
These are the physics principles that we must deal with and master to
be a normal functioning human, or a super-great athlete. Knowing how to
negotiate these principles gives us the psychological advantage that we,
too, can learn. If we can learn, then we can soon master the moves and
achieve greatness. It is, what it is – the Physics of the Earth. This has not
changed since the beginning of man on Earth.
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Important Note
*For ease of reading and understanding this book, ―the athlete‖
that I often refer to throughout is typically a high school male.
However, this relates to all healthy athletes: male or female,
young or old. Age and gender do not matter – just the ability to
learn and process information and then respond accordingly. In
addition, I am usually talking in generalities. The general
population is the norm, not professional athletes.
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1 –
What is speed training? Simply, speed training is training athletes how
to run faster. Why speed training? Generally speaking, a faster athlete has
many more opportunities to be successful, and not just in sports – in life.
The benefits of being fast can be anything from just making the cut, to
making great plays, to becoming the league MVP, to getting a scholarship,
to going Pro, and so much more (see the list of the benefits of speed in the
beginning of the book)! The very good news is that all athletes can
improve their speed and overall athleticism. This is done through hard
work and dedication to getting better at the skill of running. However, it
is not the type of hard work you might imagine.
When athletes hire me to train them for speed, they all think that I am
going to have them do a lot of hard-core running. They think I am going
to have them work harder to get faster. I don't blame them. It is how we
are trained to think and what we are trained to do. This conception is
rooted in the history of our athletic paradigm and culture. "No pain, no
gain." But what if I said there is a better, more successful way? Don‘t get
me wrong, I do have them work harder. But it's not physical - it‘s mental.
The hard work is purely psychological. True speed training is about both
the psychology and physiology of how to run faster and work less doing it.
What is the ―Psychology of Speed”? What do we mean when we say
this? After all, running is a physical act of a specific skill. The way we
think about this skill, however, varies vastly from person to person. For
instance, some athletes think that running at a full-speed pace for 60 yards
is challenging, while the 800m runner in track hopes he only has to do 60
yard sprints because to him they are super easy.
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The mere fact that two people can have vastly differing opinions
about a similar, even identical, event is fascinating in itself. Digging
deeper, however, interesting patterns of thoughts, habits, and patterns
emerge. We find chain-like reactions that spiral into good (positive)
thoughts or bad (negative) thoughts, which develop into good or bad
decisions. How we process information, how quickly we process
information, and the meaning we give that information is the foundation of
learning; hence, the resulting decisions made on the information (in other
words, what we have learned) can greatly affect our athletic career and
our life as a whole.
The Psychology of Speed is about how well we can process
information. More specifically, it is about how well we can process
information while on the move. The goal is to think clearly about specific
things while running, while accelerating, and even while decelerating.
The key to running faster and more easily is to learn and then rehearse:
What to move, Where to move it, and When to move it there, for proper
running form (see call out box).
You may think, ―What's the big deal? Either you can run fast or you
can't.‖ Right? Wrong. I still meet athletes and parents, and even coaches,
who have given up on an athlete before the athlete has even been given a
chance to improve. The sports world is filled with doubters and
disbelievers. They just don't believe it is possible to get faster. You can
get faster. And, as for the young athlete, he can get faster sometimes by
as much as 50%. Psychological and physiological research, as well as
history, has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that improvements can be
made regardless of the athlete‘s present capabilities.
How is this improvement possible? I‘ll explain. Belief and courage
are good places to start. We first need to believe that getting faster is
possible. We need the courage to start the process, and then we must have
the determination to stick with it. Within the following pages we will lay
out the psychological process of learning and the many chain reaction
spirals that result from this process. We are only talking about a skill
here; the skill of running. But that skill is greatly influenced by what we
think about and when we think about it.
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SPEED LESSON
What to Move, Where to Move It, and When to Move It There
While running- move the right knee up to the front side of the body to a height
3/4 of the full leg up position. (A full leg up position is when the thigh is
parallel to the ground or the knee is even with the hip.)
Simultaneously - sync the speed and the motion of the right elbow to the
backside of the body and the left elbow to the front side of the body.
