Mark Bell's Power Project - Train Your SPRINT Without Getting HURT - Beginner's Guide || MBPP Ep. 1058

Episode Date: April 16, 2024

In episode 1058, Mark Bell, Nsima Inyang, and Andrew Zaragoza advise on how to get into sprinting without getting hurt or injured. Use this as your ultimate beginner's guide to sprinting.   Official ...Power Project Website: https://powerproject.live Join The Power Project Discord: https://discord.gg/yYzthQX5qN Subscribe to the Power Project Clips Channel: https://youtube.com/channel/UC5Df31rlDXm0EJAcKsq1SUw   Special perks for our listeners below!   🍆  Natural Sexual Performance Booster 🍆 ➢https://usejoymode.com/discount/POWERPROJECT Use code: POWERPROJECT to save 20% off your order!   🚨 The Best Red Light Therapy Devices and Blue Blocking Glasses On The Market! 😎 ➢https://emr-tek.com/ Use code: POWERPROJECT to save 20% off your order!   👟 BEST LOOKING AND FUNCTIONING BAREFOOT SHOES 🦶 ➢https://vivobarefoot.com/powerproject   🥩 HIGH QUALITY PROTEIN! 🍖 ➢ https://goodlifeproteins.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save up to 25% off your Build a Box ➢ Piedmontese Beef: https://www.CPBeef.com/ Use Code POWER at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $150   🩸 Get your BLOODWORK Done! 🩸 ➢ https://marekhealth.com/PowerProject to receive 10% off our Panel, Check Up Panel or any custom panel, and use code POWERPROJECT for 10% off any lab!   Sleep Better and TAPE YOUR MOUTH (Comfortable Mouth Tape) 🤐 ➢ https://hostagetape.com/powerproject to receive a year supply of Hostage Tape and Nose Strips for less than $1 a night!   🥶 The Best Cold Plunge Money Can Buy 🥶 ➢ https://thecoldplunge.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save $150!!   Self Explanatory 🍆 ➢ Enlarging Pumps (This really works): https://bit.ly/powerproject1 Pumps explained:      ➢ https://withinyoubrand.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save 15% off supplements!   ➢ https://markbellslingshot.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save 15% off all gear and apparel!   Follow Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast ➢ https://www.PowerProject.live ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast ➢ Insta: https://www.instagram.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/markbellspowerproject   FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢https://www.tiktok.com/@marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell   Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ UNTAPPED Program - https://shor.by/untapped ➢YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/NsimaInyang ➢Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/?hl=en ➢TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@nsimayinyang?lang=en   Follow Andrew Zaragoza & Get Podcast Guides, Courses and More ➢ https://pursuepodcasting.com/iamandrewz   #PowerProject #Podcast #MarkBell #FitnessPodcast #markbellspowerproject

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Starting point is 00:00:00 As you get older, a lot of people aren't sprinting. Don't go sprint at 100% when you start. One of the first steps to comfortably be able to sprint close to 100% is truly strengthening your feet. I'll give people a secret. You want to train your feet, just train your calves. You're jogging at a 12-minute mile pace. Just see what it feels like to do a 10-minute mile pace. But I'm talking about for like one or two or maybe three seconds.
Starting point is 00:00:21 We're trying to give you the baseline things. We're going to give you the things that are going to allow you to build the structure that can then handle sprints. A hill is a really great place to start. Another thing you can do is pull a sled. Don't think about this as a race. We don't want to go fast too fast. If you're thinking that you want to go faster, that's usually a bad spot to be in. Like going faster should actually happen naturally. At McDonald's now they have Krispy Kreme. Wait, what? How fat? What do you mean? Yeah, at McDonald's they have
Starting point is 00:00:50 Krispy Kreme. Like donuts? Yeah, Krispy Kreme donuts. And fat little Al Roker, I saw this on the Today Show, fat little Al Roker, biggest smile on his face ever. He goes, they got to put that on it. They got to an egg mcmuffin on
Starting point is 00:01:05 that make that like the roll and he was so happy and excited and everybody just kind of looked at him with disgust but i knew what he was talking about it's gonna be done yeah you can't control all the people all the time i was like this guy's a genius how long ago was krispy kreme put in mcdonald's just like a week ago i think fuck bro this obesity shit's gonna go from 65 to like 80 i'm serious i'm serious it's like we're we're if it's we're not doomed but we're due if it's that readily available right if i was fucking still eating mcdonald's and i feel like this makes me want to go get myself a biscuit sausage and egg i'd fucking get a crispy cream donut because crispy cream donuts are fucking good you know they're gonna be hot all the time dude no how long's it been since you guys have had a crispy
Starting point is 00:01:49 cream donut it's been a while a long time since i had a donut yeah comment below if you remember crispy cream if you haven't had in a while they're so i'm salad in uh there's people out there living their lives i'm fucking salivating eating these donuts. We're not part of that. In high school, we used to just get like really, really baked and then go to Krispy Kreme donuts. You smoked weed
Starting point is 00:02:10 in high school? Yeah. I didn't know that. Okay. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, Andrew. And so that's, I mean,
Starting point is 00:02:16 I lived in a pretty small, boring town. There's not much to do. So we would, you know, smoke weed and then we would drive to Sacramento
Starting point is 00:02:23 to get Kris cream donuts i have a question for you just real quick what would your young self your young weed smoking crispy cream donut traveling self say to you right now with your child what would you what would you think would you think i'm so boring no no no okay okay he would say just like i thought oh sick okay okay yeah didn't know how it was gonna happen but yeah that was always the goal anyways so yeah He would say just like I thought. Oh, sick. Okay. Okay. Yeah. Didn't know how it was going to happen, but that was always the goal anyways. So, yeah. That's dope.
Starting point is 00:02:49 Okay. I'm happy to hear that. I'm happy to hear that. And then also, yeah, I mean, probably some like, he would freak out if he knew I didn't drink at all. That would be weird for him to hear. You guys ever been to Tim Hortons? I've only driven by it.
Starting point is 00:03:03 Yeah. That's like more like on the East Coast. Yeah. But Burdick and I like rolled through there. That's who I drove through. Yeah. hortons i've only driven by it yeah that's like uh more like on the east coast yeah but burdick and i like rolled through there back so i drove through yeah back in the powerlifting days and uh like literally rolled through there and uh we ordered like sandwiches it was like i don't know like one o'clock or something like 1 p.m you know the middle of the day and we order sandwiches they're like would you like guys like a dozen donuts with that well y'all are fat y'all are fucking huge i know but they didn't even see us oh it was just a drive-through i think they offered to everybody
Starting point is 00:03:34 dog we have a problem bro i know that's that and it was legal shit around it was like a dollar or two we're like yeah why'd you even ask i think if we went in yes right yeah oh yeah i think if we went in they wouldn't have asked they would have been like give these guys the extra donuts yeah just make it quick i remember one time at kfp they asked us like hey like we're closing down like for the day do you guys want like a pot pie like i think that sounds disgusting but sure they give us like 12 oh man oh my god what am i so so we started like dropping off at families houses and stuff but that's good because pot pie like i think that sounds disgusting but sure they give us like 12 oh man oh my god what am i so so we started like dropping off at families houses and stuff but that's good because i would
Starting point is 00:04:08 have eaten all that when i was younger i would have eaten all that that kind of stuff same thing it's like that's your calories for the week it's something like a pot pie which you wouldn't think would be like that crazy yeah it's a little circle full of calories well today if people want to learn about sprinting should they fucking eat this food because actually you know if people start sprinting they're gonna want to eat more of this type of shit or if people shovel snow i heard recently if you shovel snow for 90 minutes guess how many calories you burn 90 minutes of shoveling snow i'll say i'll say 1100 oh yeah there you go it's 1200 oh yeah oh wow that's shoveling is hard work it's fucking hard as shit yeah shit's heavy too depending on like where you're shoveling or what you're doing
Starting point is 00:04:53 but yeah i heard that on uh joe rogan the other day i was like wow that's amazing that's a good way to train a kid if you have well i mean probably people in snow are probably having their kids do that anyway so did you shovel snow as a kid? Yeah, all the time. I actually kind of find it to be fun, but it does kill your back even when you're a kid. Well, look at you now. Probably happy about that. Get that manual labor in there.
Starting point is 00:05:16 Yeah, today we're going to be talking about some sprinting. I've been getting into some faster running, I would say, and I'm working on it. It feels good. And I'm just having a lot of fun with it. It feels great. Some days I'm able to push into it a little harder. I haven't had any setbacks. I feel really good.
Starting point is 00:05:35 The only thing I could say is like every once in a while my feet will get beat up. Every once in a while my feet will be like sore or I'll forget, which I haven't really had that happen with lifting, you know, it's like, no, you're standing like, like when, like Wednesday comes around or something. And I, and I did legs on Monday or something. I, you know, I, I'm not like, oh, I kind of forgot that I did legs, you know, I can feel it. But like with sprints, I sometimes, uh, forget the accumulative effects. And it's been a long time since I really practiced much sprinting. Whereas when I was a kid and playing football and playing different sports, sprint probably a couple times every day. Maybe even a lot every day.
Starting point is 00:06:15 Think of like all the drills and stuff we did in football. There's quite a bit of sprinting. And then even just doing scrimmages and stuff, you would just – I mean, now I think of like I'll go out and do some sprints and I'll do like six to eight sprints. When I was a kid, I just can't imagine that there was a football practice where I didn't do like 40 sprints plus like actual sprints at the end of practice. You know, but it's like, it's just part of growing up and it's part of being in a sport. As you get older, you get a lot of distance from that. A lot of people aren't sprinting. And so the whole time that I've been running, I've been wanting to get more into sprinting,
Starting point is 00:06:55 but I felt like I needed to build some sort of base. And so that's why I've just really taken my time getting into it. Let's quickly talk about the foot aspect thing, man, because you're totally right. When you're doing stuff in the gym and you're lifting, even if you do like some walking and stuff, you're not going to feel that wear and tear on your feet. But when you start trying to implement, and I'm going to say right now, before anybody gets too excited, don't go sprint at a hundred percent when you start. It's a recipe for disaster, especially if you haven't sprinted in a while. But when do you do? Try running faster. And when you do run faster, you're going to be on the balls of your feet.
Starting point is 00:07:28 You're going to feel your feet are beat up. Your feet and ankles are going to feel it every few days. And I think that one of the first steps to building the capacity to, at some point, might be a year from now, might be two years from now, comfortably be able to sprint close to 100% is truly strengthening your feet. I think that's a big deal. And what are some of the things that like you've done just to ease yourself into having stronger feet for sprinting? I think, you know, the simple stuff is like appropriate shoes.
