QOTD: Vacation and running, are you able to stick to your plan during a trip?
Gym treadmill. I tried running around the ship once and found it to be sooooo boring. And I kept losing count of what lap I was on.Do you run on the gym treadmill or around the tracks on the ship? I've always wondered if it feels different being on a boat doing either of those.
I made a discovery with which led to a giant improvement.
Background: I've done 3 Goofys, 10 marathons, 1 52 mile ultra, and too many 5 and 10ks to count. I been running on and off for 30 years and consistently for 15 years. My real point here is I'm not a rookie; I've been doing this for a while.
What led me to the discovery: It started with the form QOTD. My answer was that I don't keep my arms up high enough (which is what you do when you walk). Then @CheapRunnerMike posted a picture of himself finishing the 2015 marathon. I noticed his 'rear' foot is up so high, it's hidden behind his knee. By comparison, in almost all my race photos, my feet are never more than a few inches off the ground. It seems like in most, they are both on the ground. Not sure how this is even possible!
The discovery: After looking at more of my race photos and comparing them with 'real' runners and doing a little bit of googling, I have come to the conclusion that what I call running is really just fast walking. In walking, you basically lift 1 leg forward and 'pole-vault' over your planted leg. In running, you're storing energy in your planted leg and 'pogo-sticking' off of it.
The improvement: I made an effort to get my feet off the ground. Lifting my knee a little higher in the front, and trying to make more of a 'butt-kick' motion in the back. With just those simple changes, I am about a minute per mile faster at the same effort! Checking my log, the last 3 Mondays I've done 7 miles at 9:40, 10:20, and 10:26 per mile. Today i did 8:57!
Has anyone else made a small change that led to big improvements? For those of you more into the science of running, is my analysis correct? Is this a know problem?
QOTD: Vacation and running, are you able to stick to your plan during a trip?
I made the same change a number of years ago with the same impact - about 1 min/mile faster at the same heart rate. I just bring my back leg up parallel to the ground. To do this without slowing your cadence or over-striding you have to kick off a tiny bit, but it doesn't feel like you are kicking off. All elite runners run this way.I made a discovery with which led to a giant improvement.
Background: I've done 3 Goofys, 10 marathons, 1 52 mile ultra, and too many 5 and 10ks to count. I been running on and off for 30 years and consistently for 15 years. My real point here is I'm not a rookie; I've been doing this for a while.
What led me to the discovery: It started with the form QOTD. My answer was that I don't keep my arms up high enough (which is what you do when you walk). Then @CheapRunnerMike posted a picture of himself finishing the 2015 marathon. I noticed his 'rear' foot is up so high, it's hidden behind his knee. By comparison, in almost all my race photos, my feet are never more than a few inches off the ground. It seems like in most, they are both on the ground. Not sure how this is even possible!
The discovery: After looking at more of my race photos and comparing them with 'real' runners and doing a little bit of googling, I have come to the conclusion that what I call running is really just fast walking. In walking, you basically lift 1 leg forward and 'pole-vault' over your planted leg. In running, you're storing energy in your planted leg and 'pogo-sticking' off of it.
The improvement: I made an effort to get my feet off the ground. Lifting my knee a little higher in the front, and trying to make more of a 'butt-kick' motion in the back. With just those simple changes, I am about a minute per mile faster at the same effort! Checking my log, the last 3 Mondays I've done 7 miles at 9:40, 10:20, and 10:26 per mile. Today i did 8:57!
Has anyone else made a small change that led to big improvements? For those of you more into the science of running, is my analysis correct? Is this a know problem?
I made a discovery with which led to a giant improvement.
Background: I've done 3 Goofys, 10 marathons, 1 52 mile ultra, and too many 5 and 10ks to count. I been running on and off for 30 years and consistently for 15 years. My real point here is I'm not a rookie; I've been doing this for a while.
What led me to the discovery: It started with the form QOTD. My answer was that I don't keep my arms up high enough (which is what you do when you walk). Then @CheapRunnerMike posted a picture of himself finishing the 2015 marathon. I noticed his 'rear' foot is up so high, it's hidden behind his knee. By comparison, in almost all my race photos, my feet are never more than a few inches off the ground. It seems like in most, they are both on the ground. Not sure how this is even possible!
The discovery: After looking at more of my race photos and comparing them with 'real' runners and doing a little bit of googling, I have come to the conclusion that what I call running is really just fast walking. In walking, you basically lift 1 leg forward and 'pole-vault' over your planted leg. In running, you're storing energy in your planted leg and 'pogo-sticking' off of it.
The improvement: I made an effort to get my feet off the ground. Lifting my knee a little higher in the front, and trying to make more of a 'butt-kick' motion in the back. With just those simple changes, I am about a minute per mile faster at the same effort! Checking my log, the last 3 Mondays I've done 7 miles at 9:40, 10:20, and 10:26 per mile. Today i did 8:57!
