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In this episode of Between 2 Racks, the KILO Crew breaks down why power training deserves a place in long-term development, even for lifters who are not competitive athletes.
We clarify what power actually is, what it is not, and how it differs from maximal strength. The conversation explores force-velocity relationships, starting strength, explosive strength, and how velocity-based work can complement traditional strain-focused training.
We also discuss who benefits from power phases, where they fit inside a structured training year, and when they make sense within different periodization models. From absolute strength blocks to balanced years, we examine how power can be sequenced intelligently rather than randomly inserted.
Beyond performance, we address overlooked benefits: joint stress reduction, neural refresh, novelty stimulus, and long-term resilience. We explain how power work can serve as both a performance driver and a strategic shift in training emphasis.
For coaches, this episode reinforces an important principle: training quality should not become one-dimensional. Exposure to velocity, when programmed properly, expands capacity rather than distracting from it.
Power is not a trend. It is a tool. The key is knowing when and how to use it.
Stay Connected with KILO:
Have a question? Submit it for a Rapid Fire episode.
Learn more at trainkilo.com
Follow KILO on Instagram and YouTube.
By KILO Education5
1717 ratings
Send us Fan Mail
In this episode of Between 2 Racks, the KILO Crew breaks down why power training deserves a place in long-term development, even for lifters who are not competitive athletes.
We clarify what power actually is, what it is not, and how it differs from maximal strength. The conversation explores force-velocity relationships, starting strength, explosive strength, and how velocity-based work can complement traditional strain-focused training.
We also discuss who benefits from power phases, where they fit inside a structured training year, and when they make sense within different periodization models. From absolute strength blocks to balanced years, we examine how power can be sequenced intelligently rather than randomly inserted.
Beyond performance, we address overlooked benefits: joint stress reduction, neural refresh, novelty stimulus, and long-term resilience. We explain how power work can serve as both a performance driver and a strategic shift in training emphasis.
For coaches, this episode reinforces an important principle: training quality should not become one-dimensional. Exposure to velocity, when programmed properly, expands capacity rather than distracting from it.
Power is not a trend. It is a tool. The key is knowing when and how to use it.
Stay Connected with KILO:
Have a question? Submit it for a Rapid Fire episode.
Learn more at trainkilo.com
Follow KILO on Instagram and YouTube.

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