Session 4 — Fitness Drills
Pure cardio-based drill work in the park. Shuttle runs, T-drill, cone weave, box drill, figure of 8 and press-ups. One hour. At 50, it was hard. By the end I had nothing left. That is exactly how it should feel.
The Session
This was a pure fitness drills session — no weights, no machines, just cones, open space and the willingness to push hard. The focus was on the cardiovascular system working under real athletic demands: manoeuvrability, acceleration, deceleration, speed over short distances, change of direction, agility and footwork, coordination, body control and reaction. Everything the gym alone cannot replicate.
One training partner. He had legs full of soreness from the previous TRX sessions and could feel it through every drill. That is the nature of consecutive training — the sessions compound on each other. He showed up and worked through it anyway. That counts for more than a comfortable session with fresh legs.
The final drill we made up between us — following each other, improvising changes of direction, reacting in real time. It was the most genuinely fun moment of the session and produced the most authentic athletic response. It was also absolutely exhausting.
Drills
How It Felt
Intense. By the end of the session I had nothing left — completely spent. That is not a complaint. That is the point. At 50, pushing to that level and completing a full hour of drill work is exactly what this kind of training is supposed to produce. The body adapts to the demands placed on it. If the demands are comfortable, the adaptation is minimal. If they are not comfortable, the adaptation is real.
The shuttle runs were hard. Most of the drills were hard. The legs were the first thing to go, followed by the lungs, and then the mental battle of pushing through on an empty tank. That is an honest account of how it felt and there is no reason to dress it up differently. At 50, with two ACL reconstructions behind me, completing a full hour of this kind of work and struggling through it is not a failure. It is the work. I will get better at it. That is the whole point of coming back and doing it again.
The press-ups at the end were the hardest part — upper body work on top of an hour of cardio-based effort tests a different kind of endurance from anything you do in a gym.
Coaching Note
Drill-based fitness work develops qualities that strength training alone cannot — the ability to change direction under fatigue, to react without thinking, to coordinate the body at speed when it is already working hard. These are athletic qualities that matter outside the gym as much as inside it. The fitness testing section of this site tests precisely these qualities. If this session feels difficult, the tests will tell you exactly where the gaps are.
The improvised follow-the-leader drill at the end deserves its own mention. When the structure of a session is removed and two people simply react to each other in real time, something different happens. The movements become more natural, more athletic, and significantly more demanding than any prescribed drill. It is worth doing more of.
Watch all Session 4 videos in order on YouTube.