Viewing 40 posts - 81 through 120 (of 260 total)
  • Running Myths Exploded.
  • nicko74
    Full Member

    I’ve sat and watched this one, to see how it goes…

    Running Myths Exploded

    Or, in other words, “some guy on the internet disagrees with what has, until now, been a matter of general opinion”.

    Do what works for you, and feel free to ignore numpties who disagree – whether or not they have a youtube video that says so.

    glupton1976
    Free Member

    To be fair he’s done a wee bit of training. http://www.drandyfranklynmiller.com/

    MSP
    Full Member

    My advice to you would be to go out and dick about with your running style – see what works best for you.

    So, work on my technique then 😆

    glupton1976
    Free Member

    Call it what you want. Play at the ministry of funny runs. You’ll enjoy it more than working on technique. 😀

    paulhaycraft
    Full Member

    Last summer I was recovering (slowly) from a back injury and found that I couldn’t run hard at all but could plod reasonably comfortably.
    I decided to give FFS running a go and gradually changed my style. I got some minimal Merrels for about £20 and run once a week(ish) in them and the rest of the time in neutral shoes. My running style has tilted forward a fair bit during that time.

    The biggest benefit seems to be the increase in strength in my ankles and calves. If I almost go over on an ankle now it’s usually ok. A couple of years ago if I did that Id have to have a week off running with an ankle strain.

    It’s true that we have to find what works for us individually but I find it hard to argue against the human biology argument for barefoot running….although actually running in bare feet where I live would be asking for trouble.

    surfer
    Free Member

    and pretending that good technique just comes natural is bollocks.

    You do realise I didnt say this dont you

    would like to shortcut the process

    You wont get far by doing the above and reading about it on the internet 😯

    Those who are naturally good runners have no concept of how **** grim it can be for others!

    Who are these “naturally good runners” Molly. Do you mean the ones who go out rain or shine and plug away? the more I train the luckier I get and all that 🙄

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Who are these “naturally good runners” Molly. Do you mean the ones who go out rain or shine and plug away?

    No, I mean those who start jogging and can easily knock out 7.30 miles as soon as they start. Like people I know.

    The naturally bad runners are the ones who are pleased as punch having trained like hell to do one single mile under 8 mins. They also exist.

    The same people I played football, athletics, basketball and everything else with at school, who I was every bit as fit as, the ones who on cross country runs handed my arse to me on a plate. They are the ones with natural technique. Same as I had natural technique in all the sports I was good at.

    We know technique is important. I don’t understand your point. Are you saying NOT to bother trying to improve technique? If you are imagining me spending my life subscribing to fads I’ve read about on the internet, I’m not. I run, I think about what I could do better, I read about it, discuss it, I take advice, and I’ve improved massively.

    Still failing to see what I’m doing wrong.

    Onzadog
    Free Member

    Glupton, thanks for posting. I found it interesting. I know it’s not the stw way, but I’m happy to be advised by someone who’s done so.e research and is considered an expert in their field. I’m very interesting in what he said about orthotics though as I use hard orthotics fir everything. It would be nice if I could do away with them.

    As for running technique coming naturally, I’m not so sure. Learn a little about gait and watch people in the street. It looks like most of them haven’t mastered walking yet.

    surfer
    Free Member

    I don’t understand your point. Are you saying NOT to bother trying to improve technique?

    We have had this discussion on a number of threads Molly and I have made the point clearly before so I will put the question back to you. What do you mean by “good technique” and how will you know it when you see it? also how will it help you? Do you want to look good when you run or do you see “technique” as something that will make you faster, is that what you are trying to achieve? Do you mean efficiency? if so overtly good “technique” (in the sense of “fast”)doesnt always look attractive and I know a number of good athletes who appear to have poor “technique” but are effective racers and I know a lot of athletes who look very smooth and efficient and are less effective when it comes to racing. There is a lot going on under the “bonnet”!
    An effective and efficient (and often fast) technique comes through training and the repetition of specific action over a long period of time. The adaption process is faster with some people than others I am sure but by striving for “technique” or some “magic bullet” I think you are missing the point that hard work brings the reward.
    I dont think about a single muscle or group when I am running I just try to cover the ground as quickly as I can given the terrain and I let nature take its course.

    piemonster
    Full Member

    As far as I can tell. Surfer is saying your form will come with practice, so the best thing to do is go out and run.

