Sunday, March 25, 2012

Notes for the last 4 miles


We will have a change in schedule this week and class will not meet this Wednesday as planned. We will meet as scheduled on April 18 – just a few days before our race day. Until that time I’ll be posting a number of lessons to read and think about to get you ready for the big event. By facebook, we can talk about how and when to meet up for race day so that we can run together. 

I like to spend these last classes thinking about two big things, and we’ll break each of these ideas down a bit further.

First - am I ready? The answer is clearly YES! Due to months of planning and yet it is a good time to review a few processes. These include structuring your rest period (taper) prior to race day, making sure your nutrition is in order, checking your mental process and knowing what you are shooting for on race day. So we’ll look briefly at several of these things that we have gone over already and make sure you are tuned up, so to speak.

Second - what do I do after this? Big question and a vital, one as many folks will experience “post race blues” from a vaccum in their training after so many months in preparation - funny sounding -  but common. The other group may say “yeah am free! I did it!” and sit down on the couch. Either case could be deleterious as you have worked hard to develop the capabilities and become more healthy and a proper “exit strategy “and next steps can set your course for continuing the benefits and going onto to more great things.  
Take a look at the lecture notes form Dr Sam Zizzi again and look at your own mental process prior to race day.

Are you using visualization techniques that allow you to reflect on what a great day will feel like and incorporating the five senses? Are you looking at your own reasons to run and not comparing yourself to others?
 
Are you embracing challenge as a good thing and making preparations to A) come up with action plans to squelch your perceived barriers B) letting go of uncontrollable variables on race day and preparing to have a great outlook for those you can control?

Remember that the variable that you can control, interestingly are the most important ones for you having a great day. Mental outlook, adequate rest & nutrition, not overtraining, not forgetting to secure your shorts are all key things and items you are in charge of – as opposed to weather, wind, crowds, etc.

If you’d like more time thinking about the mental landscape of training and performance, I have been enjoying the Fitness Behavior podcast found at iTunes or Bevanjamesseyles.com – check out fitness behavior episode #6, Podcast episode 7, episode 15, episode 3. This guy has a fresh outlook from New Zealand, is really right on with perspective and openness and gets us thinking a bit more about the mental attitudes that shape our training patterns and effectiveness. Free and well done.

Following below are a few items on race prep. Please use the index of posts on the right tool bar to read:
Race Recovery Planning posted 9/18/11
Lessons in salt, water and Advil posted 9/18/11
Caffeine Addendum posted 8/22/11

For mental process and a great race day please read:
Mark Cucuzzella inspiration posted 9/10/10
Mental training part 2 posted 9/3/10  
I like to send folks off with What’s next? posted on 9/24/10

Later this spring I’d like to write about changes in thought regarding stretching and will post that article when it is completed for folks to read. I’ve included links here for a few things to look at – namely Phil Wharton’s routines for active isolated stretching and Sock Doc’s counter points against static or ballistic stretching. Remember that you should only stretch a warm muscle if you are going to stretch as all and that stretching should be specific to the athlete, not the activity. So everyone is loose or tight in different places according to how we are built. Consider carefully where you need to be loosened.  

Another view on stretching, injury prevention

Sock doc (DC) discusses running injury, runner health and other topics with sound advice. Discusses his view of stretching too.

Wharton active isolated stretching

one example of active isolated flexibility drills

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Dr. Mark on Natural Running

One of my heros in the running world, and the medical world too. Consider the lengths he is willing travel to teach folks to move in a healthy way and become more fit. Cool.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Barefoot, minimalist, natural running style



"Man's mind, once stretched by a new idea, never regains its original dimensions." -Oliver Wendell Holmes

When I first started this piece several years ago, the focus was on what barefoot running is and why a new runner might consider it. At that time there was just a bit of material in the popular media about natural running style. Barefoot was considered a fringe and was more a lifestyle choice than a running topic. I even had a handout from Ultrarunner magazine about adopting some barefoot running, because this was an article that was fresh, and addressed the topic in the mainstream. I am happy to say that the world has changed a bit, and now the terms barefoot and natural running have achieved almost “Kleenex” status in the common vernacular. I now only need to give you the basics while pointing you to dozens of great resources on the topic, including an entire book written by Dr. Daniel Howell, about all of the health benefits of not wearing shoes. As more viewpoints have been discussed, research has been generated, and we have discussed the topic among those who work with runners – the majority opinion has begun to shift my mind has indeed been stretched – to the point that minimalist running is something I expose runners too from the beginning now. The funny thing here is that by examining the history of our sport we see a bit of, “what is old is new”.

