it’s
not a lack of the latest running shoes, technical T-shirt, gels or
does-it-all-and-more GPS that holds us back as runners – it’s something much
simpler. Whether we care to accept it or not, basic mistakes – the kind nearly
every runner makes – are what stop us from reaching peak condition and racing
as well as we can.
‘The
thinking must be done first, before the training begins,’ said the late Peter
Coe, father and coach of two-time Olympic 1500m gold medallist Sebastian Coe.
So, before your turn to your next training programme, here are 10 big errors –
culled from runners and coaches – to avoid if you want to run your best.
1. Making
all runs ‘medium’
Some
runners complete all workouts at a medium level, failing to garner the benefits
of longer, easy distance runs or short, tough speedwork. Every workout has a
purpose and achieving it requires an optimal intensity and duration. Long runs
provide some of the same benefits (strengthening slow-twitch fibres, etc) at an
easy pace as at a medium pace, but at the easy pace you’re able to run longer
and recover more quickly. Speedwork demands shorter, more intense efforts,
alternating with intervals of near-total rest. Decreasing the intensity of the
hard parts alters the workout’s effect.
The fix: Ditch the default
Recalibrate
your ‘daily’ run pace to a conversational pace. If it isn’t a quality-workout
day (eg intervals, fartlek), don’t test your fitness. Back off every time you
feel yourself pushing your legs and/or lungs. Drop behind your training partner
or group if they’re pushing it, or run alone if you have to. Set a goal (easy)
pace and make the challenge to stick to it – no faster.
2. Neglecting
speed
Runners
cannot live on mileage alone. We can always benefit from some faster training.
Here’s what happens when you skip strength and speedwork entirely:
•
Atrophy of fast-twitch fibres
•
Decrease in neuromuscular recruitment and efficiency
•
Increase in lactate accumulation during high-intensity exercise
•
Decreased muscle-buffering capacity (ability to neutralise lactic acid buildup)
The fix: Pick up the pace
Adding
some faster training allows you to maintain strong fibres, retain neuromuscular
efficiency and stop your buffering capacity from dwindling to the point of no
return. Adding regular sessions of short hill repeats, fast strides or form
drills reinforces muscle-fibre and nervous system development. Moderate tempo,
fartlek or hill runs preserve lactate removal and buffering capacity.
3. Refusing
to adjust workouts
Many
runners believe that once a certain workout is started, it must be completed
exactly as planned. Any deviation is tantamount to quitting. ‘The biggest
mistake athletes make, especially good athletes, is their inability to adjust
workouts on the fly,’ says distance coach Christian Cushing-Murray, a former US
masters cross-country champion. Wise coaches and runners understand that
unpredictable variables – weather, fatigue, allergies, stress – can affect
workouts. A refusal to adjust to these variables changes the workout.
The fix: Go with the flow
Remember
that workouts are tools to achieve running goals; they are not the goals
themselves. In a workout, you create a specific stimulus to trigger a specific
adaptation. Adjusting on the fly lets you keep your eye on the target and apply
the correct stimulus. Adjusting the workout does not mean failing the workout –
it isn’t a test, it’s a tool. Remember, the adaptation is the goal.
4. Being
resistant to change
Some
people just don’t know how to let go: these running fundamentalists have zero interest
in trying new or untested workouts. They cling to training routines that have
served them since they were first fitted for running shoes. The training worked
then, it’ll work now, goes the reasoning. And injuries or poor performances are
just temporary setbacks. The truth is that any type of training – any running
at all – will make an untrained runner a better runner. The first time you
pulled on running shoes and headed out the door, you kickstarted a
physiological process that led to improved fitness. That’s a hard first
impression to shake. But as your running body changes, your training must
change, too. What worked during your first year won’t work for your fifth. Or
tenth. Or twentieth.
The fix:
Ch-ch-ch-ch-changes
All
runners require new conclusions to meet the new information they should be
getting from their bodies. Some masters runners, for example, will change their
training every few years – to combat fast-twitch fibre loss, declining VO2 max,
decreased flexibility and other age-related issues. But by making these
adjustments, their performances will slow less dramatically than many of their
peers. If your body never changed, then your training could remain forever the
same. But every workout creates a slightly different running body. Every age,
every setback, every success alters you a little. Ignoring the physiological
reality to maintain faith in a ‘one and only’ training approach isn’t just
misguided; it’s unbelievable.
5. Pick-and-mix
workouts
The
term ‘cafeteria runner’ describes that subset of runners who treat training
like a smorgasbord – they choose the elements they find most appealing from a
variety of sources and then, with great enthusiasm, they cram them all into a
week. Cafeteria runners aren’t trying to build a training plan, they’re looking
for a workout-based multivitamin pill, a workout that by itself transforms
fitness, instills confidence and ensures race success. They just aren’t sure
which workout it is, and therefore feel obliged to try all of them.
The fix: It takes a programme
Workouts
are links in the chain of a good training programme. They create fitness
adaptations that will be exploited in future workouts or reinforce gains from
past sessions. You wouldn’t mix ingredients from chocolate, carrot and
strawberry shortcake recipes. And you shouldn’t create a training plan by
picking from lots of training sources and shoehorning what you like into one
workout.
6. Delaying
injury prevention plans
In
the introduction to his 2010 article 10 Laws of Injury Prevention, RW US Editor
at Large Amby Burfoot noted that ‘running injuries can be caused by being
female, being male, being old, being young, pronating too much, pronating too
little, training too much and training too little’. In other words, running
injuries are going to happen. Studies confirm that 50-80 per cent of runners
will suffer an injury during any given year. So the ideal time to deal with
them is before they occur. Yet most runners don’t; instead, they wait until the
first pinch in their glutes, pain on the outside of their knee or twinge in
their arch to start researching terms such as piriformis, IT-band syndrome or
plantar fasciitis.
The fix: A stitch in time
Five
key injury prevention principles to embrace:
•
Don’t push to breaking point in your workouts
•
Do exercises to prevent or correct muscle imbalances
•
Allow proper recovery
•
Begin glycogen (carbohydrate) and liquid replenishment within 30 minutes
post-run
•
Do strength exercises to ward off common injuries
No comments:
Post a Comment