Starting point is 00:08:03 You know, a lot of people know that we're fans of Vivo Barefoot. That's a great place to start. The Shama sandals are unmatched as well in terms of like the flexibility of that shoe. And you're going to actually feel the ground a little bit more. So getting some sort of barefoot shoe, I think, is a really great start because I think when we talk about all these different things, we're trying to think about what is something that's going to have the biggest impact with kind of the smallest almost investment. You know, okay, there's an investment of like purchasing the shoes, right? But that's not a huge deal. And then you just wear them and your feet actually literally get stronger just by wearing them, walking in them and doing the normal activity that you do.
Starting point is 00:08:44 them and doing the normal activity that you do. And that's the way that here at the power project, we like to look at exercise in general is like, I don't really know if there's a great reason for you to really be super worried about a one hour workout. Uh, maybe you can spread, uh, your, um, your exercise kind of throughout the day. And just when you walk by a kettlebell that's in your living room, you can do some presses. Uh, when you wake up first thing in the morning, you can go outside and do some jump rope in the sunlight and kind of double down on some of these things that you're doing. But when it comes to running and it comes to like, you know, strengthening the foot, I think the first place you start is with just getting rid of your shoes and wearing barefoot shoes. So maybe in training, you train barefoot here and there. If you have access to sand, the beach is amazing, but that
Starting point is 00:09:26 will absolutely annihilate your feet at first. So you're going to have to, every step that you take, you got to be really cautious with it. And you have to think about how much of this have I done previously? If you're just like, okay, I'm going to go in the sand and I'm going to start to try to sprint, which actually is a great place to learn how to sprint, especially in the soft sand, to sprint, which actually is a great place to learn how to sprint, especially in the soft sand, but you're going to completely wreck yourself. You're going to be so, so tired. You'll be mad at Mark after trying it. Yeah, so tired and so dead.
Starting point is 00:09:52 So you want to try to, I think it's important to build into stuff so that things don't feel so horrific afterwards. Are you saying barefoot shoes to sprint in? No. Yeah. So barefoot shoes to sprint in, that would be like next level. You know, that would be, you know, something that you would want to kind of ease yourself into. You'd want to walk in them for a while. You want to train in them for a while. Maybe some of the jumps that
Starting point is 00:10:14 you do, maybe, you know, you're doing some box jumps, maybe you're jumping rope. Even with jumping rope though, you still might want like a, and see me, she's usually on like a pad, right? I use, so I use the jump rope pad to save my rope because if i'm jump roping with that jump rope on concrete that actually will kill the rope over time but i actually jump rope with either the vivo barefoot modus shoe or the primus trail shoe um has a little more cushion than maybe the regular ones yeah yeah like the the primus light has not much on the bottom so doing some jump jump rope on that doesn't feel too great, but the Primus trail and the, the, uh, modus, um, those shoes have a little bit slightly thicker soles and jumping on them is nice. You'll
Starting point is 00:10:54 still feel it. Like you'll still, it's still flat. You'll still feel the ground. Um, but those, those are really good. I was actually going to mention too, when it comes to strengthening the feet, when it, for, for sprinting, it's odd because the walking around and all of this, I would look at these, even though you're active, I'd look at them as passive modalities. The reason why is because you're always going to walk, but how can you make sure that all of the steps you're taking, everything that you're doing is going to be helping your feet get stronger for other activities. And even though you're always walking and it's active, you're still doing something you'd always be doing.
Starting point is 00:11:33 So I almost look at using shoes, barefoot shoes, as a passive benefit. Same thing with standing on these mats that we stand on right now. You could pull yours up. There's probably other companies, and we don't have a code for this, but this is, I think, the Stoic mats from Wild Gym. We're standing on these every single podcast, and our feet, yeah, we never clean them. But our feet are constantly getting this texture, and our feet are grabbing the aspects of the mat, which makes our toes move, which is helping strengthen the toes and the tendon aspects of the feet. This is totally passive, and we're getting that benefit while we're podcasting. So if you're at work sitting in a desk, you can definitely benefit from that.
Starting point is 00:12:11 And one other thing I'll mention is go check out our podcast with Kador Ziani. The seven postures that he literally went through his postures and his book on Amazon honestly isn't expensive. I honestly think you should go get it because he goes through a bunch of postures that if you're on the ground, he gets in his feet. Like that guy's – his feet, oh, they're beautiful. His feet can fold like crazy. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:32 He's pretty wild. I'll give people a secret to the feet. You want to train your feet, just train your calves. Doing any sort of calf – any sort of calf work is footwork. And look, people need better calves anyway, right? People need bigger calves. I used to train my calves quite a bit when I was younger. I just, I like to clown on people when they ask me about my calves because everyone gets
Starting point is 00:12:52 so frustrated. I'm like, yeah, I never trained them. But when I was younger, I did train them. I did boxing. I did jump rope. You know, I did a lot of activities where you're using your calves and some people don't end up getting well-built calves from just exercise or just the different things that they like. So you might want to try to go out of your way to
Starting point is 00:13:11 do some calf exercises. But while you're doing those exercises, think about your foot more and think about like single, you know, single leg, single foot type movements where you're actually really flexing. And so some of the movements that you've been doing in the gym, I really enjoy those. Um, you're just basically putting pressure on the toe and you're trying to, you know, uh, keep your foot in a certain position while you're on like, uh, what do we have that wet deck, right? Yeah. There's the wet deck is actually amazing for it, but it's not a slight, if you have a slant board or wet deck, those are good. Yeah. And you're kind of like, uh, you're just going in all different directions on that slant board. That is super challenging and super hard.
Starting point is 00:13:46 And you'll feel your foot just start to fatigue and get tired pretty quickly. If you guys are, oh, Andrew has Cador stuff pulled up right now. But this also like looking at the way he moves, this is all the stuff that you're going to learn in his book. That's super easy to follow. It's got a big picture. So someone like me can actually pay attention to it. But just looking at the way he moves, it's one's very fluid and it just it looks really nice but it's
Starting point is 00:14:09 also like i don't know i feel pain relief just watching him move this way and then when i actually move that way it's just it just kind of makes everything line up and makes you feel way better like that right there especially look at how he's sitting on his ankle yeah and he does it again on the other side bam that feels great and something he shared with us is that like he does this all day, every day. And that's an interesting, that's an interesting thing to share with somebody that's like trying their journey for the first time, their fitness or nutrition. Like just imagine some, you know, somebody is like, well, how often do I do this? All day, every day. How about that? You know, it sounds like so discouraging in a way, but again, it's microdosing. It's like, well, how often do I do this? All day, every day. How about that? It sounds like so discouraging in a way,
Starting point is 00:14:46 but again, it's microdosing. It's like you're just doing little bits of it and you're not trying to take on everything all at one time. You're implementing one thing at a time. The jump rope for Encema, it came after you implemented a bunch of other stuff that you held onto for weeks, months, years. The flipping of the
Starting point is 00:15:05 kettlebells and, uh, me going from, you know, running to sprinting, uh, to working on some jumping, all these things, they take time. They weren't all integrated all at one time. I wasn't like, Hey guys, like I'm done with powerlifting. I'm going to retire and I'm going to go into a hundred meter sprint competition next week. You know, there's, there's going to be a, um, there needs to be a lot of regression before there's any, uh, progress really. And so I started way, way back. I went out on the track with Graham and I tried to do some kind of faster work one day and I just, I got hurt.
Starting point is 00:15:39 I think, I think it was actually, it wasn't, it wasn't the same day. You got hurt on another day. Yeah. Graham Andrew does both. Correlation. Yeah. Barefoot sprinter. Yeah. Thanks Graham. Yeah. Thank you. actually yeah it wasn't it wasn't the same day you got hurt another day yeah graham andrew does both correlation yeah foot splitter yeah thanks graham yeah thank you great programs i'm fucking around it's my fault it's graham's fault but uh yeah i got hurt and you know i think some of that was just i think it was just almost like fatigue like we ran a couple times that day and then we stopped for a little bit and then i went to run again. And like the frustrating thing about that is I feel like I wasn't even going fast, but fast for me at the time was still super slow. And now I'm,
Starting point is 00:16:15 I'm working into a position where I feel like I can, um, like flex isn't the right word. Cause I know I shouldn't be so stiff when I run, but I feel like I can almost go full blast. And I reserve myself to not really get into too much of that yet because I still feel like I'm not 100% ready for it. But a great way to get yourself into some sprinting, we were talking a lot about building up the foot and stuff, I think is very, very simply is just maybe you have a watch, maybe you have your phone. There's a Nike Run Club app that's real easy to get. It's free. There's many different ways you can do this. But if you can see like your split, if you can see like what your time is, how many minutes per, you know, let's say it says that you're you're jogging at a 12 minute mile pace
Starting point is 00:17:06 that's great maybe every once in a while you push a little bit and you just just see what it feels like to do a 10 minute mile pace and i'm talking about for just a few seconds like just check that out for a couple seconds go oh okay that still feels kind of slow to me i think i could do better than that and then just kind of see what you can do. But I'm talking about for like one or two or maybe three seconds, like really, really small, like burst. And that's what I do on my phone.
Starting point is 00:17:34 I sometimes will look at it and I'm like, oh, cool, I ran like a four minute mile. Not running an actual four minute mile, I ran a four minute mile pace for like a second or two seconds. And that time is getting better and better. And so to me, that's been motivating on my watch. I also have, it shows you like your miles per hour and that's kind of cool. Just be like, oh man, I fucking ran 15 miles an hour. That's kind of cool. So there's different ways to measure it. But again,
Starting point is 00:18:00 I think the best way to do it so you're not going to get hurt is to start out with some light and easy jogging. And then just say, I'm just going to push maybe, I don't know, another 10% beyond that. And then I'm going to rest. I'm going to push another 10% beyond that. I'm going to rest. And don't have it in your head that you're going to sprint as fast as you used to run. You're not comparing yourself to anybody else. You're not comparing yourself to your former self, just going at the pace that you can handle right now. And if you do a surge where you start out
Starting point is 00:18:36 slow and then you pick up speed gradually, that is going to be a safe way as opposed to if you just start and you try to just all of a sudden take off. You could get hurt in the acceleration. And when you're also going to get hurt is after you've probably already been running for about 20 yards. So if you're trying to run like 40 yards or 100 yards, that's too far. That's like way too far for now. Over time, you can work your way into that. I'm talking about you just hitting the gas for maybe like 10 yards.
