Carousel Studio

Repurpose X Threads into LinkedIn & Instagram Carousels

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Title Font Size36px
Body Font Size18px
Header & Footer Size12px

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Outro Slide CTA

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Build Your Carousel

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Drag Post #1
Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan

How much time should you actually spend coaching sprint mechanics for non-track athletes? This is a question I get all the time and it’s a good one, because it forces coaches to confront how they use their time. Sprinting is one of the most powerful training tools we have.

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Drag Post #2
Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan

But the amount of time you spend teaching it depends on the context… For a track athlete, sprinting is the sport. For a field sport athlete, sprinting is a means, not an end. So how do you approach it? You need to respect sprinting enough to teach it well, but not so much

Drag Post #3
Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan

that it becomes its own sport layered on top of theirs. They already have a sport. Your job is to complement that, not complicate it. That means: •No 10-minute lectures on shin angles or front-side mechanics •No paralysis by analysis •No trying to fix 5 things at once

Drag Post #4
Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan

What I care about is what they’re showing me. From there, I pick one cue. Maybe two. Not because I don’t know more — but because more isn’t helpful. I use things like sled sprints, med ball accelerations, varied start positions, and tempo runs to help athletes naturally

Drag Post #5
Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan

find better shapes. Sprinting teaches sprinting, if the setup is right. The hard part isn’t giving the athlete more information. The hard part is filtering your knowledge into the right cue, at the right time, based on what they need, not what you want to show you know.

Drag Post #6
Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan

<a target="_blank" href="https://fredduncantraining.com/product/ultimate-speed-bundle/" color="blue">fredduncantraining.com/product/ultima…</a>