JedS - 20 November 2007 06:39 AM
I know this thread is old, but if anyone is searching this post in the future it may be nice to have another opinion in this thread.
I disagree. I have found that most high school athletes can not stick with the same stride pattern from one race to the next. If the athlete can hurdle well with both legs and attacks the hurdle there is no benefit from counting strides. There are a lot of variables that can throw a stride pattern out of whack for a HS athlete wind, rain, better competition or getting in better shape to name a few. If you could work with the HS athlete 9 months out of the year like a collegiate athlete they may be able to stick with a stride pattern. What I am saying is that MOST HS athletes cannot do this. A HS athlete that knows how to hurdle well with both legs can run the 300h and never stutter before the hurdles. They can also run consistent races.
Ideally, having a race stride pattern and knowing how to hurdle with both legs is the best way go. Good races have good race strategies. Stride patterns are necessary in order to know when an athlete should increase their strides during a race so they don't stutter. Although, teaching someone to hurdle with two legs can be more time consuming than teaching them race strategy.
Yes, conditions will change because weather is unpredictable. There is weather.com and you can check winds in advance and use race strategy to talk about different possibilities for the race.