I believe I have said this once before but sprinting is one of the best if not the best conditioning tools a MMA fighter can use to increase not only their anaerobic conditioning but at the same time get leaner, stronger and more powerful. Most people forget about this easy to use and most natural tool we have. Fighters and their coaches love to put their athletes through different types of “MMA specific” circuits and use that as their only mode of conditioning. I have caught myself doing this as well but as I grow wiser and grayer in the beard I have come to love and appreciate the art of sprinting.
Sprinting is a full body training session. If you have not sprinted in a while then you will definitely have some muscle soreness in the following days. Besides getting in a great conditioning session and increasing your stamina, there are a few more benefits from getting out and sprinting. Sprinting will also help to cut off excess pounds and around this time of the year, who doesn’t need that. With the loss of fat comes the increase of lean muscle mass, which will not only make you a better athlete and fighter but also make you look good, a definite bonus for you single fighters out there. Sprinting will also help increase power while activating those Fast-Twitch muscle fibers necessary in fighting. The benefit that I find to be very useful especially in the fighting world is the fact that a sprint session is very short. With all the training that fighters need to go through to get on the mat or in the cage, shorter sessions in the strength and conditioning world will save you and your body from excess wear and tear.
If you have not put sprinting into your training this may be a great time to do it. Check out the sprint program that I posted a few months ago, this will be a great place to start. From there you can get into some more intricate and hit me up for a program to improve your strength and conditioning training.
Finally I will leave you with an awesome sprint session that I completed on New Years Eve. After each sprint, make sure you get sufficient recovery time. What I do is I gauge by my heart rate, once my heart rate drops between 30-40 beats I then complete the next set. This is a basic ladder scheme, start off with a 100m sprint followed by a 200m , then a 300m and finally a 400m sprint. I know I said finally but you are not done yet. Once recovered from the 400m sprint, which for some can take minutes as you gather yourself, you then embark down the ladder starting with 400m, then 300m, 200m and finally 100m. After a good solid warm-up, the sprinting should not take any longer than a half hour to complete. Rest intervals will determine how long the session takes.
So get out to the track and get your sprint training on, because your conditioning will thank you in the end.












