rojo wrote:
connect the dots for me wrote:
Can you relate your comment to the topic of the thread? Beyond including the words "Mary Cain" and "Salazar", it seems like you decided to write your unrelated opinion?
My opinion is this. I never believed as a coach in obsessing with form. When I was at Cornell, I felt like most athletes by the time I got rhem already had a set form that was probably most efficient for their own body. Now, Cain is a slightly different case as Salazar started to work with her in HS.
One of my alltime favorite quotes about all of this type of crap came from John Kellogg. It was along the lines of "Low mileage, high intensity, plyos and weights. That's code words for drugs."
And I'm actually not brigning that up because I'm saying Salazar had these athletes on drugs.
I'm just saying it because I believe when a coach acts like they have a secret, it's normally a smoke-screen or just the coach fooling himself. Remember, the L-Carnitine obsession. It didn't actually work. I guess the only advantage of obsessing on most of this stuff is showing yourself that you are 100% committed.
I think I read a post one time which explained that form isn't worth focusing on, until you get to the highest level, because at that point, most of the runners can sprint at close to the same speed, but their efficiency (form) makes the difference.