Starting point is 00:19:05 That's it. One thing I want you guys to, I hope you guys are taking notes because the way that we're going to talk to you about this is building a cascade of different habits and practices into your day. That's going to help you get better at sprinting. The reason why I'm saying that is because a lot of time when you're going to, when you go watch videos, I'm like, oh, how to build a bigger bench or the exercises for a bigger bench exercises to for reverse sprinting, right? They'll give you three exercises. I want to do this exercises without realizing that there are all these underlying factors that help these exercises become more beneficial to the individual who's doing them. If you see someone doing a fucking a skip and a B skip and all that type of stuff,
Starting point is 00:19:48 but you don't even realize that they've been doing something for so long that their feet are strong enough to actually handle the stresses of sprinting. And then you go try to do A skips and B skips and sprint. And then you have a stress fraction in your foot because your feet are weak. We're trying to give you the baseline things. We want to give you, we're going to give you the things that are going to allow you to build the structure that can then handle sprints. So that's why we're talking about all these basal level things. Because a few years ago, I know that I did, my feet weren't strong enough to handle the sprinting that I'm doing right now. And like Mark mentioned, if you go out there and you sprint too soon, you know, a few years ago, I think it was two years ago when we first met
Starting point is 00:20:17 Graham and then he took us out to the field to sprint. I hadn't sprinted in forever, right? And since I was like a soccer player, I hadn't sprinted at that capacity. But I was just like, you know what? My body knows how to do this. I was really fast. Let me do that now in a 250 pound body that produces more force, right? And I fucking pulled Miami.
Starting point is 00:20:34 That was my fault. That wasn't Graham's fault. But the thing is, is my new body wasn't ready for the force that I was about to put through it. So we're trying to give you the capacities and the practices that you can implement daily, right? Slowly, right? So it doesn't get in the way of life.
Starting point is 00:20:50 You're not having to spend too much time with this, but slowly so that over time, you are going to build a structure that's ready for the violence of sprinting. Yeah, watch the video. We have a video that Nsema and I did on YouTube. You're going to want to check that out we just did some sprints on a hill and um i think you were going maybe 80 or so maybe 70 80 yeah
Starting point is 00:21:12 and you just you want to keep it um you know if you're if you're new to it you might even want the percentage to be lower lower than that but a hill is a really great place to start um the hill is going to slow you down quite a bit. Again, something like soft sand is going to slow you down. The advantage of moving slower, and the same thing would happen in the pool, and we'll get to some of the exercises you can do in the pool as well, but anytime you just slow the exercise down, you're getting rid of some of the violence of it. You can even say like a hill is somehow getting rid of some of the gravity of it because every step that you take is a step not only further out in front of you, but it's higher up. So you're not, you know, if you're landing flat on the ground, your foot impact is going to be a little more harsh.
Starting point is 00:21:58 And so there's a lot of things you can do to kind of mitigate. Another thing you can do is pull a sled. And you don't have to necessarily even really run with a sled. Just walking with a sled would be a great start. And then from there, you can try to like run just a bit with the sled, but really lightweight, like maybe just like a 45. I've seen a lot of sprinters utilize that. But again, to Ansema's point, it's usually more of an advanced move.
Starting point is 00:22:23 Like let's worry about sprints with weights after we already learned how to sprint. However, pushing into the tank or pulling a sled with some intensity can be something that could also get you ready for sprinting. And one of the reasons why hills are so amazing is like you think about the ramp. A hill is like weight training for runners. That's what a hill is. Because when you take your next step, that next step being higher, you're now pushing off higher versus when you're on flat ground, you need better technique and the stride length of your foot, you're going to have a longer stride length. So if you're not ready for that stride length, that's one of the reasons why when people new to sprinting sprint on flat ground
Starting point is 00:23:03 and they try to put all that force into the ground, they're more likely to pull their hamstring because their stride length is longer. So their hamstring length ends up getting longer too. But a hill, it's a shorter burst. Like when you take that step on, like onto the next part of the hill, you're, it's a shorter step and it's a step upwards. So now you're actually recruiting more fast twitch muscle fibers when you're doing hills versus when you're doing flat ground sprints. So hills can help prepare you to do flat ground sprints later. But one thing is don't think about this shit as a race. Literally, even though sprints are, we want to go fast.
Starting point is 00:23:36 Yay. We don't want to go fast too fast. You go fast too fast, you fuck yourself up, dog. Yeah. And if you're thinking that you want to go faster, that's usually a bad spot to be in. Like going faster should actually happen naturally. Yeah. When you're out on a run and you go to hit the gas a little bit and you go, whoa, I moved way faster than last time and I wasn't even trying that hard.
Starting point is 00:24:02 That's what you're looking for. That's what we're looking for with diet. That's what we're looking for with strength training. Wow, my squat went up and it seemed like I'm barely even doing anything. My knees don't hurt. My back doesn't hurt. That's when you know when you're doing something properly. And it's kind of hard to hit those markers like that. But if you just take your time and just understand that this is going to take you a while. And by a while, for some person that maybe has been out of sprinting for a while, maybe it only takes them like six weeks to get themselves back up to par to where they can run pretty fast. But for another person, it might take six months. And for another person, it might take six years.
Starting point is 00:24:40 Like that's just the way it is. Like that's just the way it is. You might have like if you're like our buddy Russell, you know, for him to have some of these goals that he's starting to have now. He's making like a bunch of short-term goals. He's like I'd like to be able to do this. I'd like to be able to do that. And then he's making a bunch of long-term goals. And so a short-term goal was we talked the other day about him deadlifting 365. He's working his body weight down.
Starting point is 00:25:03 He wants to weigh 365 and deadlift 365. And I'm sure Russell is super strong. I'm sure we can go in there and like in three weeks, he can deadlift 365. Yeah. Four weeks. Like he could, he's just strong. He could figure it out. I saw him benching 225 the other day pretty easily. I haven't seen him bench in forever. So he, but we're not going to rush it. Like I said, let's take like six months with this because you still are working on the weight loss and to simultaneously lose weight and get stronger at the same time is a kind of a complicated game. And so why get hurt? Why, why try to rush something? It's going to be amazing when he
Starting point is 00:25:39 does it. He is going to do it. And it's going to be six months from now. For the month of April, you're going to receive 25% off all Vivo Barefoot shoes. And Seema, can you tell us why these shoes are so great? For years on this podcast, we've been talking about the benefit of barefoot shoes. And these are the shoes I used to use back in like 2017, 2018. My old Metcons, they are flat, but they're not very wide and they're very stiff and they don't move. That's why we've been partnering with and we've been using Vivo Barefoot Shoes. These are the Modest Strength Shoe because not only are they wide,
Starting point is 00:26:09 I have wide ass feet and so do we here on the podcast, especially as our feet have gotten stronger, but they're flexible. So when you're doing certain movements, like let's say you're doing jumping or you're doing split squats or you're doing movements where your toes need to flex and move,
Starting point is 00:26:23 your feet are able to do that and perform in this shoe, allowing them to get stronger over time. And obviously, they're flexible. So your foot's allowed to be a foot. And when you're doing all types of exercise, your feet will get stronger, improving your ability to move. Andrew, how can they get their hands on these? Yes. And for the month of April, you're going to receive 25% off all of your Vivo Barefoot shoes. That is a limited time deal for the month of April only. So if you've been waiting for the perfect time to buy your Vivo Barefoot shoes, now is that time.
Starting point is 00:26:53 Head over to vivobarefoot.com slash powerproject, enter the code for April, and receive 25% off your entire order. Link is in the description as well as the podcast show notes. Do you guys have different shoes for sprinting versus long distance running um yeah i'll say that when it comes for to sprinting i end up using the uh the super shoes that you actually the first pair of super shoes i ever had was a gift from mark it was the ultra what are they they're uh yeah they're called like uh shit i lost the name if you go to ultra's website you'll see they're they're they're uh yeah they're called like uh shit i lost the name if you go to ultra's website you'll see
Starting point is 00:27:26 they're they're they're one of their carbon footplate shoes i ended up buying another pair of those and i use those because they are wider but i use those specifically for sprinting because of the amount of force that i end up putting in my foot with sprinting over time i'm going to slowly start working into using a slightly thinner sole shoe like Like I'll probably work into the, I've actually sprinted in the, um, they're the Vivo, uh, Magna Forest Escape. So you can pull the ultra ones up, but the Vivo Magna Forest Escapes are actually hiking shoes from Vivos, but they have a good strong sole where it's flat that I actually, I've sprinted in those before too. And I actually like sprinting in those for flat, but they, they, they have a, they have a good strong soul so that when I put force into it,
Starting point is 00:28:07 I'm not feeling all of that ground impact, but these are the ultra shoes that I use. I believe. Yeah. These are the ones I use for sprinting right now. Yeah. It's actually interesting. Like, you know, another, another good idea is to go to a track. I just happen to hate going to a track, but I just don't like it. I mean, I hate it. It just seems like way too much of a workout. I just happen to hate going to a track. Me too. I just don't like it. I mean, I hate it. It just seems like way too much of a workout. Yes. And that circle of the track, it's way too far and everything. And then like running around
Starting point is 00:28:33 in a circle just doesn't seem like a great idea. So I just don't enjoy it. But going to a track can be super beneficial and running in the grass. If you have an opportunity to run in a field, that could be really big. A hundred percent. That's a great,
Starting point is 00:28:46 that's a great opportunity. And, and then you don't have to worry about your shoes as much. I mean, you can even start to work on stuff barefoot. And if you do stuff barefoot and you're new to it, your feet are going to sort of dictate how much activity and how fast you're going to,
Starting point is 00:28:59 cause you're, it's kind of like not feel good. Especially if you're running in the grass, it's like kind of dry or there's like any discomfort, you know, you're, it's kind of like not feel good. Especially if you're running in the grass, it's like kind of dry or there's like any discomfort, you know, you're going to probably move a little slower than normal. So you'll have some precaution built in. And be okay with moving slow in the grass.
Starting point is 00:29:13 If you go, you start running in grass, especially if it's a slightly thicker grass, you're going to feel like you're running slow, right? That's fucking okay. Your feet, if you do more stuff in grass, your feet will slowly also get stronger too with it. So just be mindful because the grass has some give, unless you're on like super hard dirt. But a lot of grass you have has some give.
