

Coach Hunter Charneski believes developing speed in youth athletes doesn’t have to be complicated. To that end, he provides a system of exercises here, along with a prescription for those moments when your athletes need certain interventions without disrupting the flow of the session.
This is arguably the most confusing time in history to be a parent and/or coach of today’s youth athlete. In an age where seemingly everyone is an expert, phones are anything but, and there is no shortage of information, the “curse of knowledge” should be the least of our concerns.
Buddy Morris was criticized years ago for calling private sector coaches “personal terrorists,” but after existing in that space for the past five years, I have to agree with him. If you’ve been following my work for any period of time, then you know what I mean when I say, passion perpetuates purpose. For those who are new to my work, let me quickly unpack that mantra:
With that in mind, allow me to pay it forward to today’s coaches, parents, and the like by providing you with a system rather than a collection of exercises, along with a prescription for those OTS (off the script) moments when your athletes need certain interventions without disrupting the flow of the session. You need not feel helpless or frustrated or fall prey to scam artists online anymore. Follow and trust.
When addressing and assessing the athlete(s) in the early goings-on of the session or training week, most coaches start from the ground and work their way up. It isn’t my intention to say this is “bad” or “wrong,” per se. It is my intention, however, to show you how a different approach may be better for you and your athlete(s).
The Arms Tell a Story
I don’t need to see anything other than an athlete’s arms to begin diagnosing what is good, what needs work, and what interventions to make.
I don’t need to see anything other than an athlete’s arms to being diagnosing what is good, what needs work, and what interventions to make, says @huntercharneski. Share on X

Intervention for Athletes Unable to Relax
Now, I could take a deep dive into the minutiae as to why relaxation is so important to faster running, but I’ll spare you the nerd moment. You just gotta trust me on this one: If your athletes are straining (check their faces for grimaces), then they’re limiting their speed potential, and we need them to chill the heck out. There is one drill that has yet to fail me: Seated Arm Action.
If your athletes are straining, then they’re limiting their speed potential, and we need them to chill the heck out. The Seated Arm Action drill can help, says @huntercharneski. Share on X
Video 8. Athlete performing a Seated Arm Action drill.
Start the athlete at a “walking” pace with a calm demeanor. The goal is to keep this same composure when you speed them up to a “jog” and then to an all-out “sprint”—the relaxation carries over nicely to everything else we’re doing. Another benefit of this drill is the teaching moment you can present to the kids regarding the importance of arm action.
Once they “sprint,” you’ll notice their hips begin to bounce. So, what does this tell us? The faster the arms move, the higher the hips come off the ground, which will allow the legs to cycle underneath them more freely. Therein lies the truth behind the importance of the arms: Not only must arms operate at the same piston-like frequency of the legs, but they must also precede leg action. The arms are closer to the brain for a reason—they’re supposed to move first!
Intervention for Athletes Struggling with Amplitudes
What should you do when the athlete(s) are having trouble transitioning from lower to higher amplitudes? Instead of simply progressing from one exercise to the next, you may find success by “bridging the gap” between the heights.
Video 9. Athlete performing the Running A’s in an ascending (low to high) fashion.
A super-simple progression you could use is the following:
Intervention for Athletes Having Excessive Trunk Flexion
If your athletes have shown proficiency in all the drills above in terms of amplitude and frequency, but something doesn’t look quite right with their posture, what can you do to alleviate this? Luckily for you, there are a couple strategies we can utilize depending on what the real issue is. Best to treat the cause rather than the symptom.
Video 10. Athlete performing A-March, A-Skip, and Running A’s with support from a band.
You can use this intervention via a tether like the video shows, or you can use it in partner fashion if you’re working with a large(r) group.
Video 11. Athlete performing Mach Drills with and without load.
Athletes Too Rigid?
If the athletes you work with are like me, then you’ve got to grant them some more degrees of freedom. My past life as a powerlifter and football player have left me extremely compressed in my torso, and with the amount of sitting, video games, and sedentary habits of today’s youth, it doesn’t hurt to have a strategy in your exercise pool to help with movement variability.
How did the athlete pictured in Image 2 achieve such a glaring difference? Well, the very long answer to the short question is the arms, with an intervention here and there. The arms tell a story. Trust what your eyes are telling you.
