
487: Ben Simons on Speed Training and the Art of Explosive Longevity
Just Fly Performance Podcast
00:00
From Long Jump to Bobsled: Ben’s Athletic Path
Joel asks Ben about his background; Ben recounts multisport youth, university long jump, and trials that led to bobsledding.
Play episode from 15:25
Transcript
Transcript
Episode notes
Today’s guest is Ben Simons. Ben is a British performance coach and two-time Olympic bobsledder with a background in sprinting and sports science. A former World Cup gold medallist, he’s now focused on helping athletes develop speed, power, and coordination through evidence-based, real-world training methods. Ben blends biomechanics, motor learning, and nervous-system training to build explosive, adaptable athletes.
Many speed training topics and conversations focus exclusively on the most stimulating possible methods; fewer get into individual factors, athlete adaptability, and how that speed and power training evolves with the needs of the athlete.
On today’s show, Ben and I discuss asymmetry, rhythm, and “aliveness” in sprint and power development. We explore when to let unique mechanics—like Byanda Wlaza’s galloping stride—run their course versus coaching toward a technical model. Ben gets into the general speed training lessons he gained from bobsled, and shares why he now favors yielding isometrics, unilateral strength, and med ball throws over heavy lifts, emphasizing longevity, reflexive strength, and movement variability. We finish with how curvilinear sprints, pool work, and playful, multidirectional movement help athletes stay reactive, adaptable, and pain-free.
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View more podcast episodes at the podcast homepage. (https://www.just-fly-sports.com/podcast-home/)
Timestamps
0:00 – Asymmetry, gallop running, and what to do with extremes
12:25 – Air-time vs ground work: why the stuff in the air transfers to sprinting
16:08 – From long jump and 4x100 to bobsled trials and the push track
19:57 – Retirement, coming back, and the management needed for longevity
24:04 – Achilles management, playing sport, and the power of movement variety
31:09 – Practical coaching advice: get people back into the sport they love
41:31 – Curvilinear sprints, feeling safe, and bringing play into rehab
45:53 – How bobsled pushing changed Ben’s acceleration and posterior chain
52:28 – Hamstring training, velocity, and the limits of eccentric volume
59:46 – Practical tools: tank sleds, prowlers, glute-ham machines, and Zurcher split squats
1:08:19 – Why Ben minimized compound max lifts and what he uses now
1:24:46 – Programming for mature athletes: living off the strength bank and using yield isometrics
Quotes from Ben Simons
"Almost all speed coaches are going to try and move their athletes back towards that perfect technical model."
"Kicking a ball thousands of times in your development... you very quickly fall into your dominant leg."
"One of the arguments with traditional A's and B's is that you're isolating one side and you're changing the learning process there because you're actually taking a reflexive action, which is the cross-extensive reflex that you get in a dribble."
"Modulating the pain is a huge piece within that rehabilitation because you're not going to compensate as much when you feel less pain."
"Just making sure we stay in touch with that reflexive part of the movement, you know, in the coupling phase, in the amortization is key."
"When you're upright pushing a bobsleigh... you have got to put that impulse through the sled itself. So it does feel like there's almost a punching going on with your handles."
"If you get him into a glute ham raise... can really feel that pelvis position under duress which is a great way to teach people where they are in space because a lot of people just don't understand the tension that they need within that pelvis and lumbar to get it neutral."
"I think in developmental stages, it's definitely those compound lifts and max strength methods are the easiest way to make gains in strength and output... But I just wonder once that money is in the bank, how far you need to pursue them."
About Ben Simons
Ben Simons OLY is a British performance coach and former Olympic bobsledder with a background in sprinting and sports science. A two-time Olympian (Sochi 2014, PyeongChang 2018) and World Cup gold medallist, Ben spent a decade representing Great Britain on the international stage, competing in over 120 events. Before bobsleigh, he was a Welsh indoor 60 m champion and studied sports science at Cardiff Met, experiences that laid the foundation for his lifelong focus on speed and power development.
Today, Ben brings that elite-sport experience to his work as a strength, speed, and performance coach. His approach blends biomechanics, motor learning, and nervous-system training to help athletes move efficiently and perform explosively under pressure. With an emphasis on coordination, recovery, and data-driven methods, Ben coaches athletes and teams across sports to bridge the gap between research and real-world performance, developing complete athletes who are as resilient and adaptable as they are fast and strong.
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