Starting point is 00:29:31 So it's going to be nice to do drills, jumps, and stuff like that on the grass. That's a great idea. You've been swimming a bunch lately? Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah. How's that going? I guess I'll talk about that here. I wouldn't say that this is like for sprinting, but swimming has kind of been my secret weapon. And I've actually not wanted to talk about that here. I don't, I wouldn't say that this is like for sprinting, but it's swimming has kind of been my secret weapon and I've actually not wanted to talk
Starting point is 00:29:48 about that. But no, it's okay. Well, you know what? My competitors aren't listening to this. And if they are, you're not going to find a pool. But, um, uh, after we had, um, yeah, good thing I remembered. But after we had Alan Belcher come on the Good thing I remembered. Alan's a homie. But after we had Alan Belcher come on the podcast, he was like, you know, um, John Jones has been using this with the pool and he's been like, he's been fucking loving it. And Alan started using the pool and he was like, yo, it's actually been a super good conditioning tool. I was like, fuck. Okay. So he's like, okay, grab some, go buy some flippers. So I got some, some flippers. Uh, and I also got some, some stuff for my hands, which I don't
Starting point is 00:30:25 use much now, but I still use them. But I slowly started implementing freestyle work into what I do. And the thing I noticed with the pool is I won't go too long on this, but the big thing it does is I can pretty much hit the pool every morning. I hit it this morning too, and I hit 22 laps. And that was a recovery swim for me now. Whereas in the beginning, doing one 25 meter back and forth or just one 25 meter destroyed me. I think the first time I hit the pool, I only did like eight laps. And I was like, I had a super pump and I was super fatigued. Now I can get in the pool almost every single day, do a minimum 20 laps. It doesn't beat my body up at all.
Starting point is 00:31:01 My body actually feels better coming out of the pool than when I went into the pool, because what I've realized is when you're doing a freestyle, the water is slightly giving you traction, kind of like how we talked about kettlebell juggling and the rope gives your body traction. When you drive down the pool and you're doing that and you're reaching and you're driving, I get this traction that happens with my hands. So it slightly pulls things apart when I'm kicking, right? It'll do the same with the hips where it kind of gives you a little bit of traction while you're swimming.
Starting point is 00:31:29 So when I come out of the pool, my body feels decompressed, but my breathing is the challenge. It's the breathing that gets challenged when you're in the pool. So I'm able to train my cardiovascular capacity without stressing out my body almost every single day. And as I become more efficient with my form, I can then push the cardio aspect of it without beating up my body. So I
Starting point is 00:31:53 could do pool work and jujitsu and lifting on the same day, but the pool work isn't taking away from anything. It's, it's putting some stress on the cardiovascular system, but the body's okay. I think a cool aspect of being in a pool is that you could, you know, when I, when I think of sprinting, you know, when I first started to think about sprinting, I'm like, what can I sprint? Like I, I don't really possess the ability to go and run as fast as I can without getting hurt. I'm like, but I could do it with my arms. I can move my arms really fast. I could punch a heavy bag or I could do certain things like that. Even that, you know, you still want to be cautious because you could hurt your hand.
Starting point is 00:32:31 There's just a lot of things that you want to be cautious with. And I like how Ansema pointed to flippers right away. For some reason, like we don't want to go, we don't want to search low enough a lot of times. We don't want to start low enough or slow enough. And we really need to. search low enough a lot of times we don't want to start low enough or slow enough and we really need to and for a lot of people that are getting into running like the first shoe that was recommended to me was the nike alpha fly which is a super shoe yeah and then other people would be like why would you start there wouldn't you want like wouldn't you want to like do the work on your
Starting point is 00:32:57 own it's like no i i want i want assistance i want a lot of help like because i'm new and because this is like you know there's a lot of weight it's gonna I'm new and because this is like, you know, there's a lot of weight that's going to be super jarring on me. And for you or for someone new to swimming, man, that's a lot of work for your shoulders. And you said you had a pump, like, you're not supposed to get a pump from swimming. I was super pumped. The first week, my whole upper body was filled with blood. It was insane. I still get a pump now, but yeah, there you go. There's the kind of first shoe that I went with. Let me tell you a funny story about swimming real quick, which happened the other day of Sunday. I'll be quick with this one guys. But I went in the pool and there's this guy swimming two lanes down. Okay. And he was just, he was cruising, no flippers, by the way, just
Starting point is 00:33:35 cruising back and forth, back and forth. So I started doing my thing. And then I realized like, oh, he's trying to stay ahead of me. I have flippers on. By the way, let me, let me kind of give you the idea of the physique behind this man. Probably late forties, early fifties. He has a man boobies, no disrespect. He has a belly, but this man is a fucking dolphin. He's going back and forth. He's going back and forth. So I'm like, this was the day I did the PR of 40 something laps.
Starting point is 00:34:00 No wonder I did the PR, right? So I was like, oh oh shit he's not stopping so i wasn't stopping either so we did like and then i finally after like 20 something laps i stopped and then after i stopped he did two more laps and then and then he stopped i was like i knew it i knew it he wanted to beat me but he beat me and i had flippers on so the thing is what i'm saying here is like no i am not a fucking swimmer but the flippers oh my like oh my god had flippers on. So the thing is what I'm saying here is like, no, I am not a fucking swimmer, but the flippers, oh my, like, oh my God, the flippers make being able to progress at swimming. Cause my form in swimming is actually much better now. I'm not going to say I'm a pro swimmer or anything, but I got some fucking water legs. But even so I think it's what I thought was
Starting point is 00:34:39 pretty cool about that is he didn't look in shape, which kind of, kind of backs up what I think about swimming. It's not going to be the craziest thing for the body. I know diet matters too, but his cardiovascular capacity, that guy has a healthy fucking heart. He has a healthy fucking heart, even though he physically looks out of shape. There's so many great things to a lot of these other activities that people get into. And that's why we recommend that people do a sport, you know, try to find something. Sometimes a sport because you're competing,
Starting point is 00:35:09 you know, it could just be like softball or whatever, but, or pickleball. Sometimes because you're competing, the risk of injury is higher, but hopefully you're invested enough in what you're doing that you start to think of what are some other things I can do in addition to this so that I can, because I love doing this, what are some things I can do in addition to this so that I can – because I love doing this. What are some things I can do in addition to this to make this better?
Starting point is 00:35:30 And I think that having something like swimming, something like jujitsu, something like running. When I'm in here lifting, I'm oftentimes thinking about how I want this to work out for running. So that could be – sometimes that might mean I do more work and other times it might mean I do less work. Like how many single leg leg curls do I want to do if I know that I'm going to run a lot tomorrow? Like I want to do some, you know, like let's get some activation, the hamstrings, let's, let's still do some of these exercises that you love and that you enjoy. But there's no reason for me to do like six sets of 10. That's what I used to maybe do, build hypertrophy and make sure that the hamstrings aren't a weakness on deadlifts and stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:36:13 But there's no reason for me to do that now that I'm running because I'll go out and run. I'll be like, holy shit, man. And then the whole week and maybe even the next week, I mean, that's a great way to get hurt is to start to combine too much of too many things going on at one time. But having a sport will knock out so many of the things that we talk about here. Like how do you swim? Like you swim barefoot. Sometimes maybe you have a flipper on or something like that, but your feet have to work a lot. How do you do jujitsu?
Starting point is 00:36:43 You do it barefoot. On the ground. Right? Well well it's fighting without punches i didn't i did not tell you andrew pointed it out i was like oh my god what an embarrassing sport i had to break down the rules yeah yeah like wow that really changes it doesn't sound that scary anymore but i don't know you guys make a big deal of it yeah yeah so i wanted to ask uh hopefully not to sidetrack the whole conversation about like the about the feet so my my son will walk around everywhere barefoot like if he we put shoes on him he freaking hates it which is great i like encourage it i take his shoes off but he will run around on cement like full speed you can just hear his feet slapping like hard right it is it's great and i
Starting point is 00:37:27 was just thinking like dude if that was me like man i my feet would be hurting really bad so um what what do you guys have for people as far as like recovering the feet like if your if your foot hurts like what can you do i know we were talking about like stepping on those uh stoic mats and doing these things passively oddly enoughly enough, I think the stoic mat. But yeah, I was going to say like what if you are already kind of like, ooh, like I went too hard. I wore the wrong shoes. I did in cement and not grass like you said. Like what are some things that they can do to help kind of rejuvenate their feet?
Starting point is 00:37:59 I think some walking would be a good idea. I don't always think that stretching is always a good idea when something like kind of hurts. However, I have found that stretching the top of your foot, just taking your foot and like putting the top of your toes down and like stretching that portion of your foot out just feels good. I'll just like sit like that sometimes. Like you were showing Kador, I obviously can't sit on my ankle the way that he does. But just having that pressure on the foot seems to help a lot. I think a lot of times the things that you have going on in your foot sometimes come from upstream.
Starting point is 00:38:37 Sometimes they come from tightness of the calves, like the way that you're landing in particular. So we're huge fans of that roller that Nsema has right there. You can roll that on your shins and calves. I think super aggressive, but it works amazingly well. And actually people that have like plantar fasciitis and some things like that going on plantar fasciitis, uh, by the way, I think people think that that's like in the middle of your foot. It's actually more towards your heel. You'll just have like crazy heel pain all the time. You're like, what's this? That's welcome to plantar fasciitis. That's what that is. And you can get rid of that most often by working through the shin and the calves. So
Starting point is 00:39:13 that would be some of my recommendation would be to do some like almost like myofascial release stuff on that. And then also just using your head and your training sessions. Like what are some things, you know, I don't know, your feet are beat up. You try to think of things that maybe you're on a bike instead of out for a run. That's why triathletes are actually – triathletes are injured usually a lot less than like marathon runners. And it's because they have other things to work on that prevent them from doing any one thing way too much. They usually don't swim that often, but getting in a pool is almost like a form of recovery in a lot of ways. And getting on a bike, obviously, like biking, they say that biking can be the most grueling thing that anyone could ever do.
Starting point is 00:39:57 I've never tried it to that degree, but biking can be a relief from being on your feet. So hopping on a bike getting in a pool cold plunge is amazing like i use my cold plunge every single day without fail and but it's not always me submerging my whole body in there every single day i just will at the very least get my lower leg in there because that makes my legs recover boom just like instantly or at least it feels that way. Yeah, cold is an amazing recovery tool. I know like, you know, when I was, one of the big reasons I built the skill of jump roping was to strengthen my feet.
Starting point is 00:40:42 And I understood that by getting better at jump rope, it's going to have a cascade effect where it helps my feet get stronger, which is going to make sprinting feel easier, which is going to make me feel more fluid in jujitsu. So one thing that happened though, as I was increasing my jumps, increasing my, um, you know, my frequency of doing it per day is my ankles would start getting beat up because the, the, the volume of jumping. So like sometimes if you start feeling something's beating you up, maybe it's a little bit more than you could chew one day. Just don't do it the next day. I know we talk about microdosing and the goal is to be able to do a little bit of something every day. But there were some days that I just didn't jump rope because I was like, oh, shit, my ankle is not feeling it right now. So there was like some days where I just didn't jump and maybe the next day I'd try to jump a bit. I'd feel a little bit of it. I'd jump for a little bit.