Now, make no mistake, it shouldn’t be our intention to simply make each interaction with our athletes a drill fest. The athlete pictured in the before/after image above did sprint—a lot—that day. Sprinting can be a very useful drill: We must not be so myopic in viewing sprinting exclusively as a skill, as it can serve as a wonderful conduit to the desired result as well. With that in mind, how do we transition from drill to skill as coaches?
Sprinting can be a very useful drill: We mustn’t be so myopic in viewing it exclusively as a skill, as it can serve as a wonderful conduit to the desired result as well, says @huntercharneski. Share on XSlow Down to Speed Up
In my experience, you will save yourself a lot of time on the back end if you hold your kids back initially by cueing them to run at an 8-9 out of 10. Benefits of submaximal sprinting early on include (but are not limited to):
As physical preparation coaches, we are really good at overcomplicating things. Like a fish in water, sometimes we’re too close to the problem to see it. Using submaximal sprints as a drill can yield tremendous benefits for today’s youth athlete.
(Very) Short to Long
If we can’t get away from the “sport specific” crowd, then prescribing bursts and surges (rather than speed changes over 60 meters) should appease them because most team sports are repeated bouts of acceleration. Other than aiming to please folks who have no idea what the heck they’re talking about, there are several other benefits of keeping your athletes’ sprints to 10 meters initially:
À la Derek Hansen, a foolproof progression for youth athletes to build upon day after day is as follows:
If You Don’t Add a Sprinkling of Novelty, Then You’re Going to Lose Them
If you’ve ever worked with kids, then you’re well aware that their attention spans are comparable to a goldfish’s. A mentor of mine once said, “You can’t argue with reality.” The bad news is you may need to go OTS more often than you’d like, but the good news is you will captivate the kiddos, leading to higher engagement and buy-in. Remember, the horse that loves to run will beat the horse that feels compelled to every time. Two of the more subtle changes in variable include:
A not-so-subtle change in variable would be start type. There are two types of starts: soft starts and hard starts. Soft starts are typically more upright in posture, and they lack a static overcome-by-ballistic movement (i.e., they don’t break inertia), whereas a hard start most definitely will break inertia and/or be closer to the ground, asking more of the athlete’s lower leg.
Soft starts are useful for a few reasons:
Make no mistake, I am not an expert in this realm. But I have had success with both results and athlete engagement with these soft start variations:
If your athletes had a brain fart and have “forgotten” the importance of the arm action with these two start variations, a simple intervention you can use is a Stationary Arm Action drill to cue the piston-like action needed to run fast:
Video 17. Athlete performing Stationary Arm Action drill.
In case you haven’t heard, kids love to feel like they’re doing something. By using a band, sled, partner, or hill, you’re going to immediately capture their attention, as well as derive better mechanics due to the resistance slowing them down and literally placing them in a more optimal angle to accelerate.
Hard starts are not to be feared, but certainly respected. If you do, then you’ll have no issues while reaping all the rewards they offer, including:
While the variations in hard starts are limited only by your imagination, here are a few that my athletes tend to gravitate toward:
Are these all the hard starts in my exercise collection? No, but these are the ones I find myself coming back to often because—let’s be honest—training kids is similar to training moms (which I’ve done). You’ve got to give them what they want if you’re going to have a snowball’s chance when prescribing the stuff they need.
Getting kids elastic isn’t a complicated undertaking: Just employing both bilateral and unilateral plyometrics at low amplitudes will do wonders for them, says @huntercharneski. Share on XWhen life gives you tomatoes, don’t make tomato sauce—turn them into bouncy balls! Getting kids more elastic will check a ton of boxes: the three biggest being performance enhancement, resiliency, and systemic output. Getting kids elastic is not a complicated undertaking: Just employing both bilateral and unilateral plyometrics at low amplitudes will do wonders for them.
Video 25. Unilateral Ankle Jumps over distance.
Video 26. Once your athletes show proficiency in both Bilateral and Unilateral Ankle Jumps, place a small barrier in their path for a great and fun progression.