Has anyone else made a small change that led to big improvements? For those of you more into the science of running, is my analysis correct? Is this a know problem?
I'm not an expert on running science but I would just say make sure this isn't causing you to overstride. If you keep your data in some sort of running app, check your cadence to see if it is has dropped.
ATTQOTD: My first was the PHM Royal Family 5K in 2012, "run" with my son. It was a lot of fun and totally started my relationship with rD!QOTD: I don't think we have answered this one here before but what was your first race? What was the distance? Where was it? Anything else special about it?
1. First, if I'm really physically tired, I listen to my body and give it extra rest. The mental part for me is about running the mile I'm in - and if that miles happens to suck, knowing that a new mile is coming up. Running out and backs and knowing that I have to finish in order to get home helps, too!1. How do you help yourself overcome the mental hurdles when you feel like you're tired and the goal race seems like it'll be unbearably long?
2. How do you deal with having to do a runDisney race weekend solo? I'm hoping to meet up with some various running group people, and one of my friends might be able to come cheer me on for the marathon, but otherwise I think I'll be going solo for the weekend, which is making me feel like it won't be a very fun trip. The accomplishment of finishing the Goofy Challenge just seems less exciting without someone there to share it with me.
ATTQOTD: I try not to schedule trips during critical runs so I have the luxury of skipping them as needed. My teen son doesn't like to wake up until noon on vacation, which can make it easy for me to work in a morning run... but if we stay out late the night before, forget it. Sleep/rest/relaxation comes first on my vacation!QOTD: Vacation and running, are you able to stick to your plan during a trip?
I'll start by saying running form is definitely something I need to continue to improve upon. So my ideas and articles are me also trying to maximize this area of my running repertoire. I found a few articles that may be of interest:
How to Improve Your Speed: Step Frequency and Step Length
What Does Good Running Form Feel Like?
Can Form Drills Help You Become a More Efficient and Injury-Resistant Runner
I believe your improvement can be a good one, as long as it doesn't coincide with your foot falling outside your center of gravity (the form drills will help confirm the correct feeling). I'd bet (and I haven't seen anything to confirm this and this is me spitballing) that how much your leg kicks back is a function of your speed relative to your vVO2max. The faster you run relative to your current fitness level, the more back kick you'll naturally develop into. The necessity of the back kick comes from the power you are generating into the ground with each step. The reason you may see two people both at 9:00 min/mile one with back kick and one without, may be related to the relative % of vV02max that they are running at. It would also explain why you see elites with massive back kick from the 3k to the marathon. Because no matter the distance, their % vVO2max is very high. Whereas, most of us don't reach the level of % vV02max to justify the necessity (or naturalness of the major back kick).
If it's something you wish to pursue, then my advice would be the same for anyone looking to make changes in their stride. Do it slowly and progressively over the course of months. Incorporate a little change in a single run for a brief time period. Then for a whole run. Then a few runs per week. Then all of your runs. If you make a dramatic change in your stride you may start using muscles/bones differently and they may not be prepared to handle the rigor of the new workload.
Agreed. This would be the first thing I would be concerned about. And it may not be something that shows up immediately from a single run that improves, but from over time and consistent training with an overstride.
...was going from a heel striker to a mid-foot striker...
I made a discovery with which led to a giant improvement.
Background: I've done 3 Goofys, 10 marathons, 1 52 mile ultra, and too many 5 and 10ks to count. I been running on and off for 30 years and consistently for 15 years. My real point here is I'm not a rookie; I've been doing this for a while.
What led me to the discovery: It started with the form QOTD. My answer was that I don't keep my arms up high enough (which is what you do when you walk). Then @CheapRunnerMike posted a picture of himself finishing the 2015 marathon. I noticed his 'rear' foot is up so high, it's hidden behind his knee. By comparison, in almost all my race photos, my feet are never more than a few inches off the ground. It seems like in most, they are both on the ground. Not sure how this is even possible!
The discovery: After looking at more of my race photos and comparing them with 'real' runners and doing a little bit of googling, I have come to the conclusion that what I call running is really just fast walking. In walking, you basically lift 1 leg forward and 'pole-vault' over your planted leg. In running, you're storing energy in your planted leg and 'pogo-sticking' off of it.
The improvement: I made an effort to get my feet off the ground. Lifting my knee a little higher in the front, and trying to make more of a 'butt-kick' motion in the back. With just those simple changes, I am about a minute per mile faster at the same effort! Checking my log, the last 3 Mondays I've done 7 miles at 9:40, 10:20, and 10:26 per mile. Today i did 8:57!
Has anyone else made a small change that led to big improvements? For those of you more into the science of running, is my analysis correct? Is this a know problem?
I am definitely a Glider.All that said, there are some debates about whether one is better than the other. There is a very good video on YouTube showing the two styles. Search for "Ironman Run Technique - Gliders vs Gazelles"