Starting point is 00:41:22 And then for that day, it'll only be a minute or two of jumping. And then the next day, it'll only be a minute or two of jumping. But the next day, I'm like, oh, okay, boom, my bounce is back. Okay, let me, I can push it again because it's recovered. It's gotten stronger and I can move forward. I don't know if you can pull up the YouTube video we did with Power Plus on Super Training 06 when he was here because I want them to be able to see that slant board thing that he showed us. That's why I started doing it. There's this thing that he had us do on the slant board where you're putting your foot on it straight on. You're putting your foot on the slant board and your foot's facing one direction. Then your foot's facing in another direction. Then your foot's facing in another direction. But that actually helped strengthen my ankles because when you're putting your foot on the slant board, ideally, I'm also holding when I'm doing it here. I'm not doing it on that day. We didn't hold anything in our hand. When I do it but I'm also spreading out my toes on the slant board, right? So that I feel like when you spread, when you spread your toes and go up on your pinky toe, or like, let's say this, put your foot on the ground right now, if you're listening,
Starting point is 00:42:35 go up into like a, like you're, you're, you know, getting, flexing your calves. Now really try to spread your toes as you're up on your feet. If you spread your pinky toe and you're not just up on your big toe, but you're also up on your pinky toe, you'll feel more activation through the ankles. Or if you try to like lift your pinky toe up, it feels like death on the big toe. Exactly. But you want to try to spread your toes and have all of your weight planted there. When I started to do that, I started to feel that area that I always got pain in my ankle. I started triggering that. I was like, oh.
Starting point is 00:43:10 So an aspect of that is because my ability to have dexterity and spread my pinky toe is weak. So then there's this pain traveling up to the ankle. This helped me fix that balance, helped improve my dexterity. And I haven't had any of those ankle issues then since then, but I figured out it was because of that. So this right here, I remember Mark, when you did this, when we were doing this here, you said the next day that you felt a lot of soreness in your feet, right? Yeah, for sure. This kills your feet initially. But if you add this drill into your day, and again,
Starting point is 00:43:42 you can have your hand on something so you can balance, you're going that your feet are gonna get a your feet are gonna get a lot stronger in time there's absolutely no reason why you can't just do this whenever wherever yeah i do this shit at the airport i'm waiting in line and i'm like oh fuck all these people i'm gonna i'm gonna get mine i'm gonna get some training in and i'll just i'll just do it and it you know i don't think anyone knows or cares like You can barely tell. And rather than making a scene and trying to be up on one foot and having the other leg up high,
Starting point is 00:44:11 I'll just kickstand the other foot back just so I have a little bit of extra balance. Or sometimes I'll just stand there. And I mean, you guys see me moving around in the podcast. I'll do calf raises and stuff. I know we're maniacs at this stuff, but it's just fun. It's fun to be able to like,
Starting point is 00:44:26 find some things that work, find some tangible things that help you to feel good when you're doing some of these movements, because going out and sprinting, like it does cost you a lot. And it is something that can break your body down. Your body needs to be super strong and resilient. Real quick on that, on that little portion where you said, you know, cause I've seen comments of people being like, Oh, your, your life is centered around this. That's why it's so easy for you. Or like, Oh wow. Cause I made this video about jujitsu and I outlined like some things that you have to do to make sure your body's ready for jujitsu. And there are multiple comments that said like, Oh, so you're saying that you have to, how your whole life has to revolve around jujitsu so you can do jujitsu for a long time. And the thing is, I get we all have different things we like to do,
Starting point is 00:45:08 but you are walking around all day long in this bag of tissue. And the habits we're talking about is just stress testing this bag of tissue so that day by day, this bag continues to improve. Because if you're not stress testing it if you're just like okay the only time i'm gonna do anything for this bag of tissues when i go into that gym for 60 minutes and then the rest of the day i'm gonna do whatever the fuck i want and not think about how it's functioning then when you're in pain you can't fucking whine about it because you're not taking the time to take care of yourself we're not giving you a whole fucking workout to do we're just giving you concepts to try to add into your that. And that goes for anybody too. It doesn't matter even what you're
Starting point is 00:45:47 doing in the gym. You could be doing all the correct movements in the gym. You could be doing yoga. You could be doing Pilates. You could be doing things that you think are really going to be beneficial and they're really going to save you and have you feel better. But if you still have crappy habits outside of the gym, you're not going to really – maybe you'll get something from it. Like maybe it will be helpful, but you're not going to really squeeze everything out of it. And I think that that's what we're talking about. Like a lot of times on this show, we're talking about how do we get the most out of these things. Yeah, and I – again, I know I might be biased because like these are things that I think about.
Starting point is 00:46:21 But when I think about us talking about these things, I am thinking about the person who's in the office. We're thinking about that person who has to sit at work all day. And the thing we're thinking is like, if you're at work, you can be passively doing these things, or you can take three minutes to the slant board that's on the right of your office desk and do something real quick. You can do that. It's not impossible for you. And I think it would be a disservice to yourself to think that you can't do that because it's not – you don't need a gym for a lot of the stuff we're talking about. Make you feel good. Yeah. Shit makes you feel good.
Starting point is 00:46:52 Yeah. Moving on to like – we were talking a little bit about like some other exercises you can do to kind of prep yourself. I think there's like just old school movements and old school exercises. High knees come to mind, like these drills that you may have done in football, you know, maybe kind of like, I don't even know what they would call it,
Starting point is 00:47:12 but just like a side, like what is it when you run sideways? What do they call that? Yeah. Just lateral. It's like a lateral run. Yeah. Like a lateral run.
Starting point is 00:47:19 Like some of these things that maybe haven't practiced in a while. You call them karaoke's when you're going like. Yeah. Oh yeah. When you twist the legs around and that's that kind of thing. Two in, two out. Okay.
Starting point is 00:47:30 Yeah. That kind of stuff. I mean, it's great. It's great for balance coordination. Obviously you got things like walking backwards or running backwards. These are all like little preparatory things that you can do to get yourself, you know,
Starting point is 00:47:44 kind of prepared to sprint. Obviously jumping, jumping's huge. So some form of jumping and SEMA has been real big on the jump rope lately. I've been messing with it as well. Jumping, you know, you don't always have to jump up onto something. I think that's kind of like all we can think of when we think about jumping. And a lot of times people will try to jump up onto something high and jump up onto something higher and higher. And while that may have some utility, I don't think that's the smartest way to do it. I think literally you could jump onto the same height most of the time and be fine. Should be something you can clear very easily. There's no
Starting point is 00:48:20 reason to kind of get hurt doing some of these things. But I think what's important to be in recognition of, whether we're talking about sprinting, lifting, or jumping, the people that do those things with the most efficiency and the most proficiency, and they're like bouncy and explosive with the movements, those people practice with things that are really easy for them. There's a couple people, a couple of dunk people on Instagram and you watch them work on their jumps and they're like, this hop up onto something that's six inches, hop on onto something that's eight inches. They'll bounce down and they'll, but they have this really good kind of rhythm to them as they're like jumping down and jumping onto other things. It's not necessarily
Starting point is 00:49:00 about them jumping onto something that's, you know, five feet tall or something. It's more about them building up that elasticity in those shorter movements and getting their feet off the ground quickly. And so when you're just starting your journey, I wouldn't even really worry about getting your feet off the ground quickly. I would just try some jumps, jump up and jump down from some stuff and make sure you can kind of do so safely. I guess it would be a mistake too, if we didn't mention like, for me, I have, you know, decades of lifting behind me. And so I think that's really helped make me resilient to all the different things that I've been doing recently.
Starting point is 00:49:37 And then another thing that allows me to be resilient is that I don't really push it that crazy. I don't have, I'm not competing. I don't have like a real particular precise goal, um, at the moment. And so therefore I don't feel like I have to do this program. I don't feel like I have to do these times. And that's another, um, situation where when you start to do those things, they have a lot of reward to them. Um, but the, uh, the risk is certainly higher when you are accountable to
Starting point is 00:50:05 compete in something. I'm going to say this strength training is huge. And there's a lot of things that you can do in the gym that are going to improve your ability to sprint, but you got to look at sprinting. Not like I'm about to race the homies and be the fastest in here. I'm about to go on a race. You need to be thinking about sprinting. I was like, I just want the capacity to sprint. Um, that's the same thing. The way I look at sprinting and not sprinting, the way I look at swimming, because swimming is this, I want the skill of swimming proficiently, not at any type of pro level because of the benefit it brings my body. Um, in terms of strength training, I'm not trying to be a professional power lifter. I want the capacity
Starting point is 00:50:42 to lift weights, to strengthen my body. And for me, the big capacity is a grappler. All of these things feed into that. But for you, the big capacity may be being able to fucking run with your grandkids and your capacity to sprint. And it doesn't need to be sprinting at a hundred percent, but to go kind of fast without even thinking about it, it's just something you can do where you can just bolt to 60% with fucking fun that is right right just soup soup soup soup right that is what we're looking for here so when you're building up this skill of sprinting don't think of the sprint like i want to be usain bolt and go on the track and sprint 100 meters this is
Starting point is 00:51:21 a long game play where a year from now or two years from now, you're able to go into a 70% run without even thinking about it because your body, you're just so chill with it. It's just something you're able to do. It's not something you need to think about. You don't need to worry about doing a 100% sprint because none of us are track athletes, but most of us have lost the ability to sprint, right? So that's how you got to think about it. And we'll end up bringing on some guests coming up, talking about sprints and functional patterns. They talk all the time about everything you're doing, trying to be related to gait and stuff like that. So that'll be kind of cool to get some commentary from those guys as well as some other people that we're going to get on that can talk about
Starting point is 00:52:06 sprinting. I know you were saying that you had a friend that gave you some good critique on your running and it was just kind of move your arms a little bit more like, I guess, move your arms back more. Yeah. If Andrew pulls the video up on Mark's page, the one where you're sprinting together,
Starting point is 00:52:20 my friend Micah, who was a UC Davis, I think he was the captain of the track team when he was there. He watched my sprinting and he was like, Oh, you're leaking power in your arms. I was like, all right, tell me what's up. Tell me what's up. And I love this dude. I appreciate him looking at it. But if you watch my arms, when you see this next part, look at my arm swing, right? If you see like my arm doesn't come all the way back and it doesn't, I don't have that gate. And when I was sprinting, when I was younger,
Starting point is 00:52:45 I was a soccer player. So my thing, if you ever watched Cristiano Ronaldo sprint, it bastardizes sprinting, but that man is very fast on the field. So what Micah fixed and what he told me to do was to start like trying to improve my arm strength. So what I've actually been doing is I actually have the Weck shakers. They're in the gym. I could show it right here, but I'll show you real quick. What I do now is you can literally do this drill at home, but I'd suggest that if you try this, be kind to yourself because you may have never moved your elbows to this type of flexion. Your shoulders might not be able to handle it. But literally all I do is this in one standing. And I try to be as relaxed as possible. Like you see, I'm not like, I'm not straining.