Distal elasticity improves proximal function. By spending time with these extensive, low-amplitude plyometrics, you will be doing your youth athletes a great service not only for their speed potential, but also for the way their body performs as a whole. I could go into myriad other jumps, hops, and bounds, but that would go beyond the scope of this article. If you touch on these three early and often, the kids will benefit more than enough.
To review, we have addressed all the drills, interventions, and prerequisites required to run. We have cut the kiddos loose over 10 meters, employing both soft and hard starts, as well as addressed the (often overlooked) elastic component. Now what?
Three Ways to Progress
If time is not on your side, then you can simply stick to a 10 x 10-meter script (flat load) for the kids and change other variables as touched on earlier (shoes, surface, start type), and the kids are bound to improve. Youth athletes are like a brand-new tube of toothpaste: It doesn’t matter what you do, you’re going to get something out of them.
Sticking to 10 sets of 10-meter sprints is as effective as they are simple. If you wish to keep things vanilla (which I have no problem with), an easy way to progress is to simply add a set each time you work with the kids, as Derek Hansen does with professional teams like the Kansas City Chiefs:
Lengthening the efforts is a fool’s errand if they’re still not fast over a short distance. No one cares how many times the kids can run a 6.0 forty. I would rather a blazing fast 10-meter dash again, and again…and again.
No one cares how many times the kids can run a 6.0 forty. I would rather a blazing fast 10-meter dash again, and again, and again, says @huntercharneski. Share on XIf you’re like me, then you live for max velocity. With that in mind, I most definitely want to expose the youngsters to longer runs and higher speeds. The only question is how do we do so safely? I’m glad you asked:
Video 27. Using Accelerate and Maintains are a safe way to “link” longer runs as a prerequisite.
In a world where there’s no shortage of information, parents and coaches deserve to be shown a tried-and-true way to help today’s youth “get there first” in both an effective and safe manner. My passion is speed, my purpose is to pay it forward, and my hope is that this provides you with a sense of empowerment in knowing that speed can be simple.
If the guidelines in this article are followed and tested, then I am confident the athletes you work with will see results, have fun, and (hopefully) be changed for the better. On the other hand, if the only thing this article did was make you question yourself, balk at me, and/or spark new thoughts, then it was worth it. #SPRINTORDIE

Coach Hunter Charneski believes developing speed in youth athletes doesn’t have to be complicated. To that end, he provides a system of exercises here, along with a prescription for those moments when your athletes need certain interventions without disrupting the flow of the session.
This is arguably the most confusing time in history to be a parent and/or coach of today’s youth athlete. In an age where seemingly everyone is an expert, phones are anything but, and there is no shortage of information, the “curse of knowledge” should be the least of our concerns.
Buddy Morris was criticized years ago for calling private sector coaches “personal terrorists,” but after existing in that space for the past five years, I have to agree with him. If you’ve been following my work for any period of time, then you know what I mean when I say, passion perpetuates purpose. For those who are new to my work, let me quickly unpack that mantra:
With that in mind, allow me to pay it forward to today’s coaches, parents, and the like by providing you with a system rather than a collection of exercises, along with a prescription for those OTS (off the script) moments when your athletes need certain interventions without disrupting the flow of the session. You need not feel helpless or frustrated or fall prey to scam artists online anymore. Follow and trust.
When addressing and assessing the athlete(s) in the early goings-on of the session or training week, most coaches start from the ground and work their way up. It isn’t my intention to say this is “bad” or “wrong,” per se. It is my intention, however, to show you how a different approach may be better for you and your athlete(s).
The Arms Tell a Story
I don’t need to see anything other than an athlete’s arms to begin diagnosing what is good, what needs work, and what interventions to make.
I don’t need to see anything other than an athlete’s arms to being diagnosing what is good, what needs work, and what interventions to make, says @huntercharneski. Share on X

Intervention for Athletes Unable to Relax
Now, I could take a deep dive into the minutiae as to why relaxation is so important to faster running, but I’ll spare you the nerd moment. You just gotta trust me on this one: If your athletes are straining (check their faces for grimaces), then they’re limiting their speed potential, and we need them to chill the heck out. There is one drill that has yet to fail me: Seated Arm Action.
If your athletes are straining, then they’re limiting their speed potential, and we need them to chill the heck out. The Seated Arm Action drill can help, says @huntercharneski. Share on X
Video 8. Athlete performing a Seated Arm Action drill.
