What country are located in?
Seifullaah73,
You seem to be spinning your wheels asking every last person for every last detail of your training program. You have to understand that this forum is about getting advice for how to design your own program and become a better trainer/athlete, not getting others to write a template specific to you that you follow to a T... Think about it as some teach a man to fish type stuff...
Anyway, I told you to do 50 dips and pullups per workout until you can get them done in 4 sets of 25. Other people told you to do 4 sets of 8. This is not contradicting advice. This is GENERAL ADVICE. You could choose to do 3 sets of 10 and it would be fine. You could do pushups instead of dips. The point is at your level bodyweight movements at moderate intensity will suffice for the time being. Whenever you find yourself in the gym do a bunch of pullups and dips (or pushups). Put it in your log. Try and do more (or more per set) each workout. Do some weighted back squats and calve raises a couple times a week. Try and do more weight or more reps for these lifts. Always do at least 5 reps and fewer than 20. Log it. It will thrill those on the forum to see you improve (that is after all why people dispense advice for free... they like to see it help someone improve).
As far as sprinting. I ask that you just follow this advice and not ask for any more details. Keep sticking to your track workouts with your club. As far as your supplemental work follow this advice:
A) If you have some time during the day and your legs don't feel terribly sore and you didn't run fast the day before:
Go run fast and do it somewhere familiar. Try and break a record. Run between 300 and 800 meters. Keep reps between 30m and 120m. If there is no track nearby but there is a 50 meter hill... Then go run up the hill 8 times as fast as you can. Time yourself and try and make each rep better than the week before... pay special attention to the last rep and make it all out. If there is no hill nearby but there is a 100 meter straight go run that 5-6 times and set a record on the last one!
B) If you have some time during the day BUT you ran the day before or your legs still somewhat sore from weight-training or previous speed work:
Go run intermediate and do it somewhere familiar. Try and break a record by reducing recovery or lowering overall time. Run between 1000 and 2500 meters. Keep reps to at least 100 meters. For example if you find a 200 meter straight somewhere go run the 200 meters 5-10 times. Rest at least 30 seconds and less than 8 minutes between reps. Run each rep at the same time. This will take some practice. If you run to fast you will "die" if you run too slow you won't get a good workout. You will figure it out. Maybe you will be able to run 200m in 35 seconds 8 times with 4 minutes rest between each rep. Try and improve next time. You could improve by adding a 9th rep. You could improve by taking the recovery down to 3 minutes. You could improve by taking the time per rep to 33 seconds. Remember improvement (lower time or reduced recover) is required across ALL reps. Nobody can tell you what to improve you have to base it on how YOU feel. Generally if you are feeling a bit more sore you will do better trying to set a record for less recovery... You will learn to feel that out. When you are close to 8 minutes recovery between reps than try and lower the recovery... If your recovery is short then try and reduce time per rep!
C) If you have some time during the day but you ran the day before and you still feel very sore from training:
Then rest. If you are really itching to train than go jog for 15 minutes, do your skips, dynamic activation, and some static stretching.
D) You have homework or a lecture or a family commitment and can't train:
That's ok. The next day you have some free time just evaluate whether you are A,B,or C. Get in the gym too if it's been awhile.
**************
One rule: Before you ask any more questions, get to a track ASAP and got some friend of yours or someone to just stand there and time you running 60m, 100m, 200m, even 300m and 400m. You can stand there put your hand on the ground and they can start the watch when they see you move and stop it when they see your foot touch down past the line. Have them take 3 times for the 60m, 2 for 100m and 1 time for each other distance. Report your times in your log. Also, get a spotter or a squat cage and find out how much weight you can squat for 3 reps. Finally, report how many pullups in dips you can do in a single set of each. That is your homework. The sprint times and squat testing should be repeated every couple months. Besides that just follow the guide a wrote for you and good things will happen. I've been around sprinting for awhile and I have tried my best to write this as simple as possible (you might notice I combined speed endurance and tempo for you... at your level you really don't need to separate the two and it seemed to be confusing you)... I hope after your report your test results you next journal entries will be a lot shorter... something like this:
**** Sample ****
Felt a bit sore but not terrible (Option B)
Ran 200m 7 times. 4 minutes recovery. Times: 32,33,34,33,34,34,37 (Will try and take a bit off the first next time and get them all under 35)
Got to gym: Did 3x10x150 for squats, calf raises. (will go for 3x10x155 next time) Did 4x10 pullups and dips (will go for 4x12 next time)
That's it.
Good luck.