
How to Increase Your Speed, Mobility & Longevity with Plyometrics & Sprinting | Stuart McMillan
Andrew Huberman (host), Stu McMillan (guest)
In this episode of Huberman Lab, featuring Andrew Huberman and Stu McMillan, How to Increase Your Speed, Mobility & Longevity with Plyometrics & Sprinting | Stuart McMillan explores plyometrics, Skipping, And Sprinting: The New Blueprint For Longevity Andrew Huberman and elite sprint coach Stuart McMillan explore how fundamental movements—especially skipping, striding, and sprinting—can dramatically improve speed, coordination, posture, tissue health, and longevity. McMillan explains gait patterns from walking to maximal sprinting, emphasizing that most adults have lost the ability to run fast safely and need structured on-ramps back to higher-speed movement. They detail why skipping is the most accessible, zero-cost plyometric tool for almost everyone, including older adults, and how it builds the eccentric strength and cross-body coordination critical for performance and fall prevention.
Plyometrics, Skipping, And Sprinting: The New Blueprint For Longevity
Andrew Huberman and elite sprint coach Stuart McMillan explore how fundamental movements—especially skipping, striding, and sprinting—can dramatically improve speed, coordination, posture, tissue health, and longevity. McMillan explains gait patterns from walking to maximal sprinting, emphasizing that most adults have lost the ability to run fast safely and need structured on-ramps back to higher-speed movement. They detail why skipping is the most accessible, zero-cost plyometric tool for almost everyone, including older adults, and how it builds the eccentric strength and cross-body coordination critical for performance and fall prevention.
The conversation broadens into how authentic movement expression reflects personality and culture, using examples from sprinting, soccer, music, and art. They also tackle controversial topics such as genetics and sprint performance, drug use in sport, and why the ability to safely sprint maximally may be one of the best single proxies for overall vitality.
Throughout, McMillan offers highly practical frameworks: how to think about form (e.g., foot strike, hip extension, posture), how to structure skipping and striding workouts, and how to prioritize specific strength work in the gym to support better running rather than just bigger lifts.
Key Takeaways
Skipping Is The Safest, Most Accessible Plyometric For Nearly Everyone
McMillan argues that most adults can’t safely sprint anymore because their tissues and joints can’t tolerate the forces, but they can skip. ...
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Let Speed Dictate Foot Strike, Don’t Force Heel Or Toe Running
Instead of obsessing over heel vs. ...
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True Speed Depends On Eccentric Strength, Not Just Concentric Power
McMillan’s testing across many sports showed concentric strength (the “lifting” part of a movement) barely differentiates elites from sub-elites, whereas eccentric capacity (controlling and braking forces) consistently does. ...
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Hip Extension And ‘Knee Behind Butt’ Are Central To Healthy Movement
Modern sitting-heavy lives rob people of hip extension: the ability to get the knee behind the hip. ...
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Striding Is The Bridge Between Jogging And True Sprinting
McMillan distinguishes five gait patterns: walking, jogging, running, striding (roughly 75–90% of max speed), and sprinting (>90–95%). ...
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Strength Work Should Be Unilateral And Position-Specific, Not Generic
For elite sprinters, McMillan does almost no bilateral barbell work; he views max strength as already at or past diminishing returns. ...
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Authentic Expression Improves Performance; Copying Others Destroys It
Using Usain Bolt, Andre De Grasse, Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Dennis Rodman, and artists like Basquiat as examples, McMillan and Huberman argue that peak performers move best when their style matches their personality and body, not an external template. ...
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Notable Quotes
“Skipping is probably the best plyometric activity that almost everyone can do at any age.”
— Stuart McMillan
“Most people on the planet can walk, jog, maybe run. Very few can actually stride, and almost nobody past a certain age can really sprint.”
— Stuart McMillan
“If you don’t have the genetic capacity to run fast, you won’t run fast. Nature gets you in the room; nurture determines what you do once you’re there.”
— Stuart McMillan
“For me, there may not be a better single metric of health or vitality than the ability to safely express maximal speed.”
— Stuart McMillan
“Every 100-meter race is fifty meters of pressure and fifty meters of peace.”
— Stuart McMillan
Questions Answered in This Episode
For someone in their 50s or 60s who hasn’t sprinted in decades, what precise multi-month progression would you recommend—from walking to skipping to striding—to safely regain some top-speed capacity?
Andrew Huberman and elite sprint coach Stuart McMillan explore how fundamental movements—especially skipping, striding, and sprinting—can dramatically improve speed, coordination, posture, tissue health, and longevity. ...
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You emphasized that most adults have lost access to the striding gait. What specific signs—visual or sensory—should people look for to know they’re truly striding and not just running a bit faster?
The conversation broadens into how authentic movement expression reflects personality and culture, using examples from sprinting, soccer, music, and art. ...
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Given your data that eccentric strength, not concentric, differentiates elites, how would you redesign a typical ‘leg day’ in the gym for a recreational runner who currently does only squats, lunges, and leg presses?
Throughout, McMillan offers highly practical frameworks: how to think about form (e. ...
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You argued that the ability to safely sprint maximally may be the best single marker of vitality. How would you compare that practically to established clinical metrics like VO2 max or grip strength when advising physicians or coaches?
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In youth development systems like Jamaica’s Champs or the Kenyan marathon hotbeds, where is the ethical line between building a powerful performance culture and over-specializing or exploiting young athletes?
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Transcript Preview
Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast, where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life. (instrumental music plays) I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. My guest today is Stuart McMillan. Stu McMillan is one of the world's most sought after coaches for teaching people how to get stronger, run faster, be more powerful, and healthier. Today, we talk about how to do that using what for most people might seem like a rather unconventional set of methods, but for any serious track athlete, will be very familiar, because they do it almost every day, and that's skipping and striding. You heard right. As you'll soon learn, skipping, what most of us think of as a kids' activity, is actually one of the best plyometric activities that we can all do at any age to build more power, speed, coordination, and to improve our muscle, fascial, and nervous system function. Stu McMillan has coached over 70 Olympians across nine Olympic games, and he has coached the players and coaches of every major professional sport. He explains explains how skipping and something called striding are zero-cost activities that we all can and should include in our weekly fitness routine. They not only will have you moving better and having better posture in all your activities, but they also take minimal time and they can help protect you against injuries and improve your longevity. We also talk about the best strides for running at any speed. So if you're into jogging or sprinting, we talk about all the best ways to do that. We talk about the sport of track, which both Stu and I happen to love, and why certain groups of people excel in different sports due to genetic and environmental reasons. We also have a very direct and open conversation about the use of performance-enhancing tools in the athletic and wellness worlds. This is a really special episode because if you like or if you don't like things like running, swimming, cycling, or other activities such as weight training or yoga, there's going to be a lot to take away from it that you can apply. Stu McMillan is a true savant of coaching how best to move and how to improve your health. It was an honor and privilege to host him and to learn from him. I'm sure you'll agree. Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford. It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero-cost-to-consumer information about science and science-related tools to the general public. In keeping with that theme, this episode does include sponsors. And now for my discussion with Stu McMillan. Stu McMillan, welcome.
Thank you. Great to be here.
We go back a little ways.
Yeah.
And you're the guy that they call in to make athletes, or pretty much anybody, faster, stronger, healthier, and more powerful. And who wouldn't want that-
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