Clean & Minimal AI Powered Fitness Routines
Download AppIntermediate Speed & Agility
A fast-paced speed and change-of-direction session with short, repeatable efforts.
Intermediate Speed & Agility
A fast-paced speed and change-of-direction session with short, repeatable efforts.
Warm-Up
Raise heart rate, mobilize joints, and prep sprint mechanics. 6 minutes.
Ladder & COD Circuit
Move fast, stay controlled. Use cones for a short shuttle distance (about 5–10 m).
Power Finisher
Explosive but soft landings. Keep knees tracking over toes.
Cool-Down
Lower heart rate and restore range of motion in the legs. 3 minutes.
Reactive Foot Speed Over Raw Power
A-Skips and ladder drills (One Foot In Each, In-In-Out-Out) train neuromuscular coordination at the ankle and hip flexor, reducing ground contact time — the true limiter of top-end speed. Lateral Bounds and Skater Hops then load the glute medius and adductors eccentrically, building the elastic stiffness that makes direction changes explosive rather than effortful.
The Deceleration Demand Nobody Trains For
Shuttle Runs and lateral patterns stress the quads, hamstrings, and hip stabilizers through repeated braking forces — the exact loading that separates agile athletes from fast-but-straight ones. Your connective tissue, not your muscles, is often the limiting factor in short change-of-direction efforts, which is why warm-up progressions here build tissue temperature before peak demand.
Short Efforts, Maximum Neural Output
The 16-minute main block uses intermittent, high-intensity efforts to train the phosphocreatine and fast glycolytic energy systems without accumulating fatigue that degrades movement quality. Keep each drill crisp and deliberate — if foot contacts become sloppy on the ladder, reduce reps rather than grinding through, as speed adaptation comes from quality patterns, not volume.