6/3/2025 How Many Repetitions Should I Perform? Rethinking Reps Through the Lens of Motor Learning and Athletic DevelopmentRead Now“Should I do sets of 3, 8, or 10?”
It’s a common question in athletic development and strength training. And while the answer depends on your goals, it’s also easy to get lost in the numbers and lose sight of something more fundamental: the intention behind each movement and the connection between them. Reps matter, but not as much as why and how you’re doing them. Repetition Schemes Have Their Place Let’s not dismiss reps entirely. Different rep schemes serve different physiological purposes. These ranges are useful tools in the toolbox, but they’re not the whole picture, especially when the goal is improved movement capability, coordination, or transfer to sport. Movement Intent Comes First If you’re mindlessly grinding through a set of 10 without understanding what you’re trying to achieve, you’re missing the mark. What matters more than the exact rep count is:
Intent drives adaptation. If your focus is on owning internal rotation during a split squat, or maintaining inside edge pressure during a lateral step-up, that intent will shape the outcome, regardless of whether you’re doing 3 reps or 10. The Power of Connection: Movement Truths Every exercise is an opportunity to reinforce movement truths, the fundamental motor strategies that show up both inside and outside the weight room. When reps are approached with connection in mind, the result is what some coaches call “sticky” behaviors, patterns that hold under pressure, fatigue, or the unpredictability of sport. Examples include:
These aren’t isolated movements; they’re puzzle pieces that fit into the broader picture of athletic performance. Reps Are a Tool, not a Rule Instead of asking, “How many reps should I do?”, consider asking:
If those questions are answered clearly, then 3 reps might be plenty, or you might need 8 to get the desired effect. Don’t let numbers on a page dictate the depth of your training. Reps don’t build athletes. Intention and connection do. Let the reps support your purpose, not define it.
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AuthorJamie Smith is a proud husband and father, passionate about all things relating to athletic development and a life long learner, who is open to unorthodox ideas as long they are beneficial to his athletes. Categories
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