In this engaging conversation, Sam Portland, a UK-based athletic performance coach and creator of Speed Gate Golf, discusses the evolution of athlete performance. He emphasizes the significance of rhythm and movement in sport speed training, advocating for a return to simplicity in drills. Sam critiques over-complicated techniques, promoting sport-specific practice for better transfer of skills. He also shares insights on warm-up strategies and the importance of creating a comfortable environment for athletes to express their speed.
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Build Rhythm With The Jump Rope
Use jump rope drills to build rhythm, timing, and elastic return before sport sessions.
Short doses (even ~2 minutes) create high coordination and transferable pickup skills for sport.
insights INSIGHT
Make Sport The Cornerstone
Anchor training to sport specificity rather than chasing shiny trends on social media.
Coaches should work backwards from the sport's demands to design meaningful programs.
volunteer_activism ADVICE
Avoid Programming Bloat
Reject excessive exercise bloat and select drills that replicate sporting actions at relevant velocities.
Keep programming efficient and consistent; avoid variety for variety's sake.
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Today’s guest is Sam Portland. Sam is a UK-based athletic performance coach and creator of Speed Gate Golf and the Sports Speed System. After a career in professional sport, he now consults with athletes and teams while mentoring coaches toward healthier and more sustainable careers. Sam has worked with athletes from Premiership Rugby, American football, the Olympics, and beyond, and also runs a grassroots “combine program” designed to fill key gaps in long-term athletic development.
In this episode, Sam unpacks the evolution of modern athlete performance, highlighting the role of rhythm, movement, and overlooked details of transfer from training to sport. From the simple power of a jump rope to the deeper psychological layers of coaching, Sam’s insights spark critical thinking and creative training solutions. This is a conversation packed with practical takeaways, helpful for any coach or athlete.
Today’s episode is brought to you by Hammer Strength.
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View more podcast episodes at the podcast homepage. (https://www.just-fly-sports.com/podcast-home/)
Timestamps
0:41 – Jump rope, rhythm, and movement foundations.
8:17 – Start with sport specificity: enroll in the sport first.
16:07 – Reject the bloat — prefer simple, efficient training.
23:13 – Simplicity wins: fewer, better training "flavors."
26:58 – Depth over width in warm-ups — give athletes time to groove.
31:09 – End positions are consequences — focus on what happens between them.
33:31 – Beware shiny systems — find what actually transfers to sport.
38:34 – Make training game-relevant: play, don’t just test.
40:37 – Play-first approach: teach skill through sport-like practice.
45:35 – Threat removal and the neurology of speed.
54:32 – Warm-up blueprint and the Sports Speed System (book).
Quotes from Sam Portland
“It's elastic driven… it requires lots of coordination, lots of timing. You have to be able to sit in this pocket of rhythm.”
“I actually just ordered a heavy rope as well for conditioning… let's put it on steroids.”
“What first module… needs to be enrolled in a sport? Because that's how you're going to be actually working backwards from the principle of specificity.”
“Our profession is incredibly bloated in terms of… how much ownership of adaptation can we keep hold of and attribute to our job without them just playing sport.”
“Now her best dish has three—that’s where we need to be heading.”
“We're going to play in sport, Joel. That's what we're going to do.”
“When you can get that speed not afraid, guess what—you've got space for sport.”
“Secret is consistency. Don't change on that at all because that is your tick box.”
“Residuals don't matter for team sports.”
“The book was written as a field guide…if a 14-year-old picked it up could I make myself better? Yes. If a 20-year coach picked it up could they improve with nuance? Yes.”
About Sam Portland
Sam Portland is an athletic performance coach from the UK, the creator of speed gate golf and the Sports Speed System. Following a lengthy career in professional sport, he now consults with athletes/teams and helps guide coaches to happier, healthier, and more financially fulfilling careers.
Sam has worked with premiership rugby, American football, Olympic athletes, and international competitors across a plethora of sports, including hockey, bobsleigh, and track and field. Aside from this, Sam keeps in touch with the grassroots aspects of athlete preparation by hosting his ‘combine program’. This program is a long-term athletic development program that fills the essential gaps in physical literacy that are not fulfilled at school or by club sports.