While the book Born To Run and the recently published research of Dr. Dan Leiberman seems to have energized the term barefooting – running barefoot did not start in 2009 or even in this century. While I would encourage you to read the work of both of these guys – I’ll take a minute to point out some highlights of how we got to running shoes in the 20th century. I hope to also spark a bit of thought about what things looked like before shoes and how that factors into where we are at today. I kept my shoes through this fervor about bare feet, but I can tell you that my thinking, as well as my shoe choices, continues to evolve over time on this subject. I think that every runner should look at the history of our sport and can take a lesson from what shoeless or minimal shoe training can do for your running.

The feet have 26 bones, 33 joints, 12 tendons, 18 muscles; each foot is an amazing piece of machinery and while it has many things it does not have others – so why it is made this way and what was it for in the first place? Science has made a great case for a theory that the current form of humans evolved and succeeded as a species due to 26 different, running specific, adaptations. These adaptations allowed us to pursue quarry on the move, at a rate just fast enough to tire that animal out, while we have the innate endurance to finish the hunt and gain groceries. Again, Dr. Dan Leiberman offers a much more through explanation of this theory and it is solidly based in the science of both anthropology and comparative biology. We were able to travel, pretty fast, and fast enough to win food and cross great distances. Clearly, we did this without shoes and anthropologists have not found any evidence of Nikes from this critical time period. 

Until Bill Bowerman, the famous University of Oregon track coach, created the running shoe in America in 1972, just 40 years ago, we all ran in very thin light shoes that offered little in the way of a heel cushion or padding from the ground. I have read that he designed the shoe to accommodate what he felt would be a longer and more competitive stride for his athletes. He could teach them to lead with the heel and the longer stride length would out run the competition. Bowerman was NOT a physical therapist, medical doctor or biologist who may have asked, “what might this lead to, other than winning races?”

Currently in Africa and many parts of the developing world, children are raised without transportation and also without footwear. It is estimated that the average Kenyan child has about 1,800 miles on their legs and feet by the time they graduate from primary school and all of these miles, for the majority of kids, are without shoes of any kind. It has been argued that this contributes to the number of victories for great Kenyan runners at the international level and on the Olympic podium. Early leg development and natural foot strength (at altitude, Kenya is a mountainous region with an altitude similar to Flagstaff, AZ) allow these kids to develop all the capabilities of their legs before serious training ever begins for competition.

Many cultures are able to train and run well without shoes or with minimal shoes. The Tarahumara Indians of Mexico are featured in Born To Run for their great ability and running in very simple sandals – a slab of rubber strapped to their feet for protection from sharp objects. This is a similar style of shoe to many early Nations of the American Southwest and the pre Spanish cultures in South America such as the Maya and Inca. The Inca empire had thousands of miles of roads and very little in the way of shoes to traverse them. In those days a severe running injury would cause you to drop lower on the food chain – a deadly prospect. I have read counter arguments in the past three years that state that the Tarahumara Indians are a specific race of people that have passed on the genetic material that allows for more durable legs perhaps. I think that this is about as credible an argument as saying that I am passing on the genes for my kid to couch surf and play video games. The Hopi oral tradition explains that their people ran to the Pacific annually to pray for rain. MapQuest explains that this is a trip of at least 523 miles, one way, from Winslow, Arizona to Los Angeles, California. The Spanish missions in California were built to be one days ride apart from each other for a number of strategic reasons, but recall that only the Spanish elite had horses – thus everyone else was on foot. The examples in history of long distance ambulation are simply too numerous to count, nor to be coincidence. While you may have to change your definition of what “running speed” is you can safely accept that our species adapted and excelled because we can ambulate well and without significant assistance.

