Speed is trainable — but most programs train the wrong thing
Parents hear "you can't teach speed" and assume their kid is stuck with whatever they were born with. That's wrong. Speed is a skill built from mechanics, force production, and the nervous system's ability to fire fast — all of which respond to training. What's true is that most youth programs say they train speed and actually train conditioning, and those are close to opposites.
If a "speed" session leaves an athlete gassed and dragging, it was a conditioning session. Real speed work leaves them fresh, because speed is expressed only when the athlete is fully recovered between reps.
The rule that fixes half of bad programs: speed goes first
Fatigue and top speed cannot coexist. You cannot train maximum velocity on tired legs — the moment the athlete is winded, they slow down, and now they're rehearsing slow movement patterns. That's the opposite of the goal.
So the order of a session matters more than the drills in it:
- Warm-up and activation — prepare the nervous system, not exhaust it.
- Speed and acceleration work — first, while fresh. Short sprints, full recovery between reps (walk back, don't jog). Quality over quantity.
- Strength and force work next.
- Conditioning last, if at all — it's a fitness quality, not a speed quality.
A program that opens with a lap and a bunch of up-downs has already spent the athlete's speed budget before the speed work starts.
Acceleration matters more than top speed for most sports
For a young football, soccer, or basketball athlete, the first 10–20 yards — acceleration — decides most plays. Very few game situations let anyone reach true top-end speed. So the highest-leverage work is teaching a powerful, mechanically sound first few steps: shin angles, arm drive, and putting force into the ground behind them.
This is also where clean coaching pays off fastest, because most young athletes have never been taught what a good acceleration position even looks like.
Measure honestly or you're guessing
You can't improve what you don't measure, but a number measured inconsistently is worse than no number — it lies to you. If you're going to test a 40 or a short shuttle, test it the same way every time: same surface, same start, same rest, same tool. A hand-timed number on a good day and an electronically timed number on a tired day tell you nothing when you compare them.
Track a small set of honest benchmarks over months, not a big set measured sloppily once. Progress you can trust is what keeps a young athlete motivated — and it's the only thing that tells a coach whether the program is actually working.
The takeaway for parents
Ask any program a simple question: do you train speed while the athletes are fresh, and do you measure the same way every time? If the answer is a warm-up lap, endless conditioning, and a stopwatch used differently each session, your athlete is working hard and getting fitter — not faster. Speed is built with intent, order, and honest measurement.