The Fix My Weakness Tool helps athletes and coaches quickly identify the most common limiting factors in sprint performance and translate them into actionable training decisions. Instead of guessing, the tool connects a visible problem, like a slow first step or plateaued top speed, to underlying mechanical and neuromuscular factors, then gives targeted drills and a simple program.
Step-by-Step Instructions
1. Select your primary weakness
Choose the issue that most consistently shows up in your sprinting:
- Slow first step
- Top speed plateau
- Tight hamstrings
Focus on the most limiting factor, not multiple problems at once. Sprint performance is constrained by the weakest link in the system.
2. Review the diagnosis
The tool provides a short diagnosis explaining what is likely happening beneath the surface.
These diagnoses are based on key sprint performance principles:
- Sprinting speed depends on force production and application direction
- Early acceleration requires horizontal force dominance
- Top speed depends on vertical force and stiffness
- Perceived “tightness” often reflects protective neuromuscular strategies, not just flexibility
Research supports that sprint performance is driven by how force is applied to the ground, not just how much force is produced (Morin et al., 2012; Samozino et al., 2016).
3. Identify likely causes
Each weakness is broken into common root causes.
Examples:
- Slow first step → poor projection, weak horizontal force
- Top speed plateau → poor front-side mechanics or insufficient max velocity exposure
- Tight hamstrings → overstriding, pelvic position, or low eccentric tolerance
This aligns with biomechanical findings that sprinting efficiency is influenced by technical coordination and force application patterns, not isolated strength alone (Weyand et al., 2000; Clark & Weyand, 2014).
4. Perform the recommended drills
The drills are selected to target the specific constraint, not just general fitness.
Examples:
- Acceleration → sled work, falling starts
- Max velocity → fly sprints, wicket runs
- Hamstrings → eccentric loading, controlled sprint mechanics
Evidence shows that:
- Resisted sprinting improves acceleration by increasing horizontal force production (Petrakos et al., 2016)
- Max velocity sprinting improves neuromuscular coordination and stiffness (Mero et al., 1992)
- Eccentric hamstring training reduces injury risk and improves force tolerance (van Dyk et al., 2019)
5. Follow the starter program
The program provides a simple weekly structure.
Key principles:
- High intensity, low volume for speed development
- Full recovery between sprints
- Stop when performance drops
This reflects well-established sprint training principles:
- Speed is highly neural and requires maximal intent with full recovery (Ross et al., 2001)
- Fatigue reduces coordination and alters mechanics, limiting adaptation (Girard et al., 2011)
6. Apply the “quality rule”
Each program includes a rule such as:
- Stop when sharpness drops
- Prioritize relaxation at speed
- Pain changes the plan
These rules reflect the idea that sprint performance is governed by neuromuscular regulation and coordination, not just effort.
Fix My Weakness
Choose your biggest sprint problem. Get a diagnosis, targeted drills, and a starter program.
Diagnosis
Likely poor projection, low starting stiffness, or weak intent in the first 2 to 4 steps.
Likely Causes
- Popping up too early
- Reaching instead of pushing backward
- Low explosive horizontal force
Drills
- Wall drive switches, 3 x 5 each leg
- Falling starts, 4 to 6 reps
- Two-point starts, 4 to 6 reps
- Sled pushes, 4 x 10 yards
Starter Program
- Acceleration day plus sled work
- Jump and throw day
- Short sprint day
- Stop when quality drops
Diagnosis
Likely front-side mechanics, rhythm, posture, or insufficient exposure to high-speed sprinting.
Likely Causes
- Forcing stride length
- Low hips or backside mechanics
- Not sprinting fast enough often enough
Drills
- Wicket runs, 4 to 6 passes
- Fly 10s or fly 20s, 3 to 5 reps
- A-run buildups, 3 x 20 meters
- Straight-leg bounds, 3 x 20 meters
Starter Program
- Fly sprint day
- Elastic rhythm day
- Submax technical buildup day
- Stay relaxed at speed
Diagnosis
Tight hamstrings often reflect positioning, fatigue, low tissue tolerance, or protective tension.
Likely Causes
- Overstriding
- Poor pelvic position
- Low eccentric tolerance
Drills
- A-march drills, 3 x 20 meters
- RDL patterning, 3 x 6 controlled reps
- Nordic hamstring lowers, 2 to 4 controlled reps
- Tempo runs or buildups at 70 to 85 percent
Starter Program
- Low-intensity mechanics day
- Eccentric strength day
- Gradual buildup run day
- Pain modifies training


