A Study from the University of Essex finds sprint performance can significantly improve simply by changing how you think. Itโs a surprising twist that challenges everything we assume about speedโand proves that sometimes, the brain might just be your most powerful muscle.
Scientists teamed up with Tottenham Hotspurโs elite youth academy and discovered a trick that instantly made teenage players run faster. But they didnโt need new shoes, protein shakes, or weeks of strength training. Nope. They just needed a few powerful words.
Phrases like โpush the ground awayโ or โlaunch like a jetโ lit up the playersโ brains, helping them visualize motion more effectively. That mental spark alone led to around a 3% improvement in their 20-meter sprint times. Itโs the kind of boost coaches usually chase for weeks.
Dr. Jason Moran, the lead researcher, explains that focusing on external cuesโlike whatโs around you, rather than your own bodyโunlocks more natural, fluid movement. The body just โgets itโ better when you think about flying like a jet or speeding like a Ferrari and By this way one can run faster without training.

And itโs not just elite footballers who benefit. This technique can be used anywhere from PE classes to weekend matches. Even parents could get their kids moving sharper just by shifting how they talk.
Itโs a bit wild, right? That just tweaking the way we describe motion could beat drills. But it seems our minds are wired to respond to storytelling more than we ever realized.
So next time you’re about to sprint, donโt just run. Take off. Fly. Push the world behind you. Your brain might just kick your legs into high gear.
Reference
“How effective are external cues and analogies in enhancing sprint and jump performance in academy soccer players?” by Jason Moran, Matt Allen, Joshua Butson, Urs Granacher, Raouf Hammami, Filipe Manuel Clemente, Megan Klabunde, and Gavin Sandercock. Published in the Journal of Sports Sciences on February 1, 2024.