When the elbows move to the back of the torso, the forearm and hand should be
lined up under that elbow, pointing straight down or perpendicular to the
ground.
Simultaneously - After the left foot strikes the ground and the left leg has
extended, the left arm should be in its full front side up position, and the right
arm to its full backside position.
With the right leg in its full front side position, and keeping the elbows bent at
about 95 degrees, the hand should get no higher than your shoulders on the
front side of your upper body.
The photo is a personal analysis of a runner.
The lines show the proper position of where the body should be.
*To view sprint technique videos and drills, see the Speed Training manual.
You can order the manual from www.speeddr.com
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What is the greatest secret weapon an athlete can possess? That‘s
easy. SPEED. Why? When you are fast no one knows exactly how fast
you are, and more importantly, no one knows when you are going to use
that great burst of speed. Speed allows you have much more influence and
control over the game for a greater period of time. When the ball gets
loose, you can choose to get there first. When you have the ball, you can
separate sooner. When your opponent has the ball, you can catch up by
closing the gap—quickly! Your speed is a secret that only you know!
Coaches base their decisions on a number of factors when choosing a
starting lineup. These factors include strength, good judgment,
intelligence, knowledge, desire, leadership, team play, and of course,
speed of play. In most sports it is hard to become a starter if you are slow.
You have a much better shot when you are the fastest. In fact, speed is so
instrumental in a player‘s list of attributes that some NFL teams will
actually draft a superstar track sprinter who has never even played football
just for the speed factor. Seriously.
Since speed is such a valuable asset for an athlete, why doesn‘t it
receive greater attention in training? Most coaches say speed is very
important, but then they have their team spend 75% percent of their
working time focusing on building strength, building power, conditioning
and learning the playbook. If you think about it, this really doesn‘t make
much sense. It‘s a major oversight of most athletic programs. One reason
for this oversight is that fast and efficient running is very hard to quantify.
It's also very hard to teach athletes how to become more efficient movers,
unless, of course, you have a knowledgeable and qualified speed trainer.
Which is rare. Unfortunately, most ―speed trainers‖ are actually just
conditioning coaches. Therefore, most youth and high school programs
just have a running and conditioning regimen with bench marks to attain.
Even with the college teams and pros, most of the attention is paid to the
workout regimen and not to teaching the efficient movement and running
of the individual athletes.
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Why is proper speed training difficult? Because it‘s personal. Each
athlete is different in his ability, his body type, and, most importantly, in
his individual thoughts and personality. It is much easier to require all
athletes on a team to do the same required and regimented program to get
ready for the season. It is very difficult, on the other hand, to get each
athlete to learn how it feels to move faster and more easily, from that
athlete's point of view. Furthermore, we are locked into a certain,
established culture of training and practice. We are locked into a culture
of measuring athletic performance, and we base our opinions about a
particular athlete on the results of that performance. We then make
absolute and conclusive decisions based on those opinions.
But what if we could help change that?
Size is measurable, speed is measurable, strength is measurable, and
time is measurable. But how do you measure the combination of these
things? The one who has the greatest combination of running speed,
strength, and composure is often the one who makes most of the plays.
This combination, at the highest level, makes for an athlete who is
balanced and controlled, and moves very fast as well; like a cat chasing
prey. This high level of balance and control allows for better and quicker
change of direction, acceleration, deceleration, and poise, and hence, a
more accomplished athlete. These athletes get high praise for being good
workers in the weight room and on conditioning drills. But the real reason
for their greatness is the speed at which they move their size and strength.
If an athlete cannot get his size and strength to the play, what good are
those attributes? It is his speed, and efficiency that enables him to be
where he needs to be, when he needs to be there - yet there is no praise for
being efficient.
Have you ever seen a spirit shirt that said, "The most efficient
runner's club?" Of course not. Almost all of the spirit shirts are awarded
to the athletes who reach strength milestones. It's the "1000 Pound Club,"
or the "900 Pound Club." However, it does not matter how strong you are
if you cannot get that strength to right place at the right time to make the
play. (more on this in chapter 21 – Speed vs. Strength).
