In the modern world of coaching where information is at our fingertips, it is no wonder some of us try to do to much by losing other ideas in the translation. Experience gives coaches a filter to utilize information that applies to our situations. Some of this can be misdirected due to the inability to combine prior knowledge with intuition.

Coaching cues have been on the forefront of communication strategies for coaches. The ability to say more with less words is an imperative skill needed in the ADHD generation of athletes. Coaches like Nick Winkleman and my friend Brett Bartholomew have transformed this process into a coaching pedagogy of sorts. Without a doubt, coaching cues are a core concept and have several different categories.

Verbal Cues - Internal (EX: Knees out) and External (EX: Push your feet through the floor)

Visual Cues - Demonstration & Feedback

Tactile Cues - Hands-on, Accommodating Resistance, Varied Surfaces

The most important point is most coaches use Verbal Internal Cues which may be the less effective. What compounds this thought process is those cues may do more harm than good if chosen poorly. Here are three that I feel fit that category.

1. High Knees

High knee drills are often commonplace in a variety of sports performance settings. They are often utilized in pre-practice or pre-speed training sessions. One thing to understand is that high-knee drills and cuing high-knees are not the same. The intention of any drill where the mechanics of sprinting are simulated or progressed to is absolutely welcome. Where the problem lies in how the athletes are being told to "bring their knees up high."

Gone are the days where you would have any athlete bring their knees up to their chest as high as possible. Dynamic warm-up or not, this drill is as far from biomechanically sound to prepare an athlete for sprinting as there can be. I am in no way an expert on speed, and I will be the first to admit that training elite track athletes is vastly different from training field or court, team sports as I've written about extensively here.  Almost all linear speed enhancement with athletes in a team setting will deal with the acceleration phase of the sprint. Our basic progression was probably over-simplified (you can watch it here), but simply put, the foot of the frontside leg will rarely rise above opposite knee level. By instructing an athlete to pump his or her knees any higher, several technique discrepancies can happen.

  1. The athlete will lose proper posture and appropriate forward lean
  2. The athlete will create a more vertical shin angle which will alter ground contact forces
  3. The timing of the frontside/ backside mechanics cycle will be inhibited.

The emphasis for the acceleration phase through the top-end phase will differ, but none will benefit from the athlete bringing their knees to their chest. I also talk about some other ways I made my athletes slower in this article. 

Better Cues to Use: Focus on Arm Swing, driving the knee forward, and producing force against the ground. 

2. Land Soft

My first ten years of coaching were filled with mistakes and using cues like "landing soft" was a big one. Instructing athletes to land in a controlled position and absorbing the force of landing seems like a natural progression. It is almost counter-intuitive for some coaches to do otherwise as the tendency to protect the athlete supersedes all other aspects of landing. We as coaches tend to lean toward safety over performance when it comes to any eccentric contraction or deceleration phase of movement. This is with good reason, as almost all lower-extremity, non-contact injuries happen during landing, cutting, or braking on the field or court.

Focusing on altitude landings, deceleration technique, and change of direction mechanics are all solid investments in an athlete's health and performance. Landing is a skill improved by neurological efficiency (unconscious competence) and correcting muscular imbalances (posterior chain). But with all the emphasis on improving landing mechanics, are will sabotaging it with our own cues?

Nowadays, everyone is an Olympic lifting expert and coaches aren't afraid to display their intellectual prowess via social media. I am far from an expert and my experience is with large groups with minimal time. I wrote about training the Olympic lifts in a team setting here. That being said, when looking at an athlete catch a snatch or clean, it takes me about 3 seconds to know if they are strong enough to progress past their technique flaws. The question is always, "how strong to you have to be in other lifts (squats, pulls) to lift X amount of weight on the platform?

Watching an athlete catch a clean in the power position and then have that weight force them down to a front squat, then the athlete is weak. If the weight hits your rack position and you descend afterwards, you aren't strong enough. It doesn't take much video to figure that out. That leads to my biggest issue with teaching a soft landing. It is almost as bad as teaching a soft catch position.

An even bigger issue when an athlete lands softly on top of a box or on the ground is simply this: They will never land that way on the field or court. The whole purpose of landing or decelerating is to do it as quickly as possible in order to produce fore in a different or opposite direction. Landing slowly ans softly disables that process. Athletes need to land in a great athletic position (which should resemble or even replicate the power position) with proper joint angles and no additional and unnecessary movement or alteration in posture.

Better cues to use: Land Strong

3. Pinch your Shoulder Blades Together

This is a cue that coaches use continuously as the need for athletes to maintain scapular retraction throughout the duration of almost all weight room movement warrant a great deal of emphasis. In fact, there are companies who have made an exorbitant amount of money inventing already invented equipment to perform already invented variations of scapular retraction. You  can use elitefts bands for a fraction of the cost, but that's none of my business though. Here's an example of some of these movements from a low position and high position.

The key with maintaining a proper shoulder position (specifically with the scapula) are to have the athlete retract AND depress the scapula. What often happens when the athlete attempts to simply "pinch their shoulder blades" is their shoulder girdle elevates like a shrug. With the shoulders elevated, pressing and pulling movements can lose efficiency of movement and jeopardize shoulder health. The cue itself is not the issue as long as the desired shoulder position is achieved. Here is a video Nick Showman and I did on achieving the athletic "power" position which includes proper position in the thoracic spine.

Better cues to use: "Shoulder blades in your back pockets" or even "chest up."

The one aspect of this list that is 100% true is it's not complete. There are undoubtedly many other cues that coaches use that could be replaced for the betterment of those athletes. There is never right or wrong in these cases, just coaches finding better ways to help their athletes achieve more.


Articles by Mark Watts

Olympic Lifting for Athletes: Using Static Holds to Improve Technique

Head Games: Training the Neck to Reduce Concussions

The Fastest Sport on Ice: Things You Don't Know About Bobsled

Tips to Crush the Combine Tests

An In-Season Training Guide for Baseball Pitchers

Individual Training in a Team Setting

Off-Season Training for Football (with 8-Week Program)

What is Really Wrong with Strength and Conditioning

How Do You Get Athletes Fast?

The Last Sports Performance Podcast

Olympic Lifting for Athletic Performance

Sports Performance Coach Education Series

WATCH: How to Find a Strength and Conditioning Job

WATCH: Becoming a Mentor to Young Coaches

WATCH: The Four-Step Coaching Process

WATCH: 5 Strategies to Perform More Work in Less Time

WATCH: Why Communication is Key to a Better Coaching Career

WATCH: A Better Way to Train High School Athletes

WATCH: How to Implement Auto-Regulatory Training in a Team Setting

WATCH: Pre-Workout Circuits to Optimize Training Time and Maximize Performance

WATCH: Hypertrophy Circuits for Athletes in a Team Setting

Coaches Clinics 

WATCH: Two Bench Press Mechanical Drop-Sets for Hypertrophy

WATCH: Two Lateral Speed Drills with Bands to Improve Change of Direction

WATCH: Adjusting the Glute-Ham Raise to Optimize Your Training

WATCH: Basic Linear Speed Acceleration Drills in a Team Setting

WATCH: Kettlebell Training for Team Sports


 Mark Watts' Articles and Coaching Log

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