Sleepless Knight
Jedi Knight Seeking His Jedi Princess
- Joined
- May 15, 2008
- Messages
- 4,966
I took a jogging class in college at BYU taught by the head coach of the women's cross country team. When I took the class the program was in the middle of a 4 years span where their final results at the NCAA national championship meet were 1st, 2nd, 1st, and 1st.I'm addicted to running but I wanna ask a question you, guys. Is running everyday a huge mistake? Like...does that affect my results negatively?
He shared the following story. He had been talking with another coach whose program was dealing with major injury problems. As they compared notes and mileage, he found that while both programs were doing everything else very similarly, including weekly mileage, there was one difference. The other school was running 7 days a week and BYU was only running 6. In fact, BYU never ran on Sundays and was running slightly more miles each week with the one day off.
The other school started giving their runners one day off and their injuries started to improve. I know that both Jeff Galloway and Hal Higdon advocate taking rest days. Rest days give your body a chance to recover and/or heal from even minor issues that can become injuries even if you don't feel anything. Both also note that activities such as walking and/or swimming count as rest days because they use different muscles than running.
That same reasoning is why run/walk/run helps many amateur runners finish stronger at the end of longer distance races. By taking those walk breaks from the very beginning, you are in essence preserving that energy for later when you will need it more.