    Anecdotally I tend to stop running completely over the summer months and just spend my time eating crisps riding bikes. When I start running again I’m like a sack of spuds. But that irons out as the muscular economy and efficiency realign themselves to running.

    And yes, I can still remember how awful it is to be bad at running. When pushing the distance on a run is just getting to the next gate 200m away, or the end of a line of trees. And even then having to stop to recover. I still vividly remember being described “you looked demented” because I was so trashed by a five mile run I could barely keep going. At least I think that was the reason. My ability to run further and faster with less injuries came about through practice, and with that came the muscular development and form to accommodate high work loads. There was bugger all natural talent involved.

    baby
    Free Member

    I think surfer is spot on here.

    For those looking to get a better technique I’d advise running a 5k everyday for the month of October.

    Run on feel everyday. If you’re tired, run slower. Feeling good, run faster. Just make sure you go out and run.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    What do you mean by “good technique” and how will you know it when you see it?

    I’ll know if a change in technique results in an improvement, because it’ll feel easier, and I’ll go faster. I’m interested in efficiency and speed of course. I’m not interested in looking good 🙄

    I am sure but by striving for “technique” or some “magic bullet” I think you are missing the point that hard work brings the reward.

    Umm……. If I wasn’t interested in hard work I wouldn’t be running at all, would I? Running is hard work full stop.

    Thinking about technique is important. As I’ve also stated many times, it can be the difference between hating and enjoying. I’ve done plenty of training, and it helps, but figuring out better technique can have dramatic and instant results.

    I can only conclude that you, surfer, and the others who say ‘just run’ have never been in my position. That of an otherwise fit determined person who’s shit at distance running.

    My ability to run further and faster with less injuries came about through practice, and with that came the muscular development and form to accommodate high work loads.

    Yes. And form. Form doens’t just magically appear, at least not for everyone. Maybe for some I don’t know.

    This never happens on swimming threads…

    glupton1976
    Free Member

    For those looking to get a better technique I’d advise running a 5k everyday for the month of October.

    What have you been smoking?

    surfer
    Free Member

    I can only conclude that you, surfer, and the others who say ‘just run’ have never been in my position. That of an otherwise fit determined person who’s shit at distance running.

    Dont conclude that I am good at it but the difference between being “shit” and “less shit” will be determined by the training you are doing. Anyway made my point, good luck Molly 🙂
    Out of interest how much distance are you doing per week and do you do any mixed pace Fartlek type stuff?

    baby
    Free Member

    What have you been smoking?

    Ha.

    deadlydarcy
    Free Member

    I tried intervals. Nothing complicated or super-fast, just 5 x 4min/km with 2 mins rest/recovery. I do five to ten minutes of circuits style warm-up so, some side steps in and out, some press-ups, some burpees and some knees up-heels up stuff. My warm down is a slow jog home for 5 minutes (apart from when I pass my competitive neighbour’s window when I speed up and push my chest out in case he’s watching 🙂 ). I can confirm that they have sped me up.

    The only technique based thing I’ve tried is to imagine a line projecting out from my sternum and not letting my hands cross that line, working my arms a bit more and relaxing my hands from a tightish grip.

    Funnily enough mol, when I run fast during the interval, all these things happen naturally. And my body learns to run a bit faster. Just going for a run has never helped apart from making it easier to just go and do something instead of having a bar of chocolate.