Additionally, if you put your foot or body in the wrong mechanical
positions, you will run even more slowly, use more effort, become more
fatigued, risk more injury and lose the play more often. Miss enough
plays and you will shape the opinions of others to believe that you are not
very good. You may be strong and dedicated, but you just can't get to the
ball or to the spot you need to get to, in time to make the play.
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Unfortunately, the result is that your opinion of yourself and your
conclusions about your abilities are shaped by this evidence and
experience. Consequently, you conclude that you are, in fact, not very
good.
But, speed changes all that.
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You may have heard of the 10,000 hour rule for mastery. This is a
rule that researchers have universally agreed upon that says for a person to
become world-class at any activity, it takes, on average, around 10,000
hours of practice. They found that being an expert is not really based on
talent, and it is not unique to a particular person. They found that what the
masters and the geniuses have in common is that they had been toiling and
practicing their chosen craft for about 10,000 hours, regardless of the
activity. This rule applies to everything from playing chess to shooting
free throws to running.
The following is a common scenario that happens with young athletes
every summer. Follow along, and then apply the spiraling power of
10,000.
Psychological Scenario:
Let's say you are an athlete. You work hard all summer long. You do
disciplined weight training and sprints for conditioning. At the end of
the summer, you, the coaching staff, and everyone else clearly sees
that you are 10% faster than last year. Everyone is happy. ―Great
job, kid! You did it. Hard work pays off.‖
But, let's dive deeper into this scenario and compare it to really
getting faster.
You did it. Your hard work paid off. You can now run 10% faster at
a top speed of, say, 15mph, and you can hold that speed pretty well.
And you are now also 50% stronger due to great dedication in your
weight training. In this scenario, you did a great job of spending
100% of your time on strength and conditioning, and it worked;
hence, you can now make 10 more great plays per game.
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This is where coaches and athletes make a lot of mistakes in well-
meaning judgments and opinions. The mistake they make is that they
think a 10% improvement equals 100% improvement.
Now try the scenario this way:
During the summer, you spend most of your time learning to run
faster and more efficiently. You learn about your body and master
what to move, where to move it, and when to move it there. You use
75% of your summer training time learning to run faster. Then, you
spend 25% of your training time on strength training to support your
running speed. (Once you have mastered how to run, then add in
conditioning).
Now your top speed improves to 20mph not 15mph, and it is easier to
hold because you are more efficient, so you use less energy. You can
now do five to ten more reps per workout simply because you are not
tired! The number of deliberate, concentrated, and high quality
repetitions grows exponentially. It's like playing a video game 500
more times than your opponent did that summer.
Now your improvement is 60% vs. 10%! Now you make 20 more
great plays! Also, now that you are faster, the application of your
strength is exponentially greater, simply because you run at a higher
mph! Remember, back to physics, it doesn't take as much effort to
keep an object in motion as it did to start the object in motion. And
you are the object! Just like riding a bike, you pedal hard at the start
to get the bikes momentum going and then you can just coast!
Let‘s use soccer as an example. Now that you are faster, you may end
up looking like the one with the best ball skills and ball control on the
field. The truth, however, is that because of your speed, you now
always seem to get to the ball not only first, but a full two seconds
before your opponent. This gives you more time to organize your
body, which gives you more touches on the ball. So now you look
like a better soccer player because you are constantly getting multiple
opportunities to touch and control the ball in all types of situations.
Now, not only are you faster, but your soccer skills improve because
you are now able to touch the ball ten more times than anyone else
during a game or during practice. Considering this spiral effect,
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figure out your opportunities from the time you were 10 years old.
How about 8 years old? Think about how important this spiral of
positive opportunities could be for your soccer career? Being faster
to the ball will give you many more opportunities to gain quality
repetitions.
