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The Sprint System should be done directly after the warm-up and flexibility period.<br>2. The maximum number of sprints should be nine which could be divided into three sprints per body area. If one of the areas proves more difficult for the athlete to learn, sprints can be increased concentrating on that particular area. However, nine learning sprints is the most even if the body areas are divided.<br>3. The distance for each sprint should be 30-50 yards with recovery time being 15-20 seconds or walk-back.<br>4. The speed of each sprint should be or speed& .never full speed for learning purposes<br>5. Th sprint system should never be considered a part of the athletic conditioning, only a part of the learning process.<br>6. The sprint system should be done 2-4 times weekly in-season and off-season, in groups or individually. Feedback, from a coach, parent, or teammate is important.<br>The Actual Sprint<br>You must start low, explode out, extend completely with back leg and big vigorous arm action. Videotaping the sprint is highly recommended for analyzing the athlete s performance. If you want to become a faster athlete follow the BFS 8-point Sprint Technique System.<br>Upper<br>1. Head  head should be upright.<br>2. Eyes- - eyes should be fixed looking straight ahead.<br>3. Back  back should be upright and slightly arched.<br>4. Shoulders  shoulders should rotate vigorously with elbows fixed in a 90-degree angle.<br>5. Wrist  wrist should simulate a whip action as the shoulder rotates back.<br>Lower<br>6. Legs  initial leg action is to lift forward then up. The lower leg should hang before planting.<br>7. Feet - feet should make the initial plant directly under the hips and not out in front of the body.<br>8. Knees  on the follow-through or end of the leg drive, the knee should fully extend.<br>Remember practice this sprint system, concentrate on one area of the body for each sprint (upper, torso, or lower). On the last sprint of each set combine the eight points to achieve a full speed sprint. Time and record the last sprint of each set in your logbook. Try to break the record each week. Practice this system tow to three times a week when the body is FRESH.<br>Following these guidelines and principles EVERY athlete can improve speed dramatically!<br> lifters, this may give a slight anatomical advantage or the advantage may be experienced because of a heavy, tight lifting suit or even lack of flexibility.&nbsp; Whatever the reason, extreme low&nbsp;bar placement squatting will detract from overall leg development which is obviously bad for an athlete.</P> <P align=left>Most athletes will be able to find a natural groove on the shoulders when they come under the bar in a proper position.&nbsp; "Don't put the bar on your neck; put it on your shoulders.&nbsp; Find a groove."&nbsp; In almost every case, if you say these technique cues, athletes will be able to have excellent bar placement during their squat.</P> <P align=left><STRONG>C. Taking the Bar off the Rack:</STRONG>&nbsp; I've seen high school athletes get all psyched to squat and get their shoulders 2-3 inches under the bar.&nbsp; Then, with an explosive movement, jam their shoulders against the bar.&nbsp; Well, jamming your shoulders against a steel bar from this 2-3 inch space will cause the athlete to bruise his neck or shoulders.&nbsp; Besides hurting, it is unlikely the athlete will have the bar placed on his shoulders correctly.</P> <P align=left>On the other end of the spectrum, I've seen athletes wimp a bar off the rack.&nbsp; Many times this athlete will not be in a good solid squatting position as he backs up to a ready stance.</P> <P align=left>A far superior way is to come under the bar