    If your quads and glutes are sore from doing intervals (you will be doing them won’t you?), run a cold shower over them for five minutes and have a glass of chocolate milk.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    I try to do one 5-10k a week, one sprint session and one tempo session, but sometimes only two of those. Or none…

    Without sorting out my form, all that training was a waste. My form was originally so bad that I hated every step. That’s why I never used to do any running. I’m really not imagining it. Fixing terrible form really did result in huge improvements immediately. Training is obviously vital too, but you need both.

    No point in putting a highly tuned race engine in a car with flat tyres and knackered shocks. You won’t win any races and it won’t be fun to drive either.

    MSP
    Full Member

    do you do any mixed pace Fartlek type stuff?

    Why would he do that? That would be training, working to improve, doing things to get better just isn’t fun. Much better to just get out there and run free and naked, and wait to be magically transformed into an elite athlete.

    mactheknife
    Full Member

    Good thread 🙂 i don’t run but i do a lot of gym and bike work and have bought into the foam rolling / stretching routine to relieve muscle stiffness and soreness for a long time. Reading some of those links and then further ones linked from them has got me thinking about why i do it and the benefits or lack of.

    I wont be changing my routine much as i know it definitely works for me, but it really opened my eyes to the so called benefits of the rollers.

    Strange as i really do feel so much better and less stiff after using it.

    Jamie
    Free Member

    *skips to the end*

    Anyone have a decent method for sorting out a peroneal tendon issues, mostly peroneus brevis , as it’s been hampering me for months now 😐

    Edit: 100!

    surfer
    Free Member

    Intervals are the single best use of training time. If you do little else then run intervals. Them and hill sessions. Everything else is just “padding” as a good mate of mine used to say (who was a good runner)

    Emil Zatopek used them to devastating effect 😀

    glupton1976
    Free Member

    I try to do one 5-10k a week, one sprint session and one tempo session, but sometimes only two of those. Or none…

    That there illustrates your problem beautifully. You wouldn’t start putting sprint sessions into a mountain bike training programme without first building up the base by spending time on the bike….

    You would go out and ride your bike and mess about with it until you are comfortable on the bike. Running is the same. Keep your clothes on though.

    Anyone have a decent method for sorting out a peroneal tendon issues, mostly peroneus brevis , as it’s been hampering me for months now

    Yip – strengthen tibialis posterior.

    Jamie
    Free Member

    Yip – strengthen tibialis posterior.

    Righto.

    Any recommend exercises?

    baby
    Free Member

    You wouldn’t start putting sprint sessions into a mountain bike training programme without first building up the base by spending time on the bike….

    That’s why I reckon he should run 5k a day for a while.

    Chuck in some pick ups or intervals if he wants. But just get some volume of running under the belt.

    glupton1976
    Free Member

    try something like
    [video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QP3Ud4d39dc[/video]

    try to not lose the will to live when watching the video.

    That’s why I reckon he should run 5k a day for a while.

    One way ticket to injury that one…

    surfer
    Free Member

    I’ve been doing these with a physio band on Gluptons advice. They certainly hurt muscles you dont know you have for a few days!

    glupton1976
    Free Member

    Surfer – You seeing any improvements?

    baby
    Free Member

    One way ticket to injury that one…

    Not if you’re sensible. It’s next to no distance, but walk some of them if you have to.

    Only adds up to 35k a week so after a month you’ll have a good base.

    glupton1976
    Free Member

    Not if you’re sensible. It’s next to no distance, but walk some of them if you have to.

    Lets take molgrips as an example – he’s doing 5-10k/week with a couple of other things thrown in sometimes. For him to do 35km/wk would be anything between a 700% increase and a 200% increase. Never a good idea.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Here’s what actually happened, in actual real life:

    Training without thinking about form = utter misery
    Think about form, make some changes
    Training = much much more fun, I do more of it, I introduce intervals and get much much better than I ever had been, quite quickly.

    I still fail to see what I’ve done wrong. My running has improved greatly.

