Rapid Fire
Episode Overview The 40-yard dash may be the most talked-about sprint in American sports — and the most misunderstood. In this episode of The Fast Lane, Chris Kerr sits down with Dan Fichter and Chris Korfist to break down what truly determines elite 40-yard dash performance, why most “4.4s” aren’t real, and how force, projection, limb velocity, and nervous system readiness dictate speed far more than traditional weight-room metrics. This conversation blends biomechanics, applied physics, neurology, and coaching reality, offering a no-nonsense look at what actually transfers to faster sprint times. Key Topics Covered Why Most Athletes Can’t Run a Real 4.4 * Why a 24” vertical jump or 11.5s 100m automatically disqualifies a true 4.4 * The difference between coach-timed, combine-timed, and true electronic times * Why elite speed “looks different” the moment you see it The Start Is Everything * Why horizontal projection matters more than raw strength * How poor shin angles act as a brake before the sprint even begins * Why “crowding the line” kills acceleration * Ideal first-step projection distance Force, Power & Body Weight Explained (Simply) * Force per body weight as the real limiter of acceleration * Why elite starters cluster around ~8 N/kg * How watts per kilogram explain why lighter athletes separate later Neurology, Falling & Speed Permission * Speed as a permission granted by the brain * Why falling is a trainable skill * How vestibular input, tendon stiffness, and threat perception affect sprinting * Why kids who fell more growing up often end up faster Foot, Ankle & Heel Mechanics * Why plantarflexion is non-negotiable for acceleration * What a “floating heel” tells you instantly * How foot stiffness influences shin angles and projection * Why weak feet sabotage otherwise strong athletes Weight Room Reality Check * Why squats and power cleans don’t guarantee speed * When more force actually makes athletes slower * Why positioning > load * How bodyweight manipulation changes force-velocity profiles Technology & Measurement * How the 1080 Sprint changes how coaches understand speed * Why time splits reveal more than full 40s * Fly-10 and Fly-20 benchmarks that actually matter * Why video + timing beats guesswork Episode Timeline Highlights * 0:00–10:00 – Quick-style reps, rebounds, and extreme isometrics * 10:00–25:00 – The myth of the 4.4 & combine timing realities * 25:00–40:00 – Force, projection, and limb velocity explained * 40:00–55:00 – Neurology, falling, and vestibular training * 55:00–70:00 – Indoor training solutions & first-step development Key Coaching Takeaways * The 40-yard dash is won before the first foot hits the ground * Projection without limb speed creates early braking * Athletes don’t need more force — they need better force application * Speed training without neurology is incomplete * If your athlete can’t fall safely, they can’t accelerate aggressively
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