The Running Thread - 2016

QOTD: How much do you warm-up and cool-down? Is it distance based or time based? When you give a time for a run, does it include warm-up or cool-down? If so, are they significantly different from the "performance" part?

All of my workouts, be they swim, bike, or run, include warm up and coold down periods. These are usually 10-15 minutes long and serve to loosen up the muscles and begin to get my heart rate up for the serious effort to come. My coach wants me to do a lot more dynamic stretching before I run, but I'm usually too lazy to do so. To keep me flexible and not overly tight, I rely on yoga and regular massages.
 
QOTD: How much do you warm-up and cool-down? Is it distance based or time based? When you give a time for a run, does it include warm-up or cool-down? If so, are they significantly different from the "performance" part?
I find that I warm up for longer on the treadmill. I think it's more of a mental thing for me. I use that treadmill warm up time to pump myself up for my boring run ahead! When I'm outside, I usually just want to get going. I do it based on time. 4 minutes of warm up on the treadmill and 2 minutes outside.

I'm pretty bad about cooling down. I walk around my house, until my heart rate goes down a bit and then I stretch. But nothing thought out very well or official :)
 
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QOTD: How much do you warm-up and cool-down? Is it distance based or time based? When you give a time for a run, does it include warm-up or cool-down? If so, are they significantly different from the "performance" part?

I sometimes imitate some of the dynamic stretches I see soccer players do when they warm up. Does that count? I don't really feel like that counts.

The only good thing I can say about my (lack of) warm-up and cool-down plan is that I have, at this point, managed to avoid any major injuries.
 
QOTD: How much do you warm-up and cool-down? Is it distance based or time based? When you give a time for a run, does it include warm-up or cool-down? If so, are they significantly different from the "performance" part?
I don't do much of either. For a cool down I might walk down my street for a minute for two but that's about it.
 

ATTQOTD:
I'm like an old jalopy, I have to have a warm up before I can get going. If its a higher impact type run (tempo, intervals, hills) I'll warm up at least 3 miles (at easy or recovery paces), if I'm just wanting to hit some faster paces, I might only warm up for a mile or 2, then speed up. Either way, I like to warm up to get the blood flowing and feel like my stride, breathing, etc are in sync. Same goes for the cool down, I'll usually do the same amount of cool down as warm up.
 
QOTD: How much do you warm-up and cool-down? Is it distance based or time based? When you give a time for a run, does it include warm-up or cool-down? If so, are they significantly different from the "performance" part?

For my speed, strength and tempo training runs, I have a 1.5 mile warm-up and a 1.5 mile cool down. For all other runs (which are at an easy pace), I don't have any warm-up or cool down.

Also, for 5k and 10k races, I usually warm-up with a slow mile prior to the race. For half marathons and higher, I usually do not warm-up even though I know some folks do.
 
QOTD: How much do you warm-up and cool-down? Is it distance based or time based? When you give a time for a run, does it include warm-up or cool-down? If so, are they significantly different from the "performance" part?

For training I must admit I do none of that. I think I'm about to embark on Hanson for my Chicago in October, so I'm pretty sure I'm going to need to do some warm-ups prior to my speedwork and tempo runs. But at this moment the answer is none. For races, it's hit or miss. I know I should be consistently doing warm-ups before races.
 
ATTQOTD: I walk to the front of my development as my warm up and then from the front of the development to my house for my cool down. It is usually 3-5 mins.
Yeah, I said "none" but I generally do some kind of walking before and after. I live in a condo/townhouse development, and I don't start running until I'm out at the main road, so I have a couple minute walk between our townhouse and the road before and after. At races, there seems to always be a lot of walking to/from where I have to park my car and the start/finish area. :) I never do a warm up run, though. I just kinda let myself ease into the run at the beginning.
 
For my speed, strength and tempo training runs, I have a 1.5 mile warm-up and a 1.5 mile cool down. For all other runs (which are at an easy pace), I don't have any warm-up or cool down.

ATTQOTD: That sounds a lot like my warm-up/cool down. I might do 2 miles or 20 minutes for speed workouts and my cool down will be 1 mile. For a 10K I might do some dynamic stretches.
 
QOTD: How much do you warm-up and cool-down? Is it distance based or time based? When you give a time for a run, does it include warm-up or cool-down? If so, are they significantly different from the "performance" part?
Most of my workouts are based off of time and have a 10-15 minute warmup built into them. If I'm swimming I ease in with a 200-400m warmup, and on the bike it's about 10-15 minutes or so before I start the harder work.
 
On training runs, I just use my first mile or so as a warm up and go slow on it. I don't necessarily monitor it, it just seems to happen naturally that I can speed up once I've warmed up. For races, I try to do a 15 minute warm up with a slow jog or walk. I am bad about cooling down though. Usually, there's a walk back to the car that serves as a cool down but if the car is right there, I just stretch for a couple minutes and that's it.
 
ATTQOTD: I also am bad about warming up. During training outside it is pretty non-existent. Cooling down I usually walk about 5 minutes back to my car. I try and finish my runs a ways from my car to force myself to walk and cool off. On the treadmill I walk 2 minutes to warm up, then 5 minutes to cool down. I never include warm up/cool down in my times. At races I usually depend on the walk to and from the start for the warm up/cool down.
 
QOTD: How much do you warm-up and cool-down? Is it distance based or time based? When you give a time for a run, does it include warm-up or cool-down? If so, are they significantly different from the "performance" part?
I warm up by starting a little slower and getting up to pace. That only lasts a short time because I'm impatient. My cool downs include walking the rest of the way back to the house and up the steps.
 
