When I was growing up in California, I was more of a baseball fan and basketball fan watching the likes of Barry Bonds & The San Francisco Giants (Had an opportunity to go to Candlestick Park several times) and Michael Jordan with the Chicago Bulls dominating the NBA for years. I wasn't a big fan of football but I did grow up watching the 49ers and watching the duo of Steve Young & Jerry Rice. I didn't understand conditioning and working out until I was in my teens and early 20's and how sports guys trained but once I understood it, I had a much higher respect for their craft and determination.
Jerry Rice will always be the GOAT of Wide Receivers but what made him remarkable and be able to last as long as he did starting in the 80's and ending his career in the 2000's was his conditioning, specifically hill sprints. Seeing footage of him running hills is just awesome. Hill Sprints is a simple but tough as hell form of exercise that not only burns fat faster than practically any other method but also has some great safety benefits as well: It helps avoid shin splints, reduce the risk of ankle and/or knee injuries and even saves you from pulling a hammy. If this kind of training can help even the greatest catcher in NFL History have a long career, why wouldn't it help you live a healthy life?
It doesn't cost you a damn thing to do Hill Sprints, it doesn't require any special equipment and it keeps your metabolism firing so freaking much that even after a workout you're not only revving it up in to the stratosphere but also burn tons of calories. Because they're hard to do in the first place, they build that mental toughness that helps you stay in the game not just in sports but in life as well. It builds confidence because when you can go hard on a hill and do it with that fighting spirit, it'll carry over to other areas of your life.
Now should sprints be the only workout you do? That depends on your goals but for the most part, they aught to be an addition to your regimen because they can help you develop insane levels of conditioning and explosive strength that in other workouts, it might feel easier to get through. One day after doing sprints, I put myself through a 30 min superset of Sandbell Carrying & Step Ups and it not only felt easy, I felt like I can go another 30 just for good measure. My stamina was just off the chain I couldn't believe it.
Be smart and be sure to check with a doc to see if you're healthy enough. If you have the ability to do so, start with 4 sprints in the beginning for no more than 30 seconds and don't worry if you can't go full speed yet, just go at a pace for those 10-30 seconds that gets you out of breath. As you progress, picture being able to able to sprint like Jerry Rice, Rocky or Walter Payton, picture them as if they're cheering you on and telling you that YOU GOT THIS!!!
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