
In every sport, the fastest athlete to react usually wins. Whether it’s sprinting to a loose ball, making a defensive cut, or exploding out of the batter’s box — your first step sets the tone for the entire play.
At AP Sports Training, we train speed the same way we train strength — with purpose and precision. Here are our favorite drills to build explosive first-step quickness that transfers directly to game situations.
Purpose: Train acceleration mechanics and reaction timing.
Start tall, lean forward until gravity starts to pull you down, then explode into your first 3–5 steps.
Coaching cue: Drive knees forward and punch arms aggressively. Don’t step —launch.
Purpose:Build horizontal force and leg drive.
Attach a resistance band around your waist and have a partner hold tension as you sprint 5–10 yards.
Coaching cue:Stay low, keep a forward lean, and push the ground away with power.
Purpose:Reinforce sprint position and posture.
Lean against a wall at a 45° angle and drive one knee up while maintaining full tension through your core and glutes.
Coaching cue: Keep toes up, back flat, and rhythm crisp — 1-2-3 drive, reset, repeat.
Purpose: Improve foot speed and ground contact time.
Set up 4–6 low hurdles and move through them with fast, powerful touches—either forward, lateral, or diagonal.
Coaching cue: Quick feet, quiet feet. You’re trainingreaction, not distance.
Purpose: Build real-world reaction and explosiveness.
Start in an athletic stance and sprint on your partner’s cue—hand clap, verbal command, or ball drop.
Coaching cue: React instantly. The faster your brain processes the signal, the faster your body moves.
First-step quickness isn’t just about speed—it’s about force, reaction, and control.
Train explosively, stay consistent, and focus on perfect form. Small improvements in your first two steps can change the outcome of every play.
At Athletic Performance, we train athletes to move with power, precision, and purpose.
If you want to get faster, stronger, and more explosive on game day


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