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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Build Your Carousel

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Drag Post #1
Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan

Sprinting is unique. It shows up in almost every sport. Acceleration, max velocity, chasing, separating, reacting. Because of that, a lot of people assume sprinting just “takes care of itself.” But in training, sprinting is still used as a general stimulus. And general

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Drag Post #2
Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan

stimuli only create specific adaptations when they’re applied deliberately. Just sprinting in practice doesn’t guarantee you’re: - Expanding the alactic envelope - Giving the hamstrings and hip flexors enough high speed exposure - Training elasticity and stiffness at the

Drag Post #3
Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan

velocities that matter - Improving mechanical efficiency - Or even accumulating enough quality volume to adapt If sprinting is done under fatigue, with unknown reps and distances, and no real intent or feedback, it’s not true/effective speed training. Speed improvements come

Drag Post #4
Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan

from how sprinting is applied, not the fact that it happens. That’s exactly what Speed Kills is built around. It breaks down sprinting as: - A physical quality - A neurological quality - And a skill that has to be trained with intent You’ll see how I structure

Drag Post #5
Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan

sprint volumes, how I expose athletes to high velocity safely, how sprinting ties into hamstring health and elasticity, and how all of it fits inside a complete training week without burying athletes in fatigue. Speed doesn’t improve accidentally. If you want it to actually

Drag Post #6
Fred Duncan
@Fred__Duncan

improve, it has to be trained deliberately. That’s what Speed Kills is for. <a target="_blank" href="https://fredduncantraining.com/product/speed-kills/" color="blue">fredduncantraining.com/product/speed-…</a>