Randy Huntington on Training Cycles, Water Work, and a “Recovery First” Mindset in Speed and Power Training

Today’s show welcomes back Randy Huntington for a “part 2” of the recent episode #282 , speaking on the success of Chinese sprinter, Su Bingtian, and the third podcast with Randy in total.  Randy is a track and field coach who has spent his recent years as the national track and field coach for the Chinese athletics association and has over 45 years of coaching experience.

Huntington is rated as a USATF Master Coach in the jumps, has been the coach for many world-class athletes over the years, including eight Olympians and seven World Championship Team members.  Mike Powell and Willie Banks set world records in the long jump and triple jump, respectively, while under his tutelage.

In the last podcast, Randy spoke on several elements of the training methods that helped Su Bingtian to become the fastest accelerator of all time, such as sled and resisted sprint training, special strength work, and more.  There was still a lot left to cover after the last episode, so for this show, we will dive back in (literally, in regards to the water training) to Randy’s training methodology.

For today’s episode, Randy speaks in depth on Su Bingtian’s weekly training setup, and how he spaces out the weekly work, with a focus on rest and recovery.  He will get into the topic of training density, and how this can be modulated with training cycles of various lengths (as opposed to only sticking with a traditional 7-day cycle).  Randy will get into elements of water training, tempo sprint training, his version of over-speed work, and much more.  This is an awesome compliment to the popular “part 1” of my recent chatting with Randy, and great material for coaches in any discipline.

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Randy Huntington on Training Cycles, Water Work, and a “Recovery First” Mindset in Speed and Power Training

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Timestamps and Main Points

4:39 –  Details on Su’s weekly training setup, and how “work + rest = adaptation”

11:17 – Thoughts on how much, and how often to apply tempo work to team training

15:35 – How various cultures can have an impact on the type of training that athletes in that culture will optimally respond to

18:56 – The importance of water training for recovery, and recovery training in general, in Randy’s program

36:51 – Why the biggest need in coaching is on the level of youth coaches, and not those who work with elite athletes

42:06 –  How Randy isolates the specific focus of his training sessions, not doing too much work all in one session

46:06 – Individual factors in elastic vs. muscular athletes in the construction of a training program

51:51 – The power of being able to move athletes around selectively amongst training groups in individual sports

55:21 – How Randy looks at long term training and seasonal shifts in training emphasis

59:51 – Principles on going beyond a typical 7-day weekly training cycle, into 9 and 10 day cycles.

1:04:51 – How Randy utilizes the “bigger players” in a training year (such as intense training methods, heavy lifting, intense plyos, etc.) and how he measures and manages recovery

1:12:06 – How Randy applies overspeed training with his athletes


“I look at work, but I put the rest in first in the week, and then I follow it back up with what work we are going to do prior to the rest”

“I like using pulse (for tempo training), I’d rather use SMO2 (when I can)… that gives me a very accurate appraisal of when to go again”

“I make our strength coaches run (tempo) with the sprinters”

“In China, you can’t give them a lot of time off, they fall apart very quickly if they have a lot of time off (Koreans were like the too)”

“How do you increase density without (going to steroids)… that’s how I arrived at (water training)… my whole approach has been recovery based first, I’d quit before I’d ever go to (steroids)… the water for me, serves for Su, the density of training I need him to do”

“If the pool is accessible, I’d go there after every session”

“There is almost no better way to do hip flexor work than to get in the water”

“Because water is denser too, you find the best pattern, you groove your movement pattern even better”

“Deep water is pure recovery work to me…. Tempo is still work; is it recovery? I wouldn’t make a steady diet out of it.. there is only so much gravity based training you can take”

“You can refresh that (coaching) spark by going back down to middle school and high school”

“You can destroy elasticity pretty easily by overtraining”

“I tend to put the jumpers on a 9 day cycle, the sprinters on a 7 day cycle, and the 800m is on a 7-10-10-5 cycle”

“We go to 9 day cycles if we need to fit in everything I need to fit in”

“You only extend a training cycle for recovery, in 7 days, you are creating density but you are not taking time to recover… you start thinking density more than intensity or volume”

“3-day cycles are the easiest to figure out; so you got acceleration, weight training, speed… or acceleration, weight training, recovery”

“Rolling 3 days are pretty easy to program”

“If you want to get scientific with anything, get scientific with adaptation.  Get scientific with sympathetic/parasympathetic balance”

“I don’t do over-speed training, I do assisted-speed training… that’s the thing you look at; where am I in my ability to apply force to the ground without creating blocking forces”


Show Notes

Su Bingtian’s Sprint Training Schedule:

Monday: Acceleration

Tues: Lift (power)

Wed: Short Speed Endurance (ASSE/GSSE) working into pure speed day over time

Thursday: Lift (upper body + 1 power style lift) Recovery Circuits in Afternoon

Friday: Acceleration

Sat: Lift (max strength) plus longer speed endurance session


About Randy Huntington

Randy Huntington is currently the national track and field coach for the Chinese athletics association and has over 45 years of coaching experience.  Huntington is rated as a USATF Master Coach in the jumps – one of only five in the U.S. He has been the coach for many world-class athletes over the years, including eight Olympians and seven World Championship Team members. Mike Powell and Willie Banks set world records in the long jump and triple jump, respectively, while under his tutelage. Six of his athletes have been in the U.S. all-time top ten in their respective events.

Huntington coached Powell to the Olympic Games in 1988, 1992 and 1996, where Powell won a pair of silver medals in the long jump. On Aug. 30, 1991 in Tokyo, Powell broke Bob Beamon’s 23-year-old long jump record that was expected to never be broken, leaping 29-4 1/2 (8.95m) – a record that still stands. Willie Banks, who Huntington coached to the 1988 Olympics, broke the world triple jump record with a mark of 58-11 1/2 (17.97m), June 16, 1985 in Indianapolis, and under Huntington’s coaching twice jumped over 18 meters, which is the longest in American history.

Huntington has also coached Olympians Joe Greene (long jump bronze medal in 1992), Sheila Hudson (American indoor and outdoor record-holder in the triple jump), Al Joyner, Darren Plab, Tony Nai and Sharon Couch. At least one of his athletes has competed in every summer Olympic Games since 1984. Powell, Greene, Hudson, Couch and Nai were all World Championship team members that he coached, along with Kathy Rounds and Kenta Bell.

Huntington has also worked with professional athletes in other sports, notably football. He has worked as a conditioning and/or speed consultant for several teams including Indianapolis, St. Louis, Miami, Denver, Philadelphia and Cincinnati, and has worked with numerous individual players including Trace Armstrong, Terry Kirby, Henry Ellard and Ed McCaffrey. He has also worked with college football programs at Florida, Oklahoma and Notre Dame including training for the NFL combine, working with athletes such as Kyle Turley and Grant Wistrom.

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