According to Christopher McDougall’s book Born to Run, Alan Webb’s feet where flat and three sizes larger when he started working with his high school coach to become America’s new top miler. In 2007 Alan set the world’s best 1,500 meter time and broke Jim Ryun’s American record for the mile. But his quest began with flat, weak, de-conditioned feet that were in need of rebuilding. McDougall writes about an interview with Alan Webb on page 175 of his book and Webb says “ I had injury problems early on, … so we did foot strengthening drills and special walks in bare feet” McDougall writes that Alan’s feet changed and his arches became higher as muscles strengthened – his shoe size decreased and his injuries abated.
McDougall writes of an Irish Ph.D, Gerard Hartman who is considered an expert in physical therapy and works with professional runners from around the globe to improve their running. He has been a proponent of barefoot running for many years and cites that “the deconditioned musculature of the foot is the greatest issue leading to running injury, and we’ve allowed our feet to become badly deconditioned over the past twenty-five years”. Many folks have advocated that slowly and gently strengthening our feet over time will allow us to run better and with less injury. We may even find that we can run in lighter footwear. Lighter footwear means less effort and perhaps faster, or the sensation of faster, as the weight on the end of your leg from a heavy shoe creates a pendulum which takes effort in order to keep swinging. 

Danny Abshire, the author of the book Natural Running is another interesting example in the quest to relearn natural movement patterns. Here is a guy who made his living for years building orthotics for skiers, runners, tri-athletes and elite sports professionals. What he saw in more than a decade of technical realignment of these people, who were presumably pretty good physical stock in so many other ways, was that they had poor posture and muscle imbalances that caused the need for orthotics in the first place. So Danny goes on to design a shoe that will help rebalance runners, patents the technology as he goes, and over a decade, seeks to sell that technology by offering it in turn to each of the five major shoe companies. They all turn him away stating that “people do not run that way” and they’ll never be able to sell this expensive stuff. Abshire is so driven by what he has learned that he then starts a shoe company to sell what he knows will work. The result is Newton shoes for a midfoot strike and more natural movement. Dr. Mark Cucuzzella won the 2011 Air Force Marathon outright, at age 44, wearing a pair of these shoes. Rather than calling the shoe a miracle – I’d say that Mark’s technique paid off and he had a good tool to aid his technique. Watch him run and you’ll see relaxed and upright form that resembles an East African, or an Olympian, or a Tarahumara, or if we could go back in time maybe an Inca, and if you walk out to the playground you’ll see your own kids run this way too. It’s what we are made to do.

What do shoes do for me? While all seem to agree that having a sole cover your tender skin provides some protection – many experts are currently reexamining what shoes do well and do not do so well. The good news about this controversy is that in the past 38 years, very little substantive research has been done on how shoes truly affect feet and that is beginning to change now. The United States Military is greatly invested in physical conditioning of its personnel and in the past has seen very high rates of injury in basic training and its share of running related injuries. A recent study on determining the appropriate footwear has shown that the type of running shoe had no correlation on injury prevention for the military personnel in the study. This leads us to “well what can I use to control the movement of my foot, for the least chance of injury?” Your gait, how your foot hits the ground and your running technique becomes more important than the type of running shoe that you might wear according to this study. Manufacturers have succeeded in creating footwear that controls movements of the foot and offers important padding from the ground as you begin running. However, seeking to control the movement of the foot by using a shoe will not ultimately be successful in preventing injury, in the long run, according to new studies. Technique will carry the day and great technique; sensitive feet that are aware of what they hit (and strong feet) may lead to using a much lighter shoe down the road. 

Do I just take my shoes off and go run? That would be a bad idea and let’s restate that it is not about being barefoot per se for many of us but getting closer to what your feet are already designed to do with barefoot or minimalist running style. First is that the process must be very gradual, even more gradual than learning to run, because you will retrain what 30 or more years of wearing shoes has done structurally with your feet. Second is that all of us have deconditioned feet similar to what Dr. Hartman discusses above – and this means that we have to slowly build up foot strength, even before we start running in minimalist footwear. A number of sources are now offering self assessment tools and drills that will recondition feet and we have covered many of those in the Learn To Run class. I think that if you have already come from a culture of shoes that you will want to learn running first and at the same time, you may choose to learn how to reduce the amount of shoe that you use. Adapting to a high cadence, shortened stride, and enhanced posture for your foundation takes months or longer, and often requires a friend’s careful eye to keep you on track. The only examples of people being injured with natural running come from runners who, in their enthusiasm, progress too quickly in bare feet or minimal shoes. One of my stated objectives for the class is to introduce you to a new lifelong activity, injury free. Therefore I do that with what your feet are already used to, and provide resources, and hopefully a strong dose of caution to you, while encouraging you to move your running to the next level by seeking to strengthen your feet, give them back proprioception, and develop what skills have been robbed from you by shoes to reset both your posture and stride. Moving naturally is a long road that enhances your running and avoids injury if done correctly and conservatively. One book about Lance Armstrong is titled “Its’ Not about the Bike” and I reemphasize that it’s not about your shoes either. I have seen folks heel strike in Newton shoes and Vibram Five Fingers and barefoot as they are already trained to this pattern of movement. To unlearn and tune into what you are doing in relationship to the ground is not beyond any of us, but it does require patience, meanwhile wear what you want. I find my patience lasts longer with light protection and that my progress is faster in these techniques without big bulky shoes, which offers greater feeling for the ground.

