
Youth athletes often work hard, but hard work doesn’t always equal smart training. A few common mistakes can slow progress, limit speed development, and even increase injury risk.
At AP Sports Training, we focus on correcting these early so athletes build the right foundation.
One of the biggest mistakes is thinking more is always better.
Many young athletes:
Train at max intensity every day
Don’t allow proper recovery
Accumulate fatigue quickly
Without recovery, performance actually goes down over time.
Speed, strength, and agility all depend on mechanics.
Common issues include:
Poor sprint form
Weak landing positions
Sloppy cutting mechanics
Lifting with bad posture
Bad technique repeated over time becomes a habit that slows development.
Jumping straight into intense activity increases injury risk and reduces performance.
Athletes often:
Rush through warm-ups
Do only static stretching
Skip activation work
A proper warm-up prepares the body to move fast and safely.
Not all running builds speed.
A major mistake is:
Running long distances for “speed”
Training while constantly fatigued
Losing focus on explosiveness
Speed requires short, high-quality efforts with full recovery.
Some youth athletes avoid lifting because they think it will slow them down.
In reality, strength training helps:
Improve speed
Increase explosiveness
Reduce injury risk
Build durability
A stronger athlete is usually a better athlete.
Progress doesn’t come from occasional hard workouts — it comes from consistent effort.
Inconsistent training leads to:
Slower development
Lost progress between sessions
Reduced confidence
Small, consistent work builds long-term success.
At AP Sports Training, we help young athletes avoid these common mistakes so they can develop speed, strength, and confidence the right way.
Because how you train early often determines how far you can go later.


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