Rate of Force Development Training: Unlock Explosive Athletic Performance
Rate of force development training measures how fast you can create force, and that speed decides who gets out of the blocks first, jumps higher, and changes direction faster. If you coach athletes, or you are one, mastering rate of force development training will separate “strong” from “unbeatably fast.” This guide shows you exactly how.
TL;DR
- RFD = how quickly you produce force; faster RFD drives sprint speed and vertical jump.
- Build strength first; then train velocity with lighter, faster lifts and plyometrics.
- Combine sprint, plyo, and isometric drills for maximal transfer to sport.
- Poor intent and heavy-only lifting are the biggest RFD killers.
- Use the sample weekly plan to apply everything today.
Why Rate of Force Development Training Matters
Rapid force wins the first ten metres of a sprint, powers explosive jumps, and sharpens every cut on the court. Athletes with higher RFD accelerate sooner and decelerate safely, reducing injury risk. For deeper science, see the NSCA overview on RFD
To understand how previous training primes your nervous system for faster gains, check out our Muscle Memory Training Guide
For strength foundations that feed RFD, explore our Strength & Conditioning Coaching

How to Train Rate of Force Development
1. Strength Sets the Ceiling
Heavy squats, deadlifts, and cleans raise your maximal force potential. Keep them in your week at 80 – 90 % 1RM.
2. Dynamic Effort Lifts
Lift 40 – 60 % 1RM with maximal bar speed. Two cues: “Move the weight like it’s hot” and “Stop each set before speed drops.”
3. Ballistic & Olympic Variations
Medicine-ball throws, jump squats, power cleans, and snatches all let you release the load; no deceleration phase; pure velocity.
4. Plyometrics
Depth jumps, hurdle hops, and drop jumps sharpen the stretch–shortening cycle. Start with low volume; land softly.
5. Sprint & Speed Drills
10- to 30-metre accelerations, sled pulls (≈ 15 % body mass), and band-assisted overspeed runs teach high-rate ground contacts.
6. Explosive Isometrics
Push against an immovable bar for six seconds; then immediately jump. You’ll feel the neural “potentiation” effect.
For evidence on velocity-based and plyometric progress, review this Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research study

1-Week Sample Plan
| Day | Focus | Main Work |
|---|---|---|
| Mon | Heavy Strength | 4 × 3 Squat @ 85 % 1RM; 3 × 4 Power Clean @ 80 % |
| Tue | Plyometric | 4 × 5 Depth Jumps; 3 × 10 m Bounding |
| Wed | Speed | 6 × 20 m Sled Pulls; 4 × 30 m Accelerations |
| Thu | Active Recovery | Mobility, light bike |
| Fri | Dynamic Effort | 8 × 2 Speed Squat @ 50 %; 6 × 4 MB Chest Pass |
| Sat | Explosive Isometrics | 4 × 6 s Isometric Mid-Thigh Pull + Vertical Jump |
| Sun | Off | Full rest |
If you also need help fine-tuning nutrition, explore our Nutrition Services
Common Mistakes & Fixes
| Mistake | Fix |
|---|---|
| Only lifting heavy | Add velocity days at 40 – 60 % 1RM |
| Sloppy landing mechanics | Coach soft, quiet landings first |
| Too much volume too soon | Start with <100 ground contacts per plyo session |
| Ignoring intent | Cue “as fast as possible” on every rep |

FAQ
What is a good RFD test for field athletes?
Use a mid-thigh pull on a force plate; measure peak force in the first 200 ms.
How soon can I see results?
Most athletes improve RFD within four to six weeks when training two focused sessions per week.
Can beginners train RFD?
Yes; build basic strength first, then add low-level plyos like pogo hops.
Does RFD help injury prevention?
Faster neuromuscular response lets muscles absorb load quickly; that reduces ligament strain during cuts.
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