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Resistance Band Training for Speed

Why Isometrics and Resistance Band Training For Speed Gives Results Not Available With Weight Training or Any Other Type of Workout.

One of the more popular types of resistance training aids is what is known as the resistance band or exercise band.

Figure 1. The resistance or exercise band.

This is an outstanding product that has a very unique physical property known as a variable elastic potential. This means that the more you stretch the band the more force you will have to apply to maintain the resistance level.

The amount of resistance found within an elastic band is therefore a function of its length when stretched. When the length of the band changes, even if by a small amount, the resistance level changes also.

Here’s a very basic idea of how and why resistance band training, when used with an isometric strategy, will far outperform weights when training for speed:

Isometric exercise for the hip flexors and knee extensors using resistance bands.

Imagine first that you are performing a hip flexor exercise, much like that shown in the figure above, except that instead pulling a cable by your leg with a stack of weights at the end of it, you are holding one end of a resistance band with the other end secured to a rather immovable pole.

Since we are using an isometric contraction, we like to keep the hip flexed to about 45 degrees with the knee slightly extended.

While holding this position, the band is stretched and exerting a significant amount of force back into your hip flexors and quadriceps muscles. After a few seconds, these muscles will naturally start to weaken. When this happens, your leg will start to drop and your muscles will begin to recruit more and more motor units to help keep your leg and knee in these fixed positions.

When your muscles start to shake keep holding the position

Eventually, and rather quickly if the resistance is high enough, you get to the point where you can no longer hold the band still and maintain the same fixed position. This causes your leg to give out or start to shake a little as the muscle weakens and your coordination dissipates. This is a desired state for your muscles to be in to train them for speed and quickness.

These movements in your thigh and leg, however small and in whichever direction, instantaneously alters the amount of resistance being applied by the band as the length of the band changes. Even slight changes in resistance, whether greater or less than the original, will affect the amount of force your muscles exert to hold the position.

Your muscles are becoming alert and responsive

Your muscles are constantly perceiving or sampling these small changes in resistance and must continually and immediately alter the amount of force being applied to hold the position. Your muscles do this by altering their typical recruitment pattern of motor units to try and maintain the held position.

This sampling and responsiveness to the resistance by the muscle is continual as the muscle fights to hold the position. As this happens, your hip flexors and quadriceps will begin to recruit more and more motor units to help keep your thigh and knee in these fixed positions.

Weaknesses are discovered and eliminated

This is a great benefit to athletes since with each new recruitment pattern of motor units a muscle’s weakness and lack of coordination is instantly exposed on a much deeper level than normally experienced. This forces the muscle fibers to immediately get stronger and quicker and with more precision than before.

The result is that the muscles are conditioned to contract faster with increased strength, coordination and responsiveness. The athlete will start to notice the difference in their athletic performance, often in just a few days.

Weights aren’t made for this

An athlete cannot get the same results when using weights in an isometric routine. This is because of the difference between gravitational force (used by weights) and elastic force (used by the resistance band). Gravitational force never changes, no matter how great the mass of the object, and therefore the muscle does not go through the process of resampling and responding to any changes in resistance and does not develop the same level of responsiveness and quickness.

A second benefit of this training strategy is that the muscle does not get a chance to adapt to the force of the resistance and plateau, or level off, at the level of resistance applied. “Muscle confusion” is the term often applied to the idea of keeping the muscle guessing as to what force to expect, and this promotes ongoing muscle development.

Third, the mass of the muscle typically does not increase with this type of training, which, if it did, could potentially offset speed gains. So, whenever you are able to increase a muscle’s strength and coordination without adding any additional body weight, your speed, quickness and athletic performance will automatically improve.

These are just some of the reasons how and why this type of training works and why athletes often see dramatic results in their sports performance in a short period of time.

Bands supply resistance in multiple angles and directions

Imagine now applying this strategy with the resistance band in positions and angles you may have never thought of before. Doing new exercises this way will immediately expose and then eliminate even greater weaknesses in your athletic performance.

Therefore we use the resistance band with an isometric training strategy to increase the strength, coordination, and contraction rate within specific muscles used in your sports skills.

Using this resistance band training for developing speed will help you and any other athlete get faster and achieve their athletic goals

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