Starting point is 00:53:30 I'm not using muscle to move my hands into those positions. You burn a ton of calories doing that, by the way. I'm just getting my elbows back and getting my, right. And I'm going to start like implementing that into my sprint is going to help me. And I've actually done that since it propelled me forward faster. Right. So, um, yeah, that's one thing. If you, if you're, if you are, if you're not using your arms, you are leaking power in your sprint. Your arms can help propel you forward. They move in tandem with your legs. Right. So they're not, they're not something that I was using much. So it's hard, you know, like we're, we're not, you know, we're
Starting point is 00:54:03 not like proficient at sprinting or at least, you know, for me're, we're not, you know, we're not like proficient at sprinting or at least, you know, for me, for sure, I'm not proficient at sprinting. And so it's going to take a while. Right. But then on top of that, it's like, you start thinking of like one or two or three things. And, uh, because I'm not proficient at sprinting, um, you forget a couple of them, you know, like you, you shouldn't have to think about sprinting. Right. That's what people will say. You know, like a lot of times, like even the comment section, like you're trying to teach like way too many things. It's like, well, no, there's certain things that you need to cue yourself in some way
Starting point is 00:54:34 because you're going to be messing up somewhere when you're not good at it. And so I'm sure the same thing happens in jujitsu. The same thing happens with powerlifting. You know, your foot's supposed to be, you know, facing this way and you're supposed to force your knees out, you know, and keep your chest up and get your air and push on your belt. Like there's so many different details of that that when you're new, you're trying to focus on too many things and you don't really have the capacity to just squat. have the capacity to just squat. And so for now, for me, I don't have the capacity to just sprint and have it be like the way that I want it to be, I guess. You and your lady just had an awesome night. You got dinner or you just came back from the gym and it's time for that fun time. But you look down at your willy and well,
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Starting point is 00:56:20 Links in the description, as well as the podcast show notes. There's a guy I want you to see if you can pull up, Andrew. His name is Asht can just type in he's a monster it's like ashton black on youtube to see if he pops up ashton bodybuilder because we need to pull up one of his sprinting videos oh yeah ashton hall put him pull him up on instagram so y'all like because i'm pretty sure ashton ashton was a sprinter when he was younger. Then he put on a bunch of muscle.
Starting point is 00:56:48 But the form is still there. Yeah, he's huge. Yeah, he's huge. So I'm pulling this up to show, like, you can be a big motherfucker and be able to sprint. And just pull up one of his sprinting videos. If you scroll down, keeps rolling, keeps rolling. Right there.
Starting point is 00:57:04 That one with the glasses on. Either or's a picture go to slow-mo perfect look at how his arms move you know what i mean the thing is his sprint passes the look test you know what i mean funny enough functional patterns use this in one of their videos to show how actually, you know, like if you just work on movement, your sprinting will improve. But the thing is, it's like this guy sprints and he lifts. So, I mean, I don't know why you're using him. It's not like he did Functional Patterns to get this big. Dude, he looks like if he used AI to create like the strongest, fastest man in the world. Give me the strongest, fastest black guy in the
Starting point is 00:57:45 world ashton is what pops up but it passes the look test you know i mean that's why they ended up using it as a good sprinting clip because you could see how he's opening his body up but i think one of the cool things when i look about when i look at this is some people are going to be like oh you were talking about sprinting you're not even a fucking track coach. Sprinting is movement, man. Right. It's a human movement that at some point we were all able to do without really thinking about it.
Starting point is 00:58:14 Relative speed. Some people were faster than others, but when we were kids, at some point we were able to sprint and then through lifestyle or just certain practices, we locked our bodies up to a point that we can no longer express this movement ability this is just a movement ability that's all it fucking is and props to the people that film this by the way they do a great job dude what
Starting point is 00:58:35 the that's all i could think of right we gotta get ashton out here bro we gotta get ashton i've talked to him a little bit before but the way that his hips move is is interesting because a lot of times a bigger guy the hips won't really move like that you can kind of like almost see i think it was muscle doc who talked a lot about disassociation uh-huh um this guy would be able to swing a golf club i'm sure like he might not be great at golf but like he would be able to swing a baseball bat you know i mean whereas like a lot of other times you know i know for myself like me swinging a golf club is like not a great idea because I can't kind of disassociate the way that he's doing. There's a comment that's like childish Gambino in the comment section. Do you see that, Mark?
Starting point is 00:59:15 What does it say? In the comment section, it's Donald Glover right there. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Oh, God. Yeah. Yeah. This is amazing. And everyone's different too.
Starting point is 00:59:23 Like, you know, I'm sure like a sprint coach might have criticism of this but like you got to move the way that your body moves and it looks like he's pretty fucking built up top and so his arm swing might be out a little wider than someone who's you know then then maybe when he was younger and maybe when he was thinner you know i i know he's grimacing but like the way his body's moving right there at the beginning it looks pretty effortlessly yeah it looks pretty effortlessly. It looks like it's almost nothing for him. Well, I think, you know, a guy like this, they develop such a great strength to weight ratio, you know, that they just get used to moving their body around.
Starting point is 00:59:58 It's no surprise, you know, he can crank out pull-ups really easily. I wouldn't be surprised if like, you know, he just hit the ground and pop out a hundred push-ups real easy. You know, a lot of times the strength to weight ratio of people that sprint is really high. And you see like on that first clip, it did a really good job. It's shown a lot of internal and external rotation of his hips, which is like, it's just hard to do as a bigger guy. You know, like if you watch like Terrell Owens or you watch Randy Moss, these, you know, like Terrell Owens or you watch Randy Moss, these, you know, NFL football players, a lot of times they're bringing their knee in kind of through the midline of their body,
Starting point is 01:00:33 almost like they're trying to knee themselves in the balls. Mm-hmm. And it's rare to see that from a bigger guy because your thighs are literally in the way of each other. And he actually is kind of like, he's still doing it. His leg is still having that whip uh that you want to have there's still a lot of internal and external rotation but yeah because he's so big it definitely um even though he's still moving tremendously fast it's definitely still slowing him down you know if he probably like when he was younger i would imagine he's faster yeah i don't know yeah but again. But again, like, does he have,
Starting point is 01:01:05 does he, does he have the capacity to sprint? Yeah. A hundred percent. And one of the things he's doing, what's fun. Yeah. And one of the things I think is so cool, Andrew, you mentioned his face grimacing. He has the ability to put all that force through his body and feel comfortable doing it. So he can then push the intensity to the point where his face starts to like, he starts to express because he's still comfortable putting that through his body. Right now, I got the way I sprint. I need to keep it. I need to keep nasal breathing.
Starting point is 01:01:33 I'll exhale through the mouth here and there. But I need to keep my face calm because if I go too fast, I'm still not comfortable at my top speed. I'm not comfortable keeping my body relaxed at my top speed. Like you mentioned, you mentioned something funny. You said his body still looks relaxed, even though his face is, you're right. His body is like, yeah, I don't get like, when I say relaxed, I don't mean there's no places that have tension. Like he's keeping his core stable. You know, his hips are stable, but he's able to produce that force and have it go through his body smoothly. There's no place within his sprint that's stopping his force output, whereas some people may have a hip issue. So when they sprint, it's kind of jerky. I know we've seen some videos of that or some people like myself, I wasn't taking a stride so that lack and arm stride was actually messing with my power, you know? arm stride was actually messing with my power, you know? So that's why one of the things I think is super important when it comes to sprinting is when you start sprinting, make sure that you,
Starting point is 01:02:31 you're, you can, you can actually relax when you're sprinting. If you start speeding up and you're like, you're thinking, and you're like, Ooh, this feels uncomfortable. Slow the fuck down, slow the fuck down. You're not ready for that that speed go at a speed where like you can breathe you can go kind of fast you can maybe let your body strive but you still feel good and then over time slowly increase that speed where you can stay relaxed when i say relax with quotes but stay at that speed because if you go too fast that's where you fuck yourself up it sounds a lot like jujitsu um so he was using something that I wanted to ask you guys about, but like in regards to trying to build up capacity for sprinting and just making sure you're able to stay calm. But, you know, using something like a skier because you're not really moving and you can really burn yourself out there. But is it the right type of stimulus when trying to build up a capacity for sprinting? trying to build up a capacity for sprinting? I think something like a skier or a rower or an airdyne bike.
Starting point is 01:03:31 I think all those things are great because I think you can normally go pretty hard on those things. So that's what I was mentioning earlier. It's like, what can you sprint on? Can at the moment, the only thing that you can sprint at 90% on is an elliptical? Then that's great. That's a good place to start um over time hopefully then you can sprint on a skier hopefully over time you can sprint on it you just have to realize like if you haven't put 100 output into anything this is this is also too um mainly for people that have already built up some capacity with strength like if you're not
Starting point is 01:04:02 strong you can probably bypass almost everything we said today. And you probably go out and sprint and be totally fine because it's, it's the buildup building up of strength that actually leaves you quite vulnerable. Because I think you can kind of just like blow out your engine in, in some sense. But again, if you haven't been,
Starting point is 01:04:20 if you sprinted when you were younger and it's been a long time since you've done any sort of sprint or it's been a long time since you exerted like a ton of force into something, just take your time with it, whether it's the bike, whether it's the elliptical or whether it's a skier. No matter what it is, tell yourself this is day one, week one. Okay, I saw the watts were there. They were at like 300 and they were there for a second. Next time I come in, I want to see if I could hold that 300 watts for like three seconds. And then time after that, maybe I go to 330, you know, and then you progressively, you take your time. Hopefully, you know, your body a little bit by now and you can
Starting point is 01:04:58 kind of, you know, make it more difficult and make it more challenging over time. Yeah. I would say this, the flat ground sprint is like the king of the sprinting capacity. It's also the most dangerous of all of those because the instrument that you're putting power through is your body. Because now if you're on a salt bike, a skier, a bike, you are putting a hundred percent through that instrument and it its fixed range of motion. You know what I mean? If you're sprinting on an assault bike, it's just circles, right? Circles and arms, right? And you can put as much force as you want in that.
Starting point is 01:05:35 It's going to be kind of hard to injure yourself, right? Same thing with the rowing machine, although maybe you might injure yourself a little bit on the pool if it's too much resistance. But you're just – that instrument, you can do 100% through that instrument. But when you're on the ground sprinting with your body and your instrument, which is your body, isn't ready for the force, that's how you blow your shit out. And that's why all the things we're talking about are trying to strengthen your body structure and strengthen your ability to move through those range of motion so that now when you're putting the power through the structure, it's able to handle that power from input to output smoothly. And when it's not, that's when you fuck yourself up. I remember asking Chris Bumstead about a dunk that he did on Instagram. And I was like, how is that landing?