    You would go out and ride your bike and mess about with it until you are comfortable on the bike. Running is the same. Keep your clothes on though.

    Still can’t work out who this sarcams is directed at.

    That there illustrates your problem beautifully.

    What problem is that? I don’t have a problem.. any more..

    baby
    Free Member

    See… I have an image of Molgrips in my mind as a sort of slighlty more amusing, yet balding, Eddie Izzard.

    If he can start running marathons everyday…

    glupton1976
    Free Member

    Good – I’m happy for you. 😀

    MSP
    Full Member

    Lets take molgrips as an example – he’s doing 5-10k/week with a couple of other things thrown in sometimes. For him to do 35km/wk would be anything between a 700% increase and a 200% increase. Never a good idea.

    Whoa there, sounds like your applying some sort of steady increase in mileage principle to running load there, that’s not fun, much better to just go out and splash around in some puddles, that’s the best way to improve.

    The-Swedish-Chef
    Free Member

    The three types of session described by Molly are the staples of all endurance type events. By simply applying them at the right pace/intensity anyone will improve. It is that simple.

    How much and how quickly will depend on a whole bunch of things, background to exercise, genes, natural talent, technique level.

    However as has been said running based speed work will generally increase your efficiency and thus “improve” your technique.

    Generally speaking people with good technique make their sport look easy, however there are a fair few examples of that not being true, Paula’s arm carriage/head movement for one.

    If its working, then keep doing it.

    djglover
    Free Member

    As other runners are saying – just put the miles in, long and slow 6 days a week, I didn’t do any speedwoork until about 6 weeks out from the great north run this year but was pounding out about 50 miles a week since January and racing on the fells every couple of weeks, no track sessions, no tempo runs until the goal race approached.. The speedwork tuned me up great for the race, but no need to focus on it whislt you build a base IME. I always did too much in previous years and would always end up injured or overtrained.

    With this approach I knocked 5 mins of my half marathon PB this year and did 1:21.

    Long slow miles are boring as hell but they work, if you do lots

    The-Swedish-Chef
    Free Member

    And the long slow miles approach is the other school of thought.

    Personally I find it de-motivational and injury inducing, especially for the newbie. However I’d guess 80% or “runners” build their base this way so it clearly works.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Lots of long slow miles… Recipe for grim, in my book. Shuffling zombie isn’t my favourite passtime.

    djglover
    Free Member

    Check out these 2 guys training for Frankfurt, most of their running is just long (relativley) slow miles, track once a week and the long run on sunday is often faster than the rest

    http://www.strava.com/athletes/1194096

    http://www.strava.com/athletes/2461157

    surfer
    Free Member

    Surfer – You seeing any improvements?

    Yes a little thanks Glupton. Managed a steady 5 miles last night with no reaction this morning. Aim to continue that into the weekend then maybe increase early next week. The eccentric exercise seem to be having a real affect now 😀

    And the long slow miles approach is the other school of thought.

    This is a misnomer. Lots of people and mags have used this term for well “long VERY slow distance”!
    The “slow” is and needs to be a relative term. There has to be a “training” and adaptation affect. If you are simply running very slowly you are wasting your time and increasing your chance of developing an injury for very little (if any) benefit.
    Even weekly long runs should be run at a manageable pace but be taxing to some extent. Top athletes who have used this technique term “slow” as a pace that not many of us can manage. There is very little “training” being done by many people I see out at weekends in large groups chatting and shuffling along. Social running is fine and good luck to them but they are not “training”
    If you use LSD to build a base then thats fine. But it needs to be done at a pace that brings about physiological change.

    djglover
    Free Member

    Yes slow is relative, for me its 7:00 to 7:30 min miles when a race will be 5:30 to 6:15. This is where a HR monitor came in useful for me, I to ensure I am in the right training zone and not going too fast or slow I am for 150-155bpm on a general run, whereas my threshold is around 177

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