In his book Outliers, Malcolm Gladwell describes the 10,000 hour
rule. He examined the success of people like Bill Gates and the Beatles
and how the one thing they had in common for their tremendous success
was practicing a certain task and skill for about 10,000 hours. He
describes, in detail, how the Beatles were right out of high school when
they started to play in Hamburg, Germany. They played together for 8
hours a day, 7 days a week. In the book, he quotes John Lennon as saying,
―We got better and got more confidence. We couldn't help it with all the
experience playing all night long.‖ Gladwell further quotes Philip
Norman, the author of ―Shout‖, the biography of the Beatles, as stating
―They were no good on stage when they went there [Hamburg]. But when
they came back, they sounded like no one else. It was the making of
them.‖
What do you think would happen if you had the time to control the
soccer ball 10,000 hours, or even 10,000 times? Or shoot free throws
10,000 times? Or rehearse great, efficient running form for 10,000 reps?
Or, for that matter, do anything for that many hours? To put this in
perspective, to get to 10,000 hours, it would take you 10 years of
practicing, if you worked 3 hours a day, every day. Now that is
commitment! Does this approach sound like some new, off-the-wall
theory?
In fact, this notion is well documented: ―This idea - that excellence at
a complex task requires a critical, minimum level of practice - surfaces
again and again in studies of expertise. In fact, researchers have settled on
what they believe is a magic number for true expertise: 10,000 hours,‖
said Alain Saffel in his review of Malcolm Gladwell's book Outliers back
in 2009.
One can conclude from this approach that the opportunity for
practice, or the rehearsal of a specific task or skill, is more important than
talent; hence, everyone can get faster and reap the benefits of speed.
Speed can change our athletic future by providing multiple, high-quality
opportunities for this practice. However, let's slow down a bit. I don't
want to under-emphasize the importance of ―quality‖ and the concept of
"quality opportunities" or "quality reps" or "quality practice." This kind
of practice is more important than just ―plain practice.‖ Your focus,
To read more about The Power of 10,000
and other Secrets to Running Faster,
check out
“You Just Can’t Teach That!
Or Can You?”
in it’s entirety at: www.thespeeddr.com
or on Amazon.com
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We have a lot of supporting evidence that it is possible to improve
our overall speed. We even have the tools to teach speed effectively and
safely. It is when we as coaches revert to our old-school ways of teaching
sports that we only improve by a small amount. We all need to be more
proactive and continue to pursue the path of knowledge and
understanding.
"You Just Can‘t Teach That!" is about the Psychology of Speed. We
knew improvement was a possibility; we saw it happen, and some of us
lived it. But it wasn't until the past 15 years or so that we have really
focused on discussions that are quantifiable. In most cases, the formula is
done. Through the in-depth research from Malcolm Gladwell's 10,000
Hours and Geoff Colvin's Deliberate Practice, we almost have no
excuses. Not knowing is the only excuse for not getting better or getting
faster.
We know much more than ever about what it takes to become a
genius or world-class athlete. We thought it was innate, but it turns out
that it is about repetition. It is about focused, concentrated, and repeated
repetition. And for most of us, it‘s not about much more than that. Just a
few more hours a day focusing on deliberate practice of a desired task will
do the trick. Like all things in life, it is not guaranteed. But, we‘ve come
a long way. We once thought that we had to be born with talent, but
research has shown that this is inaccurate. Unfortunately, to this day,
some coaches, parents, and athletes still believe that talent cannot be
taught. And unfortunately, this is often compounded by the poor decisions
made from incomplete information and incomplete results.
Through the use of your good focus and deliberate practice, you too
can become world-class. Do you have the dedication to give 10,000
hours? Would you have the resources to be able to focus on your task for
9 or 10 years?
Through the more recent research of myelin building, we know that
physiologically, this process of becoming world-class takes place and
develops over time within our bodies. Just the knowledge that this process
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is not unique to anyone should give us the psychological confidence that
all things are possible through the development of skill. If it is a skill,
then it can be accomplished. We just don't know when or how big that
skill will become, but we can all become great at a skill we previously did
not possess.
Through firing the right signals to the right nerves, we improve not
only the speed of the impulse, but the control of when that firing happens.
The result of this firing builds more and more layers of myelin that wrap
around the nerve and allow the nerve to improve the speed of the impulse.
This exciting research, such as the work published by Daniel Coyle, shows
how deliberate practice physiologically helps improve and develop skill.
