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How Strength Training Will Improve Your Running
By Roy Stevenson
May/June 2008
For the Washington Running Report

Part one--Why Rank and File Runners Should do Resistance Training
The year I turned 20, I graduated from junior to senior grade as a distance runner in New Zealand. Now I would be running the 3,000-meter steeplechase against seasoned steeplechasers who were faster and stronger than me and chewed us young steeplechasers up for breakfast.

What could I do to get within range of these guys, I asked? My running was maxed out--any more and I would have end up injured. A friend suggested I do some weight training to make me stronger. Maybe that would help? With nothing to lose I started lifting weights three times a week. I felt very strong during my races and my steeplechase time came down by 15 seconds. I even managed to get to the New Zealand Championships in the senior race. Since then there is been no doubt in my mind about the positive effects of strength training on distance running performance.

The majority of non-elite runners do not do any strength training to improve their running. Because of the time consumed by running, most runners cannot find the time or do not have the interest to lift weights, while many do not think it will help them race faster.

However, of all the sports endurance events, distance running has the most impressive research results to support weight training as a technique to improve your running. It is a given that elite runners these days lift weights as an integral part of their training regime. They will all tell you that strength training has made them faster.

The irony here is that research shows weight training has a greater improvement on unfit or less fit runners than elite runners in the parameters of anaerobic threshold, running economy, and neuromuscular characteristics. That is right--if you are a runner doing 20 to 50 miles per week, you stand to gain some marvelous improvements compared with elite runners.

A study done a few years ago found that trained runners improve their running economy from 4% to 8% with resistance training. Even small improvements in running economy can have a large impact on longer distance events such as the marathon or 10K races. A 4% improvement for a 41:39 10K runner would reduce this time by 100 seconds.

But what about the rank and file runner, with 10K times between 35 and 60 minutes? Can resistance training help this group bring their times down? Several studies have shown that recreational runners who lift weights improve their performance. One study found lactate threshold, or the point where you start accumulating significant amounts of lactic acid, to be increased after a period of resistance training in untrained individuals. Many studies of elite runners have not found this benefit from resistance training--indirect proof that rank and file runners have more to gain from strength training than elite runners.

But the study I believe to be the most promising looked at novice cycling and running trained subjects who added strength training three days per week for ten weeks. The results were exciting. The participants improved leg strength by an average of 30%, but thigh girths were unchanged, meaning they did not add any muscle bulk--something that would slow distance runners down.

And although their oxygen processing abilities were unchanged (as you would expect to find in people doing weight training), their cycling and treadmill running times to exhaustion at 80% of VO2 max were lengthened from 71 minutes to a staggering 85 minutes. Even their short-term high-powered (maximal 4 to 8 minute effort) endurance cycling and running were lengthened by 11% and 13%. In addition, six of the eight runners in this study improved their 10K times from an average of 42:27 to 41:43.

Other research has found similar results. Thus it is clear, that weight training can help you run faster for longer with the same effort and oxygen consumption. Attending a sports medicine conference recently, I heard one speaker make a comment that rang true. The athletes who are winning these days are ones who can maintain high wattage for longer than their competitors, i.e., they sustain their power at a high percentage of their VO2 max--now acknowledged as a major contributor to success in endurance events.

The question is, if you are a recreational runner spending two to three extra hours each week doing weight training, would you be better off spending this time running? Will weight training adversely affect your running? And will weight training make you tighter and less flexible? The answers are no, no, and no. In one study, coaches were surprised to find that substituting 32% of total endurance training in elite distance runners for strength training improved runners' 5K performance significantly. Other research shows that strength training does not reduce endurance performance in non-athletes. Studies investigating the effects of weight training on flexibility found weightlifters possess average to above average flexibility in most joints.

So how, then, does strength training actually improve running performance? The theory goes something like this. Your running speed is dependent on the force applied to the ground during each foot strike and the time over which this force is applied. The faster and more powerful the foot strikes, the faster you will run. Thus, if you improve the power you exert during each of your steps, you will run faster.

Resistance training improves the tensile strength of your leg muscles, and thus enhances the recoil or return of energy with each foot compression or step. Additionally, your neuromuscular system becomes better coordinated from resistance training, enabling you to run using less energy and less oxygen.

A typical comment heard from runners I have coached who have taken up weight training is "I'm able to finish 10K races with a longer, sustained drive, and strong finish." Others claim that strength training has helped them relax their arms during the early and middle stages of their races. Women in particular have a lot to gain because they tend to be 20% to 40% weaker than their male counterparts in the major body regions (legs and upper body strength).

