3 Football Speed Training Myths Slayed
How to get faster for football…a question I’m so often asked. A seemingly simple subject that has become harder to figure out than Chinese Algebra. Getting faster for football is actually pretty friggin simple, yet, guys are more confused than ever…
The fact that our “How to Get Faster for Football“ series is one of our most popular group of articles ever shows that guys are just confused about what to do.
When did it become acceptable to pass off the hard work that entails training for football speed and replace it with fairly easy cone drills and gadgets? Honestly, how thinks that running over PVC pipes is actually going to make you outrun someone on the field? Please, someone tell me!
And, why is it that it’s always some skinny geek of a coach who pushes this crap?
It’s time to get down to the real deal…to cut through the bullcrap myths that have plagued our sport for so long. It’s time to expose the myths so we can run wild, Hulkamania style! Or, dare I say we drop a proverbial Hogan Leg on these fountains of misinformation?

Football speed is about strength.
How strong you are and how explosive you become because of that strength is what leads to getting faster for football. Football speed is not track speed.
Reread that…football speed is not track speed.
I’ve heard so many track coaches lament, “We work with them all off-season and their sprinting form goes to hell two weeks into the football season.” Yea, thank God. The reason is we run in a perfect straight line in perfect form in perfect conditions how many times per game? Seriously, think about that. Maybe when a running back breaks a long one or when a wide receiver gets a step on a back, but other than that, the game is played in stop and go spurts, hard cuts, plants and jumps, and with, of course, tons of hitting.
But the fun doesn’t stop there. There is an entire industry set up to separate players and coaches from their money by promising quick fixes and gimmicks and by perpetuating old myths about football speed training so that you remain weak, slow, and broke.
Time to get down and dirty and kill some football speed training myths:
1. Agility drills improve football agility.
Note how I phrased that. Agility drills do improve your agility…in agility drills, NOT your football agility.
Running through cones looks cool. It looks like a hell of a lot of work is being done, and it’s usually set up to be complicated, thus improving its effectiveness. Plus, it’s usually marketed by big companies who pay models to run through cones wearing their overpriced spandex so that it looks super high tech and gets people to fork over the loot. But just because someone looks good doing something doesn’t mean it’s really worthwhile.

- They might look good playing, but I wouldn’t want them on my team…
Do yourself a favor. Take all the cones and bury them. After the very beginning stages, they’re only good for parallel parking practice. Sure, you can take a 14-year old player who’s never done anything athletic and see improvement by having him zigzag through cones. But, after a few months, the return on investment in the way of getting faster for football will be nil.
If you want to improve foot speed so you’re actually faster on the football field, try some clean and jerks or even the basic jump rope. It’s not sexy, but it’s effective.
2. Lifting heavy slows you down
This is the granddaddy of all football speed training myths. I think it was started long ago in some HIT-Jedi cave on Dagobah.

The HIT-ers, CrossFitters, and various other “strength is bad” fanatics contend that because the bar moves slowly when lifting max weights, the central nervous system will learn this and turn you into a big, slow, Gilbert Brown wanna be.
We all know that if you apply max force to the bar, even if that sucker is moving slow, the intent to move it quickly will improve both your strength and speed. You should always be applying maximum force to the bar. Your training should be centered around this concept.
Now, if you bench 200 lbs and try for 205 lbs, it isn’t going to fly up. It might even go slow. But the intent to move it quickly is what counts. It trains your nervous system (brain) to be fast even with heavy weights. It’s the same for any kind of lifting, whether it’s football related or you’re just trying to get bigger and stronger. It also has to do with muscle fiber types, but that’s a long and boring explanation.
So you always want to push/pull/squat the bar as hard as you can. Or as Mel Siff said in Supertraining:
“To increase speed, it is necessary to increase the magnitude or duration of the force applied (or both) or decrease the mass of the body. However, for practical purposes, not all of these possibilities can be achieved in human movement. The athlete is unable to decrease the mass of his body or an item of standard athletic apparatus or increase the duration of t (time) of a given movement. However, it is possible to increase the time of a movement of limited amplitude only by decreasing its speed, which is nonsense. Consequently, only one recourse remains, namely to increase strength. Maximum strength is the main factor determining speed of movement!”
3. You need gimmick devices to get faster for football.
I’ll keep this one short because otherwise I’ll go into a rage. I’m not kidding. This is one of those issues that just drives me insane. You don’t need a parachute unless you’re jumping from a plane. If you want to wear “strength shoes” with the huge heel in the front, alter them. Put the heel in the back and pretend to be a stripper because that’s about the only use for a shoe with a nine-inch block on the underside of it.
All these gimmick products are good for selling but bad for speed. They have little to no value, especially when compared to good, old-fashioned, hard lifting. The worst part is that the internet is littered with people selling this stuff to unsuspecting football players.
But tell a 15-year-old sophomore that to improve football speed he needs to do gut busting box squats, not go traipsing around with a parachute on, and you’ll see one disappointed football player!
- If you want to learn how to get faster…how to build real game speed… You need to sign up for the free report below.


I definately know how the paracute goes. My old man got me one for my birthday. So one day I decide to go up to the field and try it out. The thing was a piece of shit. It didn;t do anything for me. I felt like I was running the same speed I always had been, and i probably was. Now that I’m in highschool I’ve been hittin the squats pretty hard and doing some Romanian Deadlifts as well. (Get alot of this from the old man.) I’m only a freshman, but I’ve been busting my ass this whole season to try and work at being one of the varsity runningbacks. I’m trying hard on the whole speed thing, and trying to get a better 40. The squatting definately has doen something for me. I only went from a 5.1 to a 4.9, but I’, hoping this will improve as time goes on. Thank you fpr this website. It’s a major help.
-Tino
Ha yea, that happens to a lot of guys.
Dropping to a 4.9 is a big improvement, especially for a freshman. Keep lifting and it’ll continue to come down.
If you have any specific questions, let me know steve@explosivefootballtraining.com