Starting point is 01:06:15 He's like, awful. He's like, that's going to hurt for a while. So sometimes it's, you know, like you can do certain things. But again, if it's been a long time since you've done them, you want to just think about it a little bit more. I'm sure that almost everybody listening can probably jump as high as they can and probably not have any problem. But again, why do that on day one out of nowhere? Like, why not just take your time with it? Maybe you sit down in a chair or sit down on a box and just jump and just say, I just want my feet to come off the ground.
Starting point is 01:06:49 And then maybe you try to jump a little higher and just see how that feels. And then, again, say that's week one. Maybe you did 15 jumps. It's like that's good. Move on to something else. And you want to kind of just continue to bring these things in. And for me, it's been like so much fun because now I can go into the gym and I have, I just have so many different tools. Sometimes it's almost overwhelming. It kind of reminds me sometimes of like when I first started lifting, when I first started to like gain knowledge,
Starting point is 01:07:18 I was like, I want to do that, but I don't want to do that that way because of the information I have about that particular thing. And now I don't want to do that that way because of the information I have about that particular thing. And now I don't think that way anymore because I've learned so much that some things have kind of come full circle. But there's so many different things to do. There's sandbags. There's kettlebells. There's dumbbells. There's regular weights.
Starting point is 01:07:40 And there's the things that I enjoy. Like I still will just bench press because I've always liked the exercise. It's easy. It's an easy exercise for me to do that I'm already proficient at. So why in the hell would I get rid of it? The things that you enjoy, the things that you like, they're super important and they're important to your overall health as well. It's not really talked about much with longevity, but I would even go as far to say, like, if you enjoy having a drink here and there, that I think that that's important to your longevity. I'm not talking about like getting fucking hammered. I'm not talking about like, you know, being irresponsible with certain things, but there's things in this life that if you enjoy them and you can enjoy them and not be
Starting point is 01:08:22 like addicted to them and other things like that. And it's, there's not a lot of negative to them. You should fucking let yourself enjoy them. So the different movements and the different exercises that you've always liked, I think you owe it to yourself to kind of keep some of those things around here and there. Pass me that crate.
Starting point is 01:08:37 I'm too real quick. Speaking of, no, you said that, but it's funny. You said that, you know, like,
Starting point is 01:08:41 I mean, obviously I have been drinking coffee much, but I drink every now and then i'll have a little bit if i want a little bit of a kick and i like that i don't need it every day but i can pull on it when i want it right and it's just like have a little bit feel it let it go i know so so it's like we talked about getting rid of caffeine but it's one of those things am i too weak why what the fuck i use lotion i'm not this week see okay it's because i had lotion on my fucking hand no i know some of those you were looking at me you're like and see are you really questioning everything no some of those are screwed on tight i wanted to make sure it wasn't just me so if he's
Starting point is 01:09:17 got a problem with it i'm like okay but hey one thing i don't want you guys to sleep on is um your core training for sprinting because one thing that happens to a lot of people is you'll watch their hips and they're sprinting with a little bit of pelvic tilt and that can fuck with your lower back that's like not that's just not a safe way to sprint you want your hips to kind of almost be in a slightly slightly neutral ish position and you want your core to be able to be strong you don't want an open core while you're sprinting yeah not, not too arched. Exactly. So I think actually one of the things that could be beneficial are heavy carries,
Starting point is 01:09:50 heavy carries in general. Because if you're doing, if you have a barbell and you're doing like a Zurcher heavy carry, you're going to notice you're not going to do that Zurcher heavy carry here. You're going to do it here. If you have access to sandbags, fucking hell. If you have access to sandbags, a good light sandbag you can put on your shoulder, you can put it in front of you. But what you're going to notice is again, you're going to fix that pelvic tilt. Your core is going to be in the right position, whether it's on your shoulder or here. You're going to stabilize. And when you walk, you're now training yourself through gait while keeping a neutral spine, good hip and core position, and you're strengthening all of that in motion. So heavy
Starting point is 01:10:25 carries in general, fucking grab yourself some dumbbells, heavy dumbbells, fucking walk, right? That can be super beneficial for sprinting. I think we have some heavy med balls and stuff like that in the gym too. And they're like, some are like 40 pounds and 60 pounds. Like they're not insanely heavy, but because of like the circumference of that thing, you know, you're carrying it way out here and you have to kind of like adjust your body around it. I think that if you get into weights that are like real heavy, then you're going to kind of be walking, like leaning back and it's going to kind of defeat the purpose of some of what you were talking about. So still make sure that you are able to kind of lock it in. One of
Starting point is 01:11:03 the things I think that's really cool with, in really cool with a sandbag in particular is the way that you have to like hug it. You have to flex your biceps and your pecs and stuff, which is something that you don't ever really think about flexing when you're like – if you pick up a box off the ground. But I think it's something you should consider. I think when you do pick a box up off the ground, I think you should kind of like um like cable crossover the damn thing compress that yeah yeah compress that thing a little bit flex the pecs a little bit and and tighten up the core as you're as you're lifting i think it will help and so i think the sandbag is something that can kind of and some of those other implements that are like that for carrying i think are really great to keep you connected to those weights is there anybody that should avoid sprinting?
Starting point is 01:11:45 I'm thinking not about like injuries or anything like that, but like, I don't know, should power lifters avoid sprinting? Should, you know, bodybuilders avoid sprinting? Like, is there anybody or any, you know, group of individuals that like, okay, yeah, you probably shouldn't be sprinting. Yeah, I think it's great for everybody. And the longer that you can do it, probably the better. I mean, there's guys in their 70s and 80s sprinting.
Starting point is 01:12:12 Josh Bryant is a huge fan of sprints, huge fan of explosive work. And that guy can haul ass. I saw him like sprinting up a hill the other day and he was like flying, you know, he looks incredible with it. So I think it's for everybody. I think it's overlooked. I think it's hard. And I think it's just overlooked.
Starting point is 01:12:34 I love this video. Oh, this is good old Kevin Hart. Yeah. Don't play the sound. Don't sprint against. I don't think there's music. Yeah. Don't sprint against a other. I don't think there's music. Don't sprint against a world-class athlete.
Starting point is 01:12:49 What are they doing? They're getting ready. He sprints against a former NFL running back. It was Riddler. There is music. All right, just fucking mute that shit.
Starting point is 01:13:05 My bad, dog. Edit here. No, you're fine. So we're watching Kevin Hart's sprint, but in this sprint, it's apparently been a long time since he's sprinted. He tore the bottom. He tore his adductor, the bottom of his abdomen. He totally like fucked that up too. He tore a bunch of things and he was a wheelchair bound.
Starting point is 01:13:28 Yeah. He was wheelchair bound for a few weeks. Now guys, you know, I don't want to laugh at this. Oh, look at that video. The first one.
Starting point is 01:13:35 I think that first one has some interesting audio, but pause this real quick. Um, the, the thing I, the reason I pulled that up is Kevin Hart did marathons before this. You remember he he's done marathons before this you remember he's done marathons he's a guy who loves to run so it's not like he was unfamiliar with running so what
Starting point is 01:13:50 what i'm saying is even if you're familiar with running even if you've been running for a while that doesn't mean you should spend out 100 capacity because he was racing somebody this is the danger of racing when you're like i gotta beat this person i'm gonna put all the power through my body and he apparently had so much power that he tore through tissue. Damn. He tore through tissue. So Andrew, you mentioned who do I think is ready for sprint,
Starting point is 01:14:14 who's sprinting not for? I don't think sprinting is not for everybody. I think we all have the capacity. It's all how fast you get yourself there, the steps you take to move towards that capacity. If you're trying to speed run your ability to sprint, that's where you fuck yourself there, the steps you take to move towards that capacity. If you're trying to speed run your ability to sprint, that's where you fuck yourself up. Because if you got some pain in your hip and pain here, that doesn't mean you'll never be able to sprint. That just means
Starting point is 01:14:33 there are things that you need to work through before you get yourself to sprinting. But that can be an end goal because when you're able to sprint that means you have you have a you have all that ability in your body yeah i think people just need to just be really cautious with it you know go out and do like a hundred but like i don't know give yourself 30 seconds to finish it like seriously give yourself like a long ass time to finish it and then maybe you like if you were to do it on a track you you run and maybe you do 30 seconds and then you walk the turns and then you can, you know, run again and just, you're going to have to take your time getting into this because you will get hurt. And it's like not, it's not worth it to blow something out
Starting point is 01:15:15 to get hurt like that. I mean, we're trying to do some of these things to better ourselves, not to set ourselves backwards a bunch. So in my experience it's been nice to really just take my time with it and i haven't gotten hurt except for that one time where i was trying to push a little beyond where where i should have i just wasn't i wasn't ready to do that the day that i i pulled my hamstring running with you guys we weren't racing but like we were running next to each other and i was like i'm'm gonna go fast. I was racing. So you see, like, don't fucking race. Yeah. I was trying not to look at anybody else. Yo. Oh my God. Oh, on the note of what you also said though, um, in terms of taking your time,
Starting point is 01:15:58 when you're doing some of these workouts, if you're one of those people who, you know, you can actually, you can start going kind of fast, go kind of fast, but on your rest periods, rest, walk, don't, don't, don't try to use your rest periods as like, okay, I'm going to, I'm going to run a little bit and then I'm going to sprint rest so that on your next sprint, I know we're saying sprint, but technically you're not going as fast as possible, but on your next sprint, you can put a good amount of effort into it because if you don't give yourself the rest you need in those rest periods, if you're like doing a little bit too much and then you go into that next interval, a little bit fatigued, that's not what we're trying to get out of it. You know, we're trying to actually put
Starting point is 01:16:36 a little bit of intensity into this. And if your rest periods aren't fruitful enough that you're not able to recover, then you're not actually going to be able to put in the intensity that you want to put in on your sprints. So now the sprints you're doing aren't as beneficial because you're not giving yourself the rest time you need. So fucking chill out when you're resting. You can walk, you jog a little bit, but don't,
Starting point is 01:16:55 don't try to have really, you know, don't, don't waste your rest intervals is what I'm saying here. And should people, when they go to sprint, should it be, there's the start line or I'm going to sprint should it be there's the start line all right i'm going to sprint from here to there go so they go from zero to sprint no i think you
Starting point is 01:17:12 i think uh you're better off just calling all this stuff surges so that way you just start out moving um something beyond a walk like a little bit of a jog, and then just pick up going faster than whatever you were doing. I don't know why this has always made sense to me, but I've done this with everything. I did it with deadlifts. I did it with bench press. To set up for those lifts, I would always think to myself, okay, this would be the worst position to lift from. And then I would orient myself from there. I'd situate myself from there. Okay, my back's rounded. I'm draped over the bar. I have absolutely no shot of like pulling this kind of weight
