Triphasic Training Program for Explosive Sports

Triphasic Training Program - diagram of eccentric, isometric and concentric phases

Triphasic Training Program for Explosive Sports

Triphasic Training Program

Triphasic training teaches athletes to absorb force, stabilize it, then release it fast. When you build control first, you gain speed, power and fewer overuse setbacks across court and field sports.

Why triphasic training works

Every explosive move has three parts: an eccentric lowering, a brief isometric transition, then a concentric lift or push. Training each phase builds the ability to stop quickly, hold optimal joint angles and apply force on time. If your team already lifts, layering these phase goals turns general strength into sport speed. For a primer on building fast force, review EvoFitLab’s guide to Rate of Force Development Training. For movement preparation ideas, see the Four Worlds Movement Framework.

Phase 1: Eccentric strength

Goal: absorb force with control so landings, stops and direction changes feel smooth.
How to train it: slow lowers on big lifts, landing drills that teach quiet feet, decel sprints.

Sample tools

  • Back squat with 5 second lower, 3–5 sets of 3–5 reps
  • Eccentric pull ups, 3–4 sets of 4–6 reps
  • Depth drops to soft landing, 3 sets of 3–5 reps
  • Deceleration runs, mark a stop line and stick it

Coaching cues

  • Own the bottom position, keep ribs stacked over pelvis
  • Land like a spring, not a stump

Authoritative reading on eccentric methods: NSCA Coach articles and position resources at NSCA and research summaries on PubMed.

Triphasic Training Program - slow eccentric back squat coaching cue

Phase 2: Isometric strength

Goal: create stiffness at the right angle so force transfers instead of leaking.
How to train it: paused lifts, split squat holds, overcoming isometrics against immovable pins.

Sample tools

  • Split squat hold at 90 degrees, 3 sets of 20–40 seconds per side
  • Pause deadlift with 2–3 second hold just off the floor, 3–4 sets of 3–5 reps
  • Isometric mid-thigh pull, 3–5 efforts of 3–5 seconds
  • Plank and side plank progressions, 3 sets of 30–45 seconds

Coaching cues

  • Breathe low and wide, keep posture tall
  • Drive hard without losing the set joint angle
Triphasic Training Program - isometric split squat hold at 90 degrees

Phase 3: Concentric power

Goal: turn stored energy into speed and height.
How to train it: jumps, throws and fast lifts with intent.

Sample tools

  • Trap bar jump, 4 sets of 3–5 reps
  • Med ball chest pass and scoop toss, 3–4 sets of 4–6 reps
  • Flying sprints or sled sprints, 4–6 reps of 10–30 m
  • Box jump with stick landing, 3–4 sets of 3–5 reps

For jump progressions, see EvoFitLab’s Youth Plyometric Pyramid Trinidad. For season planning, use our Fitness Periodization Guide.

Triphasic Training Program - trap bar jump for concentric power

12-week Triphasic Training Program

The Triphasic Training Program runs in three four-week blocks. Keep weekly volume honest and move best reps fast.

BlockWeeksMain focusStrength liftsSpeed and plyo focus
Eccentric1–4Controlled lowering, decel skillBack squat, bench, pull up with 5 s lowersDepth drops, decel runs, low amplitude hops
Isometric5–8Stiffness at key joint anglesPause front squat, pause deadlift, split squat holdsWall sprint drills, paused broad jumps
Concentric9–12Ballistic intent and fast SSCTrap bar jump, push press, med ball throwsFlying sprints, contrast jumps

Weekly rhythm example

  • Mon Strength A plus short tempo run
  • Tue Speed mechanics and low dose plyo
  • Thu Strength B plus med ball work
  • Fri Sprint work and reactive jumps
  • Sat Full body strength plus conditioning
  • Wed and Sun active mobility or rest

Coaching and monitoring tips

  • Film two angles on jumps and sprints to audit shin angle, torso position and landing quality
  • Progress load or complexity only when landings stay silent and positions stay tall
  • Track a simple KPI each phase such as vertical jump, 10 m time or reactive strength index
  • Push athletes who need stiffness in phase 2, push athletes who need pop in phase 3

Internal links to keep exploring: the EvoFitLab blog hub and our overview on Athlete Performance Improvement Tips.
Authoritative references to learn more: foundational pieces on eccentric, isometric and concentric power at NSCA and peer-reviewed summaries on PubMed.

Conclusion

Build the ability to brake, hold and go. Run the Triphasic Training Program for twelve focused weeks, then retest your jump and sprint KPIs. If you want help tailoring blocks to your sport, message EvoFitLab and we will tune the plan.

Written by Gerard Nicholas, CSCS

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