In the current day a larger percentage of runners are now dedicated to running entirely without shoes. They have run marathons, ultra marathons and farther in bare feet, and a second subgroup simply enjoys being barefoot full time, so they carry flip-flops with them to get into Wal-Mart or a restaurant. You can read their websites and their ideas about what shoes do and do not do for the wearer and how they feel freer with naked feet. There are as many reasons to consider shoeless as there are folks not wearing shoes. I would challenge you to consider the common thinking on this matter and both accept those who forgo footwear, as well as reconsider what you may gain from simply being barefoot at home or in the yard.

Before you assume that the “barefoot guys” are off the deep end in their “foot yogi-mysticism”, take a good look at the number of people from the medical community that advocate the sale of moccasins to children and preach “barefoot is best” for toddlers. The reason for this, they advocate, is that kids walk sooner when they learn to interpret the ground with their feet (proprioception) and build foot strength naturally. They do not want kids to cut their feet and thus sell a light flexible protective moc- type shoe to achieve this. Many parents have subscribed to this idea with the pediatricians blessing and I’ve seen it work for my own kid. (As I was buying lots of bulky shoes for my running, at $80/pair…)

Arthur Lydiard was a cobbler and made shoes before he was a coach. Lydiard was a coach who was very focused on the success of his athletes. He had his runners in the most basic of footwear and preached against anything “more” for his entire career, which extended well into the era of modern shoes. Internationally sought after coach and physician, Dr. Phil Maffetone was suggesting more than a decade ago that minimal footwear was preferable for similar reasons. Even Stanford University’s world class track and cross country coach (the program gets Nike’s for free) has had his athletes running barefoot in the grass, two afternoons a week, for decades. He said to Nike that his guys got hurt less when they subscribed to this method. (This is what drove Nike to work with Dr. Gerard Hartman to create the Nike Free.) Long before the birth of the very popular Vibram Five Fingers shoe – many companies across the country have made a living manufacturing simple moccasins and unstructured footwear that allow the foot to move and muscles to work. Inuit people, north of the Arctic Circle knew that this is what kept their feet warm in winter – that the soft, moose hide boot would flex and allow better blood circulation. There have not been any podiatrist studies to examine the number of injuries related to these modern day moccasin, or mukluk wearers because they seldom report any injuries.

So before you ever consider running barefoot, simply walking around without shoes at home is a good place to start and walking farther, progressively is another. You may choose to try the new Vibram Five Fingers Shoes as well, which offer that slight amount of protection for your tender skin, a bit of arch, and not much else for padding. I have started using theses on very short runs (by time) and adding minutes each week very slowly. I spent a year reworking my stride before I ran with these shoes so that I am not landing on my heel much at all but using the mid-foot and most of my foot to absorb the impact of each step. To acquire a lighter step you can practice this technique while walking – you need not run in order to learn how to walk more gently and with a light step. Recall what I have said in many stride analysis sessions – that cadence, how often your feet hit the ground, has everything to do with a light step. Walking or running, your step must be smaller and faster to achieve lower impact forces. 

For two years now the Outdoor Retailer Trade show saw scores of outdoor footwear manufacturers gunning for a piece of the barefoot pie, gearing up to make “thneeds”, or feather weight running shoes for everyone who wants to run barefoot. The marketplace is now flooded with these new shoes, some of them using untested, un-researched technology as well, making them in some ways like Bowerman’s first Nike’s. You may choose to try them or go barefoot, grab some moccasins, run in cheaper “race flats” or just try your old Chuck Taylor’s like Lydiard ran in for decades. One key criterion for choosing these shoes is that they should not have an elevated heel. Your foot should be neutral from front to back, just as if you were barefoot on the floor. Most of us can adapt to this well if asked to do so slowly – because you have never seen a baby or an east African in high heels. A second key criterion is that they should be firm, without a lot of additional padding. The more that interferes – or is between you and the ground, the less likely you are to develop the sensitivity to be balanced and at your best. Cucuzzella has been cited as saying that the harder the surface, the lighter the landing. But if you cannot feel the surface, your foot cannot adapt to it with a light landing.