Other major benefits that weight training are theorized to have on runners includes injury prevention, correction of muscular imbalances, increase in stride length, improvement in core stability, and increase in basic speed. Although there is not yet enough evidence for all coaches and exercise scientists to agree on, these aspects should not be completely ignored and today are accepted reasons why coaches ply their runners with strength training.

Here, for example, is how resistance training can help prevent injuries. Lifting weights may help correct imbalances and biomechanical deficiencies such as the ratio of strength between the quadriceps and hamstrings groups. (Hamstrings tend to overpower quadriceps in distance runners.)

When all the research is examined, it is safe to claim that weight training is likely to improve your running, while it has never been found to detract from your performance. Now that I have sold you on its benefits, here is some practical advice on what to do and how to do it.

Part Two--Weight Training Advice and Programming for the Runner
There are several different types of resistance training equipment available in your local fitness club--free weights, Universal systems, Nautilus, Cam Systems, etc. They use different types of resistance, e.g., air pressure, fluid resistance, friction, pulleys, gravity, etc. Which of these is best? It does not matter--as long as you are pushing or pulling against resistance and overloading the muscle, you will gain strength.

Ideally, a combination of modes is best so try using a mix of free-weights and fixed machine equipment. Your workouts should only last about 45 minutes to an hour, including warm-up time and stretching.

How do we go about improving our strength? We must overload our muscles with a resistance that is slightly more than we are used to. This should not be increased every workout, but every few workouts or weeks.

General sequencing strategies include using multiple-joint exercises before single-joint exercises. Work your large muscle groups before small muscle groups. This way you will not pre- fatigue your small muscles, which would make it more difficult to work the larger ones later. Do heavy weight training exercises that require greater force before lighter exercises, for the same reason.

If you can manage three to four workouts with weights each week, I would recommend a split workout, where you alternate exercising the upper body with the legs and trunk. To achieve balance between muscle groups, alternate pushing exercises with pulling exercises on the opposite side of the body.

Other General Advice for the Weight Training Novice
Avoid holding your breath as you do each repetition. Breathing out as you exert force, and in as you perform the lowering part of each exercise, will ensure your blood pressure does not get too high.

If you must do running and weight training in the same workout, do your weights first, followed by your running. Where possible, alternate days of running and weight training. Some research has shown this to be the easiest solution to avoiding the clash between exercising the aerobic and anaerobic systems.

How many sets of each exercise should you do? The controversy between exercise scientists rages over this issue. Some say three sets of each exercise, some say two, and some say one. Many studies have shown that one set achieves similar strength gains as two or three sets. One research paper even found that people doing two sets of each exercise gained less strength than those doing one set. If you find doing weights to be a chore, then stick to one maximal set of 8 to 12 repetitions. Make sure that you could not have forced even one more rep by your 10th or 11th rep. When you can do 12 repetitions comfortably, increase the weight.

The advantage of doing one set of each exercise is that it only takes one-third the time you would spend doing three sets of each exercise. The advantage of doing three sets is that you will burn three times as many calories as doing one set, so if weight loss is your goal, go for more sets.

Other good advice for beginners includes using a spotter or partner to assist you with your last reps, and to provide encouragement. Never lift weights in bare feet; dropping a 10 lb weight on your foot will put you out of running for the rest of the season. When doing standing exercises, spread your feet about 18" apart for a good base of support. Curl your thumbs so they oppose your four fingers around the bar when lifting weights--this way the bar will not slip out of your hands and squash you.

Perform weight exercises for your legs as well as upper body. Perform your repetitions slowly, with a two to three second count on the lift, and three to four second count on the lowering phase. Finally, if you have lower back problems, wear a weight belt for support.

Here is a list of strength training exercises that should be included in a runner's program. Rather than describe each exercise, I recommend you find a good personal trainer at your club and have him or her put you through this program for the first few weeks to perfect your technique, until you are ready to go it alone.

Upper Body: bench press, seated row, lat pull down, overhead press, chin-ups, bicep curl, tricep extension or dips, sit-ups.

Lower Body and Trunk: leg press, hamstring curl, leg extension, 4-way hip machine (flexion, extension, adduction and abduction), sit-ups, back extensions.

The goal of this overview of the benefits of strength training for the distance runner is to get you into the gym to start a program. If you stay with it you will find your running improving within a few weeks. After doing this program for a month or two, ask your personal trainer to change some of the exercises so your neuromuscular system will continue to be stimulated and get stronger.

Roy Stevenson has a master's degree in coaching and exercise physiology from Ohio University. He has coached hundreds of serious and recreational runners in the Seattle area. He is ACSM, NSCA, and ACE certified, and is an instructor in the Physical Education department at Highline Community College.


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