Starting point is 01:17:49 off the ground in this position. And then I would kind of get my shoulders into place, my lats into place. And I did the same thing on the bench press. And when I'm thinking about running, I think about how slow can I run? Like, let's make that a competition. I want to see how, like,
Starting point is 01:18:04 do something that represents a jog to other people where they would say, you're no longer walking, you're jogging. It's clear. Do something that's a little bit more than a walk. And then from there, you can start to mess around with different speeds and you can start to see how, you know, how, how you can go a little faster. But for me, I always like to use the term surge. And that just
Starting point is 01:18:25 kind of means you're going from one speed, which means you're already in motion. You're going from three miles an hour to six miles an hour, or you're going from five miles an hour to eight miles an hour. I think that's a much safer bet. You're going to get probably more hurt. It would be, it's kind of rare to hurt yourself in the acceleration phase but it's just it is dangerous so that would be like the number two spot you're going to get hurt the number one spot you're going to get hurt is if you're sprinting and you're running for more than about five seconds that's where you're going to get hurt four or five seconds in is the same thing happened to kevin hart right there looks like they were running like, I don't know, 40, 50 yards. I don't know how far they were going, but after a few seconds
Starting point is 01:19:09 is when your luck runs out because you're producing a tremendous amount of force. You're probably at like what they would consider to be like something like a peak force. And the amount of force that you're putting on one, on one leg is insane. It can't be matched in the gym. You can't replicate it in the gym. It's like, I don't know, six or eight times your body weight or something like that. And depending on the athlete, depending on how strong they are, they can do even more. So maybe your average person can put like six times their body weight, but maybe this
Starting point is 01:19:41 guy over here can put like 10. That's like, Jesus, like that's a lot of horsepower. And you still have to get yourself used to that. And there's no amount of leg presses or lunges or squats or anything that's going to prepare you for that. You got to get prepared for it in a lot of the ways that we mentioned here today. I've never driven like a stick shift car, but if I think about it, like, I think it's, it's good to, when you start doing this, if you're new to it, if you've never sprinted before, then you're going to realize that you have different gears. And then as you do it more, you'll realize like, oh wow, like you can really, you have like a gear
Starting point is 01:20:15 one through gear 10, right? So when you're accelerating, slowly go through your gears. Like seriously, when you're accelerating on your sprint, go to gear zero, one, two, three. My peak gear is going to be probably gear seven or eight. That's, that's like,
Starting point is 01:20:31 that's where I'm stopping. I'm not going to gear 10 gear 10. I'm I fuck my, I will. I'm not going to say I will fuck myself up. I think I may handle gear 10. Okay. These days,
Starting point is 01:20:39 but I'm still not going to do it for a long time, but take yourself like a car. There's no reason to go flying too crazy you want to get arrested getting arrested in this segment is pulling your hamstring and tearing your ad up that's fucking getting arrested and i don't want to fucking get arrested so i'm going to gear six seven and eight yep that's where i stop so just go through your gears gradually don't go from gear zero to six you ain't ready for that you ain't ready for zero to seven zero to eight you're ready from zero one two three four maybe a few years from now you can go from zero to eight but that's not what
Starting point is 01:21:09 we're doing right now we're babies yeah it's called a uh like a a rolling start right like so instead of going from a stop sign and just fucking revving it and flooring it and taking off you're talking about like getting into like second or third gear and then kind of getting on the gas but not redlining that bitch to where your engine blows or something crazy. Exactly. Yeah. But for some people that need the structure, should they implement sprinting as like an accessory after a workout? I know we talked about like microdosing and that sort of thing.
Starting point is 01:21:39 Or should it be its own separate thing kind of like the way you're approaching swimming? You know, it's like you're not really – I don't know. know maybe you are but you're not doing like a kettlebell workout and then finishing with the swim you're going to swim to start your day yeah should sprinting be its own thing or should it be something like all right cool we're done with the lift let me go hit a hill real quick for me i like doing it like after my day's been like going for a while because like to try to do that first thing in the morning seemed like it'd be yeah this wouldn't feel so great so i'd rather do it like i'd rather do it like after some training or something like that that'd be crazy yeah hard right roll out of bed cold plunge and then sprint oh yeah and just like run run right into it but i
Starting point is 01:22:21 think it you know it's highly individual like it, you know, it's highly individual. Like some people, you know, they probably sometimes, you know, I've, I've been out like on a run before and I've seen like, I've been out super early on runs before, like five o'clock, six o'clock. And there's someone like just finishing up. So everyone's, everyone's a little different with that. But I, I think getting in some activity and getting some movement in, um, I think is like super ideal. So a lot of times track athletes do a bunch of drills and they do a bunch of stuff on the track and then they kind of start their workout. I don't do anything before I start running ever. It doesn't really matter what kind of running it is. The only thing that I'll do is I'll jog and walk and I'll take my time. I might jump a little
Starting point is 01:23:01 bit and move around a little bit that way. But the only thing that I may do is I may actually do like a little bit of a workout. So I might do like some kettlebell swings, some overhead presses, some stuff with the spine, move around a little bit, you know, be in the gym for 20, 30 minutes and then maybe go run. I think it's just highly dependent on the person. But whatever the case is, the more intense the activity that you're going to do, the more warm-up that you need. So you actually need more warm-up. You need way more warm-up to sprint, which should make sense. But a sprint might – and in this case, you might only be doing these kind of quick surges that are only four or five seconds. And you might think, well, I don't really need to warm up much for that.
Starting point is 01:23:41 But again, the intensity is going to be pretty high. And we're by no means saying you should go to 100%. We keep reiterating that you should probably be in like a 70% to 80% range would probably be a pretty reasonable place for most people to start. And when you're starting there, yes, you do need less warmup, but you still need some. If you're going to go on like a long run, like a lot of the stuff that I do where I go like on like a five mile run you literally there's no intensity to it so there's in my opinion there's no really real reason to warm up for it your warm-up is just like starting slow and then yeah and just going a little bit you know we had our conversation with joel green and joel loves to do these uh i think five times a day he'll do it just a from cold 20 second sprint and joel specifically said
Starting point is 01:24:22 in his podcast that that is a young person's ability. And it's true. When you see kids, kids will be like out of fucking nowhere. They'll just like go. Right. And the reason why Joel did that and the reason why he built up to that is so that he could keep that young body ability. So how can we do that? It's I think, and the way I handle sprinting right now is I don't make it a crazy hard workout. You know, there's a little, there's a little like bike trail that has a little mini incline right by where I live. So I'll just take my running shoes, go out there. I'll warm up a little bit, do some high knees, do some lateral stuff. I'll do a, my, my first sprint surge, I'm going to call it a surge is going to be like at 30%. I'll do like two 30%. Then I'll do one at 40%, then I'll do one at 50, 60%, then my remaining four or five are going to be at like a 70 to 80%. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 01:25:12 I slowly ramped myself up to that. But when I get done with that, my body isn't beat up. I can come here and work out. I can go to jujitsu. It's not the only thing I do during the day. But the thing is, by doing that type of workout, I've been able to really improve my ability to sprint while not taking away from anything else I'm doing because it's not destroying my body. So I think you need to figure out an intensity that you can do where the next day you don't wake up, you're like, oh shit, like your hamstrings and your knees and your feet are done. If you wake up the next day and that's how you feel, you've done too much and that's not something you can do consistently. So you need to be kind to yourself and you need to, I needed to humble myself and understand that these aren't going to look the
Starting point is 01:25:56 way I'd want them to look. I want them to look intense. I want to feel like a badass. I want to feel fast, but initially these aren't going to feel fast, but now they can feel fast because none of them, they didn't cost me anything. So figure out a way to do this. So it doesn't cost you much, but you're still making an inching progress inching forward in terms of your progress. So how do you measure progress with sprinting? I think you can measure, I think you can measure it through like how, how much through how difficult it feels. Because initially when you start, it's going to feel difficult. The form is going to feel janky.
Starting point is 01:26:31 You're going to do feel that are kind of iffy where you're like, okay, I need to slow down. But as you continue, you're going to start being able to get to that same speed you were getting to last week and it's not taking anything out of you. It's actually not even taking much mental stress from you to get to that speed. Right. And it might not be very fast, but last week getting there was a fucking chore. Then the week after that, getting to that speed again, it's like nothing. Actually, your warmup was very easy this time. That's how you measure progress. You, there's so many things, your fucking feet, probably when you start, like your feet might be feeling it. And then next week, your feet are feeling it less. That's progress. Progress doesn't only need to be measured by how fast I'm going, but it's also how is my body handling the stress I'm giving it? Because over
Starting point is 01:27:13 time, you're going to be able to progress that stress and it's not going to take much out of you. That's a lot. You might also notice that you want to do more sets. So you might finish with like a 70 or 80% set and maybe last week or the last couple of weeks you called it right there. But now you're like, well, that actually seemed pretty good. Like I'm going to do a couple more. And that's where you really start to see a lot of progress. That's where you will actually start to get faster because now you have an accumulation of stuff that you've done. But I think a lot of what we're pointing to is like, of stuff that you've done.
Starting point is 01:27:43 But I think a lot of what we're pointing to is like, we're so unfamiliar with practicing this at the stage that we're at now, that any amount is a good amount. You know, so even the smallest amount, even if you went out and you only did one sprint, that's one extra sprint that you didn't do last time. And so over time, you can kind of build upon that. I've noticed definitely for myself that the call to like do a little bit more And so over time, you can kind of build upon that.
Starting point is 01:28:14 I've noticed definitely for myself that the call to like do a little bit more is a really good sign that like I'm recovering from it and that I am getting better. And then I also – I will look at measurements. I will look at – my watch will track my speed, which I can see afterwards. And it will say you ran X miles per hour, or if I have my phone with me, it will also tell me that. So there's a lot of apps that people can use and they can, there's also like Strava, which I think, I think it's called Strava, is like an app that you can use. And it has like, you can sort of, this is like kind of counter what we were talking about earlier, but you can kind of race people, which this is more for like longer distances. I don't think they have shorter distance stuff, but I think this is more for like longer distances.
Starting point is 01:28:52 And you can kind of see like, oh, someone ran the Arboretum in 30 minutes or whatever. You can kind of match yourself up against these other numbers, which I think that's really cool. But for some people, they really like the data. They really like the numbers a lot. I try to track a lot of stuff for a while, and I just realize that I'll never care about it. I've never cared about data, and I just don't care. But it is nice every once in a while to kind of see like,
Starting point is 01:29:22 okay, that was faster than last time. All right. Strength is never a weakness. Weakness is never strength. Catch you guys later. Bye.

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