Think about a deliberate program of gentle foot strengthening for yourself as a possible next step in your program and add it gradually, just like you started running. A foot that “knows the ground” and is most sensitive, may be less likely to sprain an ankle, will run trails better, and may run slower at first but that is OK, you’re in shape and will not “de-train” as a part of this process. Your lower legs will continue to develop in a way that may reduce your injuries over time and your stride will adapt to something that is more powerful in the long run. That is what I want for your running – long running for the long run. So run gently out there.



Danny Dryers list of preferred light weight shoes
http://chirunning.com/blogs/danny/2010/02/07/chirunning-recommendations-for-minimal-shoes/comment-page-2/#comment-1330

Interesting article on shoes from a rehab perspective
http://www.chirunning.com/shop/pages.php?tab=r&pageid=18&id=575

I have also added several new links on the toolbar here to assist you in learning more about natural running style. If you ever plan to increase your training volume, or wish to develop further as an injury free runner, you owe it to yourself to look over the current research in this area.

good posture

Lee Saxby talks about best running posture

Minimalist Running Style

A quick look at the best form, with or without shoes
Here is the link to a great video by Joel Wolpert and Jay Dicharry called "Are you Ready to Go Minimal?" Easy step and explanations of what you use to run. A must see: http://blip.tv/running-times/are-you-ready-to-go-minimal-5961290

Wednesday, February 15, 2012



Natural Running - Elkins YMCA: Saturday 3/3 from 9:00 to 10:30am

What is Natural Running? As explained by Donald Buraglio at RunningandRambling.com, “Natural Running is a very interesting read. Abshire – along with contributor Brian Metzler, who has written extensively about barefoot running for Running Times and Outside magazines – explains the basic biomechanics of midfoot and forefoot running, and how the modern running shoe has progressively prohibited runners from practicing this technique. He presents a nice synopsis of how the conventional wisdom of running shoe design has evolved over the past four decades, and how recent biomechanics studies are causing the entire industry to rethink everything they thought they understood about how their products contribute to performance and injury prevention.

More than anything, though, this is an instruction manual for how to give up your heel-striking habit and learning to run more forward on your feet. If you think of Chris McDougall’s Born to Run … as the battle cry for running naturally, consider Abshire’s book the field manual. He emphasizes proper posture, forward weight shifting, and the correct positioning your center of gravity, which in turn leads to a shorter stride length and correct foot strike. In addition to detailed explanations, the book is filled with multiple photos and diagrams that make the concepts of natural running form very easy to understand.” RunningandRambling.com


Now you have the opportunity to learn the basics of these principles taught by Darlene Clark, physical therapist and Natural Running instructor. Darlene has run races from 5k up to the half marathon and works professionally to help others move more naturally. Darlene will be teaching this workshop at the YMCA in Elkins, WV and it will be free as part of the YMCA Learn to Run class being taught at the YMCA this spring.


Saturday March 3rd, 9:00am, Elkins YMCA

As part of our Learn to Run Class on  Wednesday 2/29, I'll talk about the current history of minimalist running and set the stage for Darlene's class on Saturday. Don't miss these sessions where you'll get the theory and the hands on for better movement patterns in your own running.

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Natural Running Strength & Stability Drills, NRC

Strength training for running fitness


I’ll steal an adage right off the front page of The Natural Running Center’s website, a great resource for me that I visit whenever I can. “You can’t fire a cannon from a canoe” what does this mean? You could take it a number of ways, but I’ll use it to launch an argument for strength training when honestly, all you really wanted to do was run. I’ll say this, that real horsepower comes from whole body training for what you want to achieve. If what you want to achieve is a lifelong pattern of injury free running, then you have to balance the body in order to fully support the legs that carry you down the road. Core muscles, supporting muscles, areas that are often in imbalance or asymmetry must be tuned so that your movement pattern is at its best and you can support what you’re going to pull off. That’s where I am going with the cannon from a canoe analogy.

