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Javelin Built Annual Plan

The Javelin Built Annual Training Philosophy

The Javelin Built system is designed to help throwers of every level—from high school athletes to aspiring Olympians—train smarter, stay healthier, and throw farther. It combines cutting-edge sports science with timeless principles of athletic development, structured around a yearly periodized plan that builds toward championship performance. This article explains the philosophy in detail and shows how the Javelin Built program evolves through the year.

A Balanced System Rooted in Periodization

At its core, Javelin Built blends block periodization and complex periodization. That means all key athletic qualities—strength, speed, power, mobility, and technical skill—are trained year-round, but the emphasis changes as the season progresses. Rather than isolating one quality at a time, the program integrates them so that gains in strength transfer directly into faster, more efficient throws.

Each training phase follows a logical progression:

  • General Preparation: Build the base—flexibility, strength, and conditioning.
  • Specific Preparation: Convert that base into power and speed.
  • Throws Training: Maximize coordination, explosiveness, and technical mastery.
  • Early Competition: Convert training into measurable results.
  • Late Competition: Peak physically, mentally, and emotionally for major championships.

Phase Overview

Phase Core Focus Training Methods Goals Months Competitions
General Preparation Develop robustness, tendon health, and mobility while rebuilding after the previous season. High-rep, low-load controlled tempo, medicine ball circuits, tempo runs, general lifts. Balance, capacity, and resilience. Oct – Dec None
Specific Preparation Increase strength and power while maintaining new ranges of motion. Triphasic and conjugate loading, block periodization, eccentric–isometric–concentric phases. Transfer strength into speed and elastic power. Dec – Feb Winter Championships
Throws Training Emphasize explosive movement, sequencing, and throwing confidence. Maximum intensity blended sessions, full-speed throws. Achieve personal bests in strength, power, speed, and general throws. Feb – Apr Intrasquad Meets
Early Competition Refine technique and convert training into competition performance. Complex circuits with early meets, heavy and light implements, short explosive sessions, French Contrast and reactive drills. Confidence, rhythm, and technical consistency. Apr – Jun Duals, Invitationals, States, Conference
Late Competition Peak physically and mentally while prioritizing rest and recovery. Reduced volume; short, intense sessions to refresh power and speed. Maximum performance under pressure. Jun – Aug Nationals, NCAAs, USAs, Trials, Worlds

Training Emphasis Throughout the Year

The chart below illustrates how emphasis shifts from general development (GPE) toward specific and competition exercises (CE) as the season progresses. Early months emphasize mobility and base strength, while later months target technical precision and maximum speed.

Need a refresher on CE / SDE / SPE / GPE?

Javelin Built develops all four exercise categories throughout the year—each with its own purpose and emphasis. For a detailed breakdown of what each category means and how it’s applied across training phases, explore our complete guide here: Javelin Built Periodization →

Category What It Is Quick Examples
CE (Competition Exercises) Full-approach throws and competitive movements that replicate meet demands with moderate to high intent. Standard javelin throws, full approach, rhythm and release under pressure.
SDE (Special Developmental Exercises) Movements that mirror the throw closely. Breaks the throw into parts to reinforce alignment, sequence, rhythm, and relaxation with less joint stress. Weighted balls, medicine-balls, cross steps and javelin running rhythm and alignment, short approach rhythm throws, penultimate-block drills.
SPE (Special Preparatory Exercises) High-transfer exercises that develop specific strength and elasticity without replicating the throw. Develops max force and rate of force development that transfer strongly to the throw. Jumps, sprints, shot/MB throws, Olympic lifts, Power lifts, contrast circuits.
GPE (General Preparatory Exercises) Foundational movements that build durability, balance, and range of motion for long-term performance. Shoulder stability, trunk strength, hip/glute circuits, tempo runs, aerobic base work.
Read the Full CE / SDE / SPE / GPE Breakdown →

This reference supports the annual plan by clarifying how each category shifts in focus from General Prep through Competition.

Comparing Training Focus Across Phases

Training Quality General Prep Specific Prep Throws Training Early Comp Late Comp
Strength Volume High Moderate Low Maintenance Refreshed (low volume)
Throwing Volume Low Moderate High High Low–Moderate
Intensity Low–Medium Medium–High High Very High Variable (peaking)
Technical Focus Form & Mechanics Speed of Application Rhythm & Confidence Competition Execution Recovery & Sharpness
Physical Objective Develop foundational athleticism Convert force to velocity Synchronize movement patterns Execute under pressure Deliver peak performance

Putting It All Together

This integrated model allows athletes to continuously build on what came before. The off-season creates structural balance and resilience, the mid-season develops explosive output, and the competitive phase teaches the athlete to apply it under pressure. By alternating stress and recovery, Javelin Built maintains high performance without sacrificing health.

For coaches, this model provides clarity. Instead of guessing how to plan the year, every block serves a clear purpose:

  • Oct–Dec: Lay the foundation for a healthy, powerful athlete.
  • Dec–Feb: Increase intensity and transfer strength to speed.
  • Feb–Apr: Fine-tune rhythm and throw quality.
  • Apr–Jun: Compete and build confidence in technique.
  • Jun–Aug: Refresh, taper, and deliver your best throws.

The Outcome

Athletes who follow the Javelin Built philosophy experience predictable, measurable growth. They stay healthier thanks to balanced loading, gain more power through structured strength transfer, and improve confidence with consistent exposure to technical work. Most importantly, they arrive at championship season prepared to perform—not just physically, but mentally and emotionally.

Train with intent. Build durability. Peak when it counts. That’s the Javelin Built way.

Acknowledgements

The Javelin Built philosophy was shaped by decades of mentorship, collaboration, and shared wisdom from some of the sport’s most respected minds. I am grateful for the guidance, innovation, and inspiration these coaches have provided — each helping refine how we understand, teach, and evolve the javelin throw.

Carl Wallin Tom Petranoff Tom Pukstys Duncan Atwood Todd Riech Kari Ihalainen Jeff Gorski Ty Sevin Dan Pfaff Jeremy Fischer Derek Evely Frans Bosch Cal Dietz Steffan Jones Anatoliy Bondarchuk Klaus Bartonietz

To all of these mentors and innovators—thank you for raising the standard of coaching and pushing the limits of what javelin training can be.

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