Start the athlete at a “walking” pace with a calm demeanor. The goal is to keep this same composure when you speed them up to a “jog” and then to an all-out “sprint”—the relaxation carries over nicely to everything else we’re doing. Another benefit of this drill is the teaching moment you can present to the kids regarding the importance of arm action.
Once they “sprint,” you’ll notice their hips begin to bounce. So, what does this tell us? The faster the arms move, the higher the hips come off the ground, which will allow the legs to cycle underneath them more freely. Therein lies the truth behind the importance of the arms: Not only must arms operate at the same piston-like frequency of the legs, but they must also precede leg action. The arms are closer to the brain for a reason—they’re supposed to move first!
Intervention for Athletes Struggling with Amplitudes
What should you do when the athlete(s) are having trouble transitioning from lower to higher amplitudes? Instead of simply progressing from one exercise to the next, you may find success by “bridging the gap” between the heights.
Video 9. Athlete performing the Running A’s in an ascending (low to high) fashion.
A super-simple progression you could use is the following:
Intervention for Athletes Having Excessive Trunk Flexion
If your athletes have shown proficiency in all the drills above in terms of amplitude and frequency, but something doesn’t look quite right with their posture, what can you do to alleviate this? Luckily for you, there are a couple strategies we can utilize depending on what the real issue is. Best to treat the cause rather than the symptom.
Video 10. Athlete performing A-March, A-Skip, and Running A’s with support from a band.
You can use this intervention via a tether like the video shows, or you can use it in partner fashion if you’re working with a large(r) group.
Video 11. Athlete performing Mach Drills with and without load.
Athletes Too Rigid?
If the athletes you work with are like me, then you’ve got to grant them some more degrees of freedom. My past life as a powerlifter and football player have left me extremely compressed in my torso, and with the amount of sitting, video games, and sedentary habits of today’s youth, it doesn’t hurt to have a strategy in your exercise pool to help with movement variability.
How did the athlete pictured in Image 2 achieve such a glaring difference? Well, the very long answer to the short question is the arms, with an intervention here and there. The arms tell a story. Trust what your eyes are telling you.
Now, make no mistake, it shouldn’t be our intention to simply make each interaction with our athletes a drill fest. The athlete pictured in the before/after image above did sprint—a lot—that day. Sprinting can be a very useful drill: We must not be so myopic in viewing sprinting exclusively as a skill, as it can serve as a wonderful conduit to the desired result as well. With that in mind, how do we transition from drill to skill as coaches?
Sprinting can be a very useful drill: We mustn’t be so myopic in viewing it exclusively as a skill, as it can serve as a wonderful conduit to the desired result as well, says @huntercharneski. Share on XSlow Down to Speed Up
In my experience, you will save yourself a lot of time on the back end if you hold your kids back initially by cueing them to run at an 8-9 out of 10. Benefits of submaximal sprinting early on include (but are not limited to):
As physical preparation coaches, we are really good at overcomplicating things. Like a fish in water, sometimes we’re too close to the problem to see it. Using submaximal sprints as a drill can yield tremendous benefits for today’s youth athlete.
(Very) Short to Long
If we can’t get away from the “sport specific” crowd, then prescribing bursts and surges (rather than speed changes over 60 meters) should appease them because most team sports are repeated bouts of acceleration. Other than aiming to please folks who have no idea what the heck they’re talking about, there are several other benefits of keeping your athletes’ sprints to 10 meters initially:
À la Derek Hansen, a foolproof progression for youth athletes to build upon day after day is as follows:
If You Don’t Add a Sprinkling of Novelty, Then You’re Going to Lose Them
If you’ve ever worked with kids, then you’re well aware that their attention spans are comparable to a goldfish’s. A mentor of mine once said, “You can’t argue with reality.” The bad news is you may need to go OTS more often than you’d like, but the good news is you will captivate the kiddos, leading to higher engagement and buy-in. Remember, the horse that loves to run will beat the horse that feels compelled to every time. Two of the more subtle changes in variable include:
A not-so-subtle change in variable would be start type. There are two types of starts: soft starts and hard starts. Soft starts are typically more upright in posture, and they lack a static overcome-by-ballistic movement (i.e., they don’t break inertia), whereas a hard start most definitely will break inertia and/or be closer to the ground, asking more of the athlete’s lower leg.