We look in the mirror and typically see symmetry and that looks good enough, right? Tim Noakes gives us a rundown on the most frequent running injuries from his analysis of the research. (Noakes p 788)

knee – 19% to 44% of folks see this one
tibia and fibular bone strain – 15% to 18% of folks see this one
Achilles tendinosis – 5% to 11% of folks see this one
plantar fasciitis – 5% to 14% of folks see this one
stress fractures – 5% to 6% of folks see this one
muscle injuries – 5% to 6% of folks see this one

Add up his highest percentages and you get to 99%, while the number gets bantered around all the time that 60-80% of all runners in this country are injured annually. So 19% of us at any one time are doing OK. Seriously though, the number of injuries, from major to minor, is staggering and many of these can be traced back to asymmetry and imbalance. You have to know what is under the hood so to speak and work to align, “pre-habilitate” and strengthen what is yours to best fire off your best running. 

Dr. Tim Noakes is one of the leading authorities on all things running and his fourth edition of The Lore of Running offers several interesting arguments for strength training. He argues that “there is clear evidence to suggest that acute muscle injuries can be prevented by strengthening muscles and eliminating imbalances between opposing muscles (Garrett et al. 1987; Safran et al. 1989)” (Noakes, p 783) He cites a study where the Nebraska football team was first assessed for imbalances with specific muscle testing and then given strengthening programs according to these results. In this study hamstring tears fell from 8% to 1%, and what is better is that recurrence of injury fell from 32% to 1%. (Heiser et al. 1984 – Noakes p. 783)
Noakes also teases out a key point from a 1979 study by Costill when he says that “the more runners train, the less their ability to jump” (Noakes, p 783) or put another way, we have so much specificity of movement at the same intensity – that some muscles actually weaken and both our speed and fast twitch muscle power is lost. Bad deal for me, come race time when I want to pick it up a notch. Keeping this unseen architecture in shape is one more argument for mixing it up a bit and staying strong enough to hold form and have some speed as well.

The text Run Less, Run Faster points to two studies about running and weight training. The first shows that 6 weeks of strength training with proper techniques was sufficient to reduce or correct chronic injury or activity related pain such as runner’s knee. I have anecdotally seen this work wonders with shin splints and low back pain as well. The second study showed that with 10 weeks of strength training the participants 10k times improved 2-3 percent. To put that in context, a 3% increase might mean that my winning Forrest Festival race time could be 1:32:00 faster – putting me in 1st or 2nd place instead of third. It also means that I would run with greater economy, and would carry that economy into my later years. Keeping me more injury free and reducing severity of injury when it may occur. I consider this a great return on investment for two or three hours a week.

Regardless of your chosen route to hypertrophy – research regularly suggests that performance increases follow weight training. One study cited on BenGreenfieldfitness.com suggests that the single greatest contributor to running economy as a runner ages is their maintenance of muscle mass, which typically declines as we age. (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21982960) Another article in Ultrarunner magazine pointed to a study showing that folks who weight trained for a period in their training saw speed increases of 5-15%.

So we have talked a bit about why to do it, let’s look at how to do it. Everybody has a different approach to strength training and sometimes it just depends on how excited they get about iron and the gym. Most runners I know find the gym a really hard sell, and they want to run. Many folks think that a gym workout will make them big like a Hollywood action hero and have an aversion to that also. I feel that a lean runner is less weight to carry around so I do not want to see anyone too muscle bound and I want an injury free runner who is compliant with the protocol. The strength program therefore, must be targeted, and not too much time away from running, but should complement healthy running.  There are two ways to go about this strength thing for runners. First, and likely the best, is to have you assessed by a professional to look at imbalance and asymmetry before problems begin. Functional strength and flexibility assessment is something that a Physical Therapist would do for you and determine where imbalances lie and then they prescribe flexibility for where you need loosening and strength exercises for where you need tightening. Folks like Danny Dryer, Mark Cucuzzella, and Jay Dicharry have tried to make this very easy for us in generously designing, ingenious assessment drills or exercises for runners. Often the activity points to an area that needs polishing and then the activity becomes the exercise or drill to practice and improve us. Sounds easy, so there must be a catch – I think there is in that many of these activities require another set of eyes or a mirror to keep you on track and some may require movement patterns that are very different for you. They are still one of the best tools out there in the list of resources. Those who are less motivated to do this one on their own should use a Physical therapist and attain a prescribed series of drills as a great starting point.

