Research Shorts
Two groups. Same exercise. Same total training load. The only difference was how fast they lowered the bar. Six weeks later the results told a clear story. The fast eccentric group increased rate of force development by up to 19% and grew muscle fascicle length by 10%. The slow eccentric group got stronger and added muscle thickness — but their explosive power actually decreased. CMJ power dropped. RFD didn't budge. The muscle got bigger but slower. The mechanism comes down to fascicle length. Fast eccentric contractions appear to add sarcomeres in series — essentially making the muscle structurally longer and capable of producing force more rapidly. Slow eccentrics drive hypertrophy but don't produce the same architectural change. And that distinction matters enormously for any athlete where the first 100 milliseconds of force production determines the outcome. This episode breaks down the Stasinaki et al. data, explains why eccentric velocity is the most underappreciated variable in resistance training prescription, and makes the case that if the goal is explosiveness, the tempo of the lowering phase isn't a minor detail — it's the whole point.
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