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The Deceleration Advantage

May 14, 20262 min read

Speed, Balance & Game-Changing Athleticism

“Quick athletes aren’t just fast — they can stop under control.”

Why Most Athletes Aren’t Actually Quick

Most athletes say they want to be quicker.

And usually, they think that means moving faster.

But true quickness isn’t just about acceleration.

It’s about how fast you can stop.

We were watching an athlete recently during a simple change-of-direction drill.

The first step looked explosive.

Good effort.
Good intent.

But every time they had to stop and redirect, they needed an extra step to regain control.

That’s where they were losing time.

Not during the acceleration.

During the deceleration.

The Part of Speed Most Athletes Ignore

This is what a lot of athletes miss.

Quickness isn’t just about creating force.

It’s about absorbing it.

Ask yourself:

  • Can you control your body when momentum changes?

  • Can you stop without everything collapsing?

  • Can you redirect efficiently into the next movement?

That’s what separates athletes who are truly quick from athletes who just move fast in a straight line.

What the Research Shows

Research on change-of-direction performance consistently points to the same thing:

Athletes who decelerate efficiently change direction faster—and tend to stay healthier doing it.

Because if you can’t control the stop, you can’t control the next movement.

That’s where time gets lost.

And that’s where injury risk starts climbing.

What Breakdown Actually Looks Like

You’ll usually see the same compensations:

  • Athletes pop too tall when trying to stop

  • The knee caves inward during planting

  • Multiple extra steps are needed to regain balance

Those small breakdowns create hesitation and wasted movement.

And in sport, that’s often the difference between making the play—or missing it.

Train the Ability to Control Force

So instead of only focusing on moving faster, start paying attention to how you slow down.

Can you:

  • Lower your center of mass under control?

  • Stick a position without drifting?

  • Push back out efficiently without resetting?

That’s real quickness.

Why This Matters

Improving deceleration control helps athletes build:

✅ Faster change-of-direction speed
✅ Better body control under pressure
✅ Improved balance and positioning
✅ Lower injury risk during sport movement

Because speed without control eventually breaks down.

Final Thought

The athletes who look smooth and reactive aren’t just faster.

They’re better at controlling force.

They absorb it efficiently.

Reposition quickly.

And stay connected through movement.

That’s what carries over into sport.

And that’s what actually makes an athlete quick.

— Coach Shelby & The Shelby Trained Team

deceleration trainingchange of direction
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