Another route is to choose a series of exercises from one of many good authorities on running specific strength training and bust out the moves for 8 weeks using good form and building your base. See where that takes you; a new set of ten exercises that build areas you have not gotten to yet, drills you like better from another author, or now being strong enough to hold up better to one of the above mentioned assessments. I like the simple list of “plug and play exercises that are good for runners” approach also and I’ll tell you why I think this second best option is good enough. Our culture is one of list makers, we already know how to do this – grab 10 -12 good activities for runners and go do ‘em. Most importantly though, while I would not want you to choose strength drills haphazardly, I think it is so important to strength train that I’d rather give you a list of drills to do than have you miss the opportunity. Often a person may be someone who is uneasy, inexperienced or unable to be assessed and as a result, they choose to do no strength training. This may even be a person who down the road falls into one of the injury percentiles Tim Noakes identifies and then, once injured they feel defeated, and suspect that they were not cut out for running. This is simply untrue. We can all ambulate at some speed, for as far as we’d care to go and I fundamentally believe this idea. I also know that we have developed differently than our ancestors of just a generation or two ago related to both our culture and lifestyles. Being less active and less reliant on our bodies - or developing very specialized movement patterns (who of us in America can’t type these days) sometimes comes at the detriment of other parts of our whole. Running uses more of the whole than we realize and thus we have to be strong and pretty well rounded to pull off our best performance without strain or mishap.

Danny Abshire is a strong proponent of whole body strength and emphasizes that running in not enough for the rigors of our sport in saying, “There is a false notion that running is a simple sport and that, since you are always tuning up your legs muscles, you really don’t need to do ancillary training.” (Natural Running, 121)  but Abshire goes on to point out that the better conditioned our core muscles are, as well as hip flexors, and psoas muscles, the better our posture and economy. Better posture allows us to deflect impact from joint structures and better execute our motions with less stress, less ground impact force. Better economy allows us to run faster, longer, with less wattage output. Abshire does not use weights but rather body weight as the resistance for a number of what I commonly call “floor exercises” because all you need is an open space to do most of them. The net result is the same however in that you get stronger, hypertrophy happens on some level, and thus your running feels easier and you are less prone to injury.

Tim Noakes has a different prescription in his text that combines weights and floor exercises to specifically maintain strength in abductor and adductor muscles as well as glute medius muscles and others associated with the iliotibial (IT) band for pelvic stability. Tom Holland’s book The Marathon Method is full of weight lifting routines in beginner, intermediate and advance formulas as well, all sound advice and some routines incorporate plyometrics, moves that increase fast twitch muscle power and are good for bursts of speed. An example of a plyometrics move would be jumping into and off of a low box. Remember the earlier idea that runner who logs a lot of miles, can no longer jump.

Regardless of which program you choose a set of exercise for you will be looking to build upon what we seldom use and what will support your core running posture. Video from experts like Danny Dryer and Mark Cucuzzella, show you what good posture looks like and when you try these drills yourself you can see how important this core strength is to enabling you to move at your best. Further you may find that your everyday wellness is improved by this newly reinforced posture.  