Soft starts are useful for a few reasons:
Make no mistake, I am not an expert in this realm. But I have had success with both results and athlete engagement with these soft start variations:
If your athletes had a brain fart and have “forgotten” the importance of the arm action with these two start variations, a simple intervention you can use is a Stationary Arm Action drill to cue the piston-like action needed to run fast:
Video 17. Athlete performing Stationary Arm Action drill.
In case you haven’t heard, kids love to feel like they’re doing something. By using a band, sled, partner, or hill, you’re going to immediately capture their attention, as well as derive better mechanics due to the resistance slowing them down and literally placing them in a more optimal angle to accelerate.
Hard starts are not to be feared, but certainly respected. If you do, then you’ll have no issues while reaping all the rewards they offer, including:
While the variations in hard starts are limited only by your imagination, here are a few that my athletes tend to gravitate toward:
Are these all the hard starts in my exercise collection? No, but these are the ones I find myself coming back to often because—let’s be honest—training kids is similar to training moms (which I’ve done). You’ve got to give them what they want if you’re going to have a snowball’s chance when prescribing the stuff they need.
Getting kids elastic isn’t a complicated undertaking: Just employing both bilateral and unilateral plyometrics at low amplitudes will do wonders for them, says @huntercharneski. Share on XWhen life gives you tomatoes, don’t make tomato sauce—turn them into bouncy balls! Getting kids more elastic will check a ton of boxes: the three biggest being performance enhancement, resiliency, and systemic output. Getting kids elastic is not a complicated undertaking: Just employing both bilateral and unilateral plyometrics at low amplitudes will do wonders for them.
Video 25. Unilateral Ankle Jumps over distance.
Video 26. Once your athletes show proficiency in both Bilateral and Unilateral Ankle Jumps, place a small barrier in their path for a great and fun progression.
Distal elasticity improves proximal function. By spending time with these extensive, low-amplitude plyometrics, you will be doing your youth athletes a great service not only for their speed potential, but also for the way their body performs as a whole. I could go into myriad other jumps, hops, and bounds, but that would go beyond the scope of this article. If you touch on these three early and often, the kids will benefit more than enough.
To review, we have addressed all the drills, interventions, and prerequisites required to run. We have cut the kiddos loose over 10 meters, employing both soft and hard starts, as well as addressed the (often overlooked) elastic component. Now what?
Three Ways to Progress
If time is not on your side, then you can simply stick to a 10 x 10-meter script (flat load) for the kids and change other variables as touched on earlier (shoes, surface, start type), and the kids are bound to improve. Youth athletes are like a brand-new tube of toothpaste: It doesn’t matter what you do, you’re going to get something out of them.
Sticking to 10 sets of 10-meter sprints is as effective as they are simple. If you wish to keep things vanilla (which I have no problem with), an easy way to progress is to simply add a set each time you work with the kids, as Derek Hansen does with professional teams like the Kansas City Chiefs:
Lengthening the efforts is a fool’s errand if they’re still not fast over a short distance. No one cares how many times the kids can run a 6.0 forty. I would rather a blazing fast 10-meter dash again, and again…and again.
No one cares how many times the kids can run a 6.0 forty. I would rather a blazing fast 10-meter dash again, and again, and again, says @huntercharneski. Share on XIf you’re like me, then you live for max velocity. With that in mind, I most definitely want to expose the youngsters to longer runs and higher speeds. The only question is how do we do so safely? I’m glad you asked:
Video 27. Using Accelerate and Maintains are a safe way to “link” longer runs as a prerequisite.
In a world where there’s no shortage of information, parents and coaches deserve to be shown a tried-and-true way to help today’s youth “get there first” in both an effective and safe manner. My passion is speed, my purpose is to pay it forward, and my hope is that this provides you with a sense of empowerment in knowing that speed can be simple.
If the guidelines in this article are followed and tested, then I am confident the athletes you work with will see results, have fun, and (hopefully) be changed for the better. On the other hand, if the only thing this article did was make you question yourself, balk at me, and/or spark new thoughts, then it was worth it. #SPRINTORDIE
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