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Jonathan Taylor Is the NFL's Most Unbreakable Running Back. Here's How He Does It | Men's Health

The rushing king relies on a training regimen that builds speed and strength, but focuses on durability. 

BY ANNA KATHERINE CLEMMONS

NO PLAYER TOOK more of a pounding last season than 23-year-old Jonathan Taylor. The five-foot-ten, 226-pound Indianapolis Colts running back carried the ball 332 times (the second-highest total in football since 2015) and rushed for 1,811 yards (552 more than any other player). And Taylor didn’t miss a game. This season, he’ll be expected to do the same thing.

Taylor knows this won’t be easy. He—and the rest of the NFL—is well aware of the workhorse-running-back abyss, the way players like him inevitably break down after just a few seasons of big hit after big hit. From Giants star Saquon Barkley, who started his career with back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons but hasn’t played a full season since, to Carolina’s Christian McCaffrey (remember him?), big-time running backs in today’s NFL don’t last long.

Then again, Taylor’s never been broken, not in three years at the University of Wisconsin (where he twice ran for 2,000-plus yards) and not in two seasons with Indy. And he doesn’t plan to let that change, which is why he’s borrowing from the NFL’s original innovator of wellness, Tom Brady, and rethinking his training plan.

Bigger, stronger, and faster have long been the goals most players have had in the off-season—and they’re the traits that draw the most attention at every training camp. But five years ago, when Brady released his best-selling TB12 Method book, the league began to change. Instead of just training till exhaustion to make quick fitness gains, Brady chased longevity, focusing on band and core work to stabilize and strengthen injury-prone joints and emphasizing recovery. This shift in training has been duplicated across the league (and in all of sports, really), with more players prepping with long-term goals in mind.

Taylor was paying attention, and his take on longevity has him chasing a quality that increasingly eludes those who play his position: long-term durability. “We all know the sport we play—injury rate is 100 percent,” he says. “So being able to be flexible, be mobile, you hope everything you’re doing in the off-season, all the work you do, mitigates your
chance of injury as much as possible.”

On this mid-July morning, Taylor is seated on a massage table at a gym in Weston, Florida. He takes a deep breath, then twists his torso, rotating his chest to the left. He holds for five seconds, then returns to the center and repeats the motion on the other side. Taylor barely blinks during the entire process. “He doesn’t have an emotional response,” says Jermaine Gordon, Taylor’s massage therapist. “JT knows what we’re doing.” It was Taylor who prompted Gordon to work this movement into his training. Early in the off-season, Taylor had approached the therapist to discuss his core muscles. Gordon discovered that there was room for improvement in the superstar running back’s ability to rotate his torso. And Taylor was excited to address this. So trunk-rotation training became a summer point of emphasis. Says Gordon: “JT knew exactly what he needed.”

DON'T WORRY: This story isn’t all about trunk rotations. Because Taylor’s bulletproofing summer involves more. It’s 7:00 a.m., three hours before trunk-rotation time, and Taylor is on a turf field on an extra-humid 82 degree day that’s only going to get hotter.

Part of his pursuit of longevity involves maintaining the unique breakaway speed and strength he already has. So for about three hours a day, six days a week, he trains. There are classic weight-room sessions that have him benching as much as 375 pounds and plenty of sprint drills to help him preserve (and maybe even improve) his electric 4.39-second 40-yard-dash speed.

The length of Taylor’s sessions seems to run counter to his objective of durability, especially in this fitness era. More and more, trainers encourage clients to work through shorter sessions and focus on recovery to make their greatest gains. But Taylor’s trainer, Adam Boily, sees training duration differently. On Sundays, Taylor will take to the field for three to four hours. His body needs to understand those rigors.

Taylor and Boily have revamped his three-hour sessions, though. Increasingly, they spend time helping the running back’s body recover. “Back in the day, we trained hard, we were out in the sun, we were doing three hours a day, then recovery, then medical, then nutrition,” Boily says. “Now the workouts are getting more efficient. But that should only mean you have more time to do more work.”

Taylor doesn’t mind. Clad in a long-sleeved windbreaker, he starts with a 25-minute (yes, that long) warmup that includes barefoot footwork drills and sled drags to hone his running technique. He finishes with movement prep: Six small yellow squares are lined up, with the corners touching to form a circle. Every few seconds, Boily points to a square.

Taylor must quickly step one foot into the square, then back to the center, all while continuing to shuffle his feet.

The drill, which Boily calls the “in-place, multidirectional edge work” exercise, represents another innovative shift in Taylor’s training. Yes, plenty of players do footwork drills, but few do them as frequently as Taylor does. Boily’s program has him taking them on several times weekly—and with them, he’s accomplishing more than honing his agility. Whenever he pushes off his foot, he’s teaching his ankle muscles and tendons to absorb the force of his body at a different angle, insulating a key joint against injury.

Taylor does this near flawlessly for three 30-second rounds. In between, Boily watches Taylor’s three training partners slip during the demanding sequence, which serves as a reminder that the Colt is a special athlete. “His body is biomechanically set up for athleticism,” says Boily. “The way his feet and ankles are, the way his hips and bone structure is . . . the structure of the way he’s set up is built for power and speed.”

Taylor knows he needs more—and he has known that since he started working with Boily three years ago. Boily prides himself not merely on working out players but also on educating them. That jibed with the curious Taylor, who wants to understand every adjustment his trainers make. Boily enjoys focusing on the little things, too, so he has happily worked with Taylor to correct his oblique imbalance. He has also worked to improve Taylor’s ankle mobility, teaching him to dorsiflex, or upwardly flex his feet, more effectively. This just might make Taylor harder to tackle in 2022—and it’ll help safeguard his ankles against injury, too. “Ankles,” Boily says, “are of the utmost importance to athletes.”

These are the tips that Taylor appreciates, the adjustments that can simultaneously keep him healthy and help him squeeze a little more athleticism out of his already optimized body. And after three years with Boily, he’s learned plenty of others. When there’s a lull in the session, Taylor talks about his love of bodyweight isometrics, like pushup holds and squat holds. They’ve helped him strengthen his “end range of motion,” he says, essentially ensuring that his muscles and joints can maintain stability when, say, his knee is bent to its max or his shoulder is stretched overhead at an awkward angle.

Taylor slips into full-on trainer-speak when explaining his final speed drill, the overspeed sprint. He straps a band to his waist and hands one end to Boily, who lines up ten yards away. Boily starts running away from Taylor, as fast as he can, practically dragging the player behind him. Taylor starts sprinting all out, faster than ever thanks to the momentum Boily’s created. “It allows you to run faster than you necessarily can on your own,” Taylor says, “but it trains or programs the body to get used to that speed. So now, you do it with enough repetitions, your body is like, ‘Oh, I can move that fast.’”

Three sprints later (with plenty of rest in between), Taylor changes shirts, then hits the weight room, working through heavy bench-press reps. Once he’s done with that, he saunters over to the training table so Gordon can put him through those trunk rotations and several other stretches. And as always, Taylor asks Gordon questions the entire time. “He’s a student of his body and willing to try new things,” Gordon says. “Yes, there are players like that, but I’d say usually later in their career.”

But for Taylor, the chase for longevity means asking those questions now. Because trunk rotations and ankle dorsiflexion are just as important as speed and strength work. “Some guys are crazy good and talented, even without all those things that can benefit them,” he says. “Then imagine them doing all these things. It’s insane to think about.”

Or it’s Jonathan Taylor, circa 2027—and still the best running back in the league.

This story appears in the October 2022 issue of Men's Health.


Anna Katherine Clay