QOTD: How much do you warm-up and cool-down? Is it distance based or time based? When you give a time for a run, does it include warm-up or cool-down? If so, are they significantly different from the "performance" part?

ATTQOTD: I need a lot less warming up in summer, so I'll maybe walk a tenth of a mile before getting going. It's pretty tough to actually "cool down" in 100* heat, but I'll slow-walk 1/4 mile or so after a run to get my heart rate down, then head into the AC or pool. Winter requires a better warm-up and is generally most of my first mile; I don't separate it from the rest of the run. I also foam roll and stretch before and after every run as part of my warm-up/cool down.
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ATTQOTD: I have a very specific warm-up routine given to me by my physical therapist. It includes foam rolling (3-4 minutes mostly calves and IT Band) then some repositioning exercises, then core, hamstring and glute activation exercises. Finally, I have two dynamic drills. Then I walk from my house to the road. To cool down, I walk from the main road back to my house and then do static stretching.

I have been lazy about warm-ups in the past, but ever since I have stuck with the warm-up routine I have felt better during and after runs. I resisted at first, but now that I have it down, it only takes about 10-12 minutes and it really seems to be benefiting me. I have strong but very lazy muscles according to my physical therapist. I am super quad dominant, and my hamstrings and glutes do not like to work. So my warm up is all stuff that gets those muscles working and ready to keep working on my run.
 
QOTD: How much do you warm-up and cool-down? Is it distance based or time based? When you give a time for a run, does it include warm-up or cool-down? If so, are they significantly different from the "performance" part?

ATTQOTD: MY answer is going to be a little long here. In the past for a normal run, my warm up was included in the total amount of miles done that day. For half marathons and shorter distances a warm-up could be anywhere between a half a mile to 3 depending on what the days goal are. A cool down is about .5 mile to 1 mile for races. On the warm up portions I will start of slowly and end the last quarter mile at that days desired race pace goal. Recently I am working on a dynamic stretching routine and finish my runs with a static stretching routine. Tis idea was given to me by the trainer that comes to our office to work people out during lunch. He is a former NFL player and has worked with athletes in track as well as other sports. He basically told me that running has left me very tight and I need to loosen up things to help with my overall performance. Only a week in thus far so I am not sure if it is making a difference yet.

Dynamic stretching, warm-ups, cool-downs, and static stretching are just part of my routine. I do dynamic stretching prior to every run and static stretching after every run. I do warm-ups/cool-downs on any run at marathon pace or faster. My warm-up and cool-down distance minimum is 1.5 miles but as much as 2.5 miles. I choose the distance based on trying to get the total time of the run up to or above 90 minutes. Here is why I view warm-ups and cool-downs as a vital part of the process for anything faster than marathon pace:

Essentially, there are two main pathways for the body to use oxygen to produce energy: the aerobic and anaerobic pathways. The two pathways work across a spectrum so no one system is always being relied on just more or less depending on the pace. The aerobic pathway is mostly used in slower running. The closer you get to the point where it becomes harder to breathe (Ventilatory Threshold) the more you use the anaerobic pathway. The aerobic pathway is more efficient and faster at creating energy, whereas the body uses anaerobic when the aerobic can't keep up (because you're going too fast).

The most interesting part between the aerobic and anaerobic pathway is that even though the aerobic is used mostly during slow running it takes about 6 minutes of running before it can be used. This means for the first 6 minutes we're stuck with the slow, inefficient anaerobic pathway. So if you don't do a warm-up, and you're running faster than "long run" pace you push the anaerobic pathway too hard. This creates a deficit in energy within the first 6 minutes that becomes harder to overcome. As this deficit starts to catch up with you in later miles, it causes our running form to suffer.

The cool-downs are important because it teaches you to run on tired legs. You've just finished a tough workout and now you have to go another 1.5-2.5 miles, albeit at an easy pace. I like to judge my workouts partially on the difference between my warm-up and cool-down pacing. I run them at the same effort but sometimes the paces don't match based on how fatigued I am from the "performance" part of the workout.

Race wise: 5K/10Ks have 3 miles with a few surges to race pace. A Half has 1-2 miles with a few surges to race pace. A full has 1 mile all easy.

All of my reported mileage includes warm-ups and cool-downs because I view it as part of my workout. In the end, the warm-ups and cool-downs are used to balance the "performance" part for a weekly training load of 80% easy and 20% hard.
 
The most interesting part between the aerobic and anaerobic pathway is that even though the aerobic is used mostly during slow running it takes about 6 minutes of running before it can be used. This means for the first 6 minutes we're stuck with the slow, inefficient anaerobic pathway. So if you don't do a warm-up, and you're running faster than "long run" pace you push the anaerobic pathway too hard. This creates a deficit in energy within the first 6 minutes that becomes harder to overcome. As this deficit starts to catch up with you in later miles, it causes our running form to suffer.

Race wise: 5K/10Ks have 3 miles with a few surges to race pace. A Half has 1-2 miles with a few surges to race pace. A full has 1 mile all easy.

So, how far in advance of the race do you finish your warm-up run such that you are not starting over on the anaerobic pathway issue when the gun goes off? I ask because I usually try to complete my warm-up run about 15 minutes prior to race time, but I don't have a good reason for this.
 
I warm-up and cool-down for most training runs. Generally its a time thing, not a distance thing. 5 min+ on each end. And I tend to like to work up to and down from my starting/end pace.
Before races I tend to have a built in mile warm up to the corral (lucky we have a parking spot to use about that distance from the major Chicago starting line area of most of the big races.)
Cool downs after races is much harder because I just want to be done running and get my banana. But I do make sure not to dead stop and I keep walking around a bit before sitting down.
 



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