The Missing Link in Athletic Power

June 10, 20263 min read

Speed, Balance & Game-Changing Athleticism

“Most athletes don’t lack power — they leak it.”

Where Power Gets Lost

You see it all the time in sports.

An athlete tries to rotate aggressively.

  • A baseball swing

  • A volleyball hit

  • A lacrosse shot

  • A change of direction

And everything looks rushed.

The upper body flies open.

The hips stop contributing.

Timing disappears.

The movement becomes all effort and very little efficiency.

When that happens, most athletes assume they need to get stronger.

Sometimes they do.

But often, the issue isn't force production.

It's force transfer.

That's a completely different problem.

The Difference Between Strength and Connection

Recently, we were watching athletes work through rotational training.

Interestingly, the athletes who moved best weren't always the strongest athletes in the room.

They weren't necessarily lifting the most weight.

They weren't necessarily the biggest.

They were simply the most connected.

Their hips, core, and upper body worked together.

Force flowed smoothly from one segment to the next.

Nothing looked forced.

Nothing looked rushed.

Everything was coordinated.

That's what real power looks like.

A Simple Exercise That Exposes Force Leaks

One exercise we frequently use is:

🎥 V Grip Chop Pulse

At first glance, it looks simple.

But it reveals a lot.

Most athletes immediately try to muscle through it with their arms.

And that's exactly what we're trying to avoid.

Because the goal isn't arm strength.

The goal is teaching the body how to organize force.

The Questions That Matter

As you perform the movement, ask yourself:

  • Can I stay stable through my hips while rotating?

  • Can my core transfer force without losing position?

  • Can my upper body stay connected instead of taking over?

Those questions tell us far more than how much resistance you're using.

Because rotational power is built through sequencing.

Not just effort.

Why Rotation Matters in Sport

Almost every sport involves rotation in some form.

  • Throwing

  • Swinging

  • Sprinting

  • Cutting

  • Changing direction

The ability to create and transfer rotational force efficiently is a major contributor to performance.

When that sequence breaks down:

  • Throws lose velocity

  • Swings lose power

  • Cuts become slower

  • Movement becomes less efficient

And athletes often work harder for worse results.

Power Is a Full-Body Skill

One of the biggest misconceptions in athletic training is that power is simply about producing more force.

But elite athletes understand something different.

Power isn't just created.

It's transferred.

The best movers are often the athletes who waste the least energy.

They connect the ground, hips, trunk, and upper body into one coordinated system.

And when that system works together, performance looks effortless.

Train Connection, Not Just Effort

If you're trying to improve rotational power, don't just focus on getting stronger.

Pay attention to how force moves through your body.

Can you stay connected?

Can you maintain sequence?

Can you control the movement without forcing it?

Because that's where the next jump in performance usually comes from.

Not creating more force.

Learning how to use the force you already have.

— Coach Shelby & The Shelby Trained Team

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