If you are going to choose a sampling of strength exercises off of an experts “menu” of solid suggestions one idea is to strengthen without added bulk and this works well in fitting into the idea that you do not necessarily want to spend all day at the gym either. In an Outside Online article by Nick Heil in the December 2008 issue he discusses Mark Twight’s philosophy of building athletes for their chosen sports, something that Twight has established some notoriety for in the past several years. Heil reports in his article that, “Physiologists also discovered that only certain types of lifting make muscles grow larger specifically, doing eight to 15 reps in (several) sets that end in complete exhaustion. In contrast, slightly modified approaches, like fewer reps with heavier weights, build stronger muscles without making them bigger (which is) particularly appealing to endurance athletes, for whom increased size is considered a liability.” (Heil, 2008, Outside)
Heil goes on to further explain where this concept comes from. He writes “In 1996, Dr. Tabata discovered that short-duration, high-intensity training enhances anaerobic capacity while simultaneously increasing aerobic endurance. This allows you to shed more fat than with moderate-intensity aerobic exercise, and it also produces a metabolic afterburn as the body works to repair itself. Circuits like those we did at Gym Jones are sometimes referred to in the weight-lifting community simply as "Tabatas."” (Heil, 2008, Outside)
Ross Enamait summarizes this concept reasonably well on his website by explaining that in Dr. Tabata’s study, six weeks of training in these conditioned athletes saw significant increases in anaerobic capacity and VO2 max (oxygen carrying capacity) for the athletes. To produce changes in VO2 max, in conditioned athletes is pretty exceptional stuff, as every person has a finite limit to this metric and it often takes years to increase capacity under prior protocols. But intensity is the key; Tabata used short intervals (20 second bursts, with 10 seconds of rest, repeated 8 times, equaling four minutes total). This translates to more weight, fewer repetitions, and moving through the workout faster. The short rest interval is a key to success. This has another commonality with running dating back to the famous coach Arthur Lydiard. Lydiard’s athletes did so well against the competition in part because Lydiard eschewed interval training and sought to shorten the rest interval for his athletes. Today track coaches who use repeats and ladders for their athletes make the workouts tougher by first shortening the rest interval to raise intensity.  

Here are some less technical pointers for getting you into the gym and getting you to begin enjoying it rather than dreading it. Come up with a routine you can live with; say for example 10 or so exercises, this should take you less than an hour of lifting, and only do this 2-3 days a week maximum. Avoid strength training when you are getting ready to compete or you are doing really difficult running workouts.

Find some inspiring music because this will not be easy for most folks and if we are talking quality instead of quantity, then you’ll need to get in the zone, focus, and bust it out.

Work large muscle groups and then proceed to small muscle groups, staying with a particular order for your routine. In the same way that it would not be best to run before lifting, because many smaller “supportive cast” type muscles are used for running and may be too tired afterwards to safely support the big muscles while lifting weights. When lifting you should strive to work the big groups first and then the accessory muscles last. Work the body globally, including legs and look at a few drills that emphasize range of motion rather than isolating a particular muscle. This is again a trick that is not only holistic in nature but gives you a bigger bang for the buck in terms of both time invested and energy spent. Pushups seem so passé but they work because these principles apply; full range of motion for a group of muscles makes a more useable and globally fit body. Box jumps, walking lunges, and planks are several other examples that fit into this type of new school routine. The drills and exercises I’ve put on the list seek to sample the experts and still keep these concepts in mind.

When using these drills on the list, work with small number of repetitions (reps) and high load for a fast, intense workout without too much muscle bulk

The text Run Less, Run Faster states that the average adult loses half a pound of muscle mass annually as they age, once past the age of twenty. If you understand that muscle mass is associated with a higher metabolic rate you realize that you not only can use more fuel but do so more efficiently if you have this muscle mass on board, rather than leave it in your twenties. As endurance athletes we want to be the high metabolism animal that can burn fats as fuel – enabling us to have hours of fuel on hand at any moment.

“Ok! You’ve convinced me to lift or get stronger, somehow, so give me a list to start with so I don’t have to go get assessed!” Here is your list to get started and there are a ton of new drills you can add and subtract from this as you go.
Core strength workout
2 times weekly, 3 is OK








exercise
sets
reps
hold for
find it








Standing wall slide
one



pg 138
Holland






Single leg squat
one



pg 188

Pierce






walking lunge
one



Pg 190

Pierce






calf raises
one



pg 134
Holland






toe raises
one



pg 139
Holland






push up
one



pg 122
Holland






Dumbbell row
one



pg 123
Holland






Supine bridge
one



Pg 127
Abshire






oblique plank
one



pg 127
Abshire






plank
one



pg 130
Holland






Run in place
one



Pg 131
Abshire




















Remember: use enough weight that the last few reps are challenging but you maintain form






every strength session makes your running miles more fluid and easy







lean muscle mass deflects impact from joint structures which are less regenerative





an ounce of prevention is better than a pound of cure









If you have the gumption to really learn more about improving your supporting musculature related to running, a great video of both assessment and drills was just completed by the Natural Running Center and you can view it here. http://naturalrunningcenter.com/2012/01/19/mobility-stability-video-healthier-natural-running/
"The risk of failure, social or physical, is paramount, because failure and dissatisfaction are the parents of thought," he said. "Success and fulfillment do not inspire or require introspection." Mark Twight