Stay focused at that task for 10,000 hours, and seemingly you too will
become a master at that skill.
Teaching athletes to run is the same concept; running is a skill like
any other human mechanical action. Psychologically, the results of all the
research should be our "Aha" moment. We can get much better, as
athletes, within certain individual parameters, including, but not limited to,
body size or environment.
When we learn to run faster, we create a whole new dynamic of
positive, spiraling changes within our physical body and self-concept.
Two separate systems that work together as one whole unit, the mind and
the body. We evolve into a whole new being. Many times this great and
enormous transformation is the result of less than 10,000 deliberate hours.
The evolution of running faster and more efficiently happens long before
even 100 hours. It can happen in more like 100 simple focused repetitions
or less. How many hours would it take you to complete 100 reps? 10
hours? Or 20 hours? Maybe less.
If we pay attention and follow the rules for building myelin, then we
actually focus on and seek out mistakes and errors. I still get confused
looks from my athletes when I tell them I want them to make mistakes
90% of the time. We are looking to build a new skill. We are looking to
find that "zone" for where learning takes place. That zone is the ―make
mistakes, go back, and slowly correct them‖ zone. This is where we get
better and better and better. If we keep going, only the constraints of our
human body and personal potential limit us.
We can no longer be afraid of athletes making mistakes. In fact, we
want to train athletes to seek out mistakes and then make the deliberate
correction. Resolve to create this sequence of 10,000 hours of deliberate
practice - focusing on correcting and re-correcting. Seek out errors, and
you too will build myelin. You too will build a skill. You too can run
faster than in the past. You too can change your self-concept. And you
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too can change your whole life and become a master. This awesome
change is made possible through understanding the Psychology of Speed
and not just "conditioning."
“We Learn . . .
10% of what we read
20% of what we hear
30% of what we see
50% of what we see and hear
70% of what we discuss
80% of what we experience
95% of what we teach
others.”
-William Glasser
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Kenneth Taylor, Sport Speed Expert, is a SAQ Pioneer and former Professional
Football Player (NFL) and World-class Track Athlete. He played Corner Back
and Punt Returner for the 1985 Chicago Bears Super Bowl Championship team
and the San Diego Chargers.
Since retiring from professional
football in 1988, he has become
a well recognized Sport Speed
Specialist. For over 20 years,
Ken has coached and
trained thousands of athletes
from various professional and
educational institutions and
corporations including middle/
high schools, colleges/
universities, Nike, the FBI, NFL,
NBA and their kids! His
specific training services are for
those players who want to
improve themselves and develop
their athletic potential through
speed, quickness, and athletic
skill instruction. His specialty is
with athletes that participate in
change-of-direction sports such
as: soccer, football, basketball,
baseball, softball, volleyball,
tennis, lacrosse, and track & field.
Ken earned his Bachelor of Science degree from Oregon State University where
he concentrated on ―Exercise and Sports Science, Exercise Physiology, and
Biomechanical Movement.‖ He has earned many awards including PAC-10 All-
Academic Team 1982, 1983, and 1984 and he was also the PAC-10 Scholar-
Athlete Medal Winner for 1984 representing track and football.
Ken is also the founder of NASAQ (National Association of Speed~Agility~
Quickness), a group of highly educated, professional, and top-notch world-class
athletes who are giving back to the athletic world.
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Ken makes a difference in athletes‘ lives through his unique psychological and
physiological techniques. He has helped coaches, trainers, and athletes
throughout the world through speaking engagements, speed seminars, articles,
personal consultations, team trainings, training videos and DVD‘s, and online
video analysis. He has also written the first interactive speed training video book
and manual.
Kenneth is often also known as the ―Speed Dr.‖ which was lovingly given to him
by several of his athletes‘ moms, who said ―he was like a doctor – he could fix
anybody!‖
If you would like more information on Kenneth Taylor‘s training options or to
book him for speaking engagements or other trainings, please contact us.
Contact:
Email: [email protected].
Website: www.thespeeddr.com.
“Hope to hear from you soon!
Until then,
Be Well, Be Fast‖
- Ken