Speed, Sprint & Agility

20m Sprint

Gluteshamstringsquadscalves Alactic / ATP-PC
i.

How to Do It

From a stationary two-point stance, sprint a flat-out 20 metres in a straight line. Drive hard out of the start with a forward lean and powerful arm action, staying low for the first strides, then rise gradually as you build speed. Run through the 20-metre line without decelerating. Time each effort, taking full recovery between reps on the same surface and footwear.

ii.

Why It Works

Trains and measures pure acceleration — the ability to overcome inertia and apply large horizontal forces over the first 20 metres. Short-distance sprinting develops the explosive force production and powerful arm-leg coordination that a longer run rarely taxes.

iii.

Hockey Transfer

Almost every sprint in hockey is short and acceleration-dominant — jumping on a loose puck, beating an opponent to the boards, exploding out on a breakaway. A faster 20-metre time is a direct dry-land read on first-step quickness.

iv.

Coaching Cues

  • "Push the ground back, don’t reach"
  • "lean and drive the arms"
  • "low and patient, then tall"
v.

Common Mistakes

Popping upright on the first steps; over-striding instead of pushing; tensing the shoulders and face; easing off before the line

vi.

Progression / Regression

Progression

resisted starts (sled or band) or extend to a 30 m sprint

Regression

10 m accelerations focused on the drive phase

vii.

Primary Muscles

Gluteshamstringsquadscalves
viii.

Energy System

Alactic / ATP-PC

Ready to train?

Put it to work
on the ice.

This exercise is part of a fully periodized 12-week off-ice program — built by a sport scientist who coaches at the national level.

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