메뉴 건너뛰기

본문시작

조회 수 5860 추천 수 0 댓글 0
?

단축키

Prev이전 문서

Next다음 문서

크게 작게 위로 아래로 댓글로 가기 인쇄
?

단축키

Prev이전 문서

Next다음 문서

크게 작게 위로 아래로 댓글로 가기 인쇄

How Best to Combine Strength Training and Running

Hard running workouts hampered the day after leg strength training.

Published
February 24, 2014
LegPress

Many runners now accept that they'll perform and feel better if they do more than just run. That's especially true for people who took up the sport as adults and whose non-running hours include a lot of sitting. Regular strength training, including for your legs, can help to correct muscle imbalances and weaknesses that are common in modern life.

At the same time, many runners struggle with how to schedule their various workouts. After all, strength training is supposed to help, not detract from your running. New research out of Australia offers guidance on how best to combine mile repeats and repetitions in the gym.

Fifteen runners of a wide range of ability and average weekly mileage did different strength-training sessions on three occasions. One workout was a high-intensity whole-body session, one high-intensity but for legs only, and one was low-intensity, whole-body. Six hours after each workout, they did a treadmill test of 10 minutes running at 70% of  ventilatory threshold pace (easy), then 10 minutes at 90% of threshold pace (roughly, close to half marathon pace), and then as long as possible at 110% of threshold pace. The runners also did the treadmill test at the outset of the study, to get a benchmark for how they would perform when fresh.

The high-intensity strength workouts significantly lessened the runners' time to exhaustion at the end of the treadmill test. In the benchmark test, they'd lasted an average of close to 5 minutes at 110% of threshold pace. After each of the high-intensity strength sessions, time to exhaustion was almost a minute less, suggesting that the hard weight workouts six hours earlier had dramatically decreased the runners' ability to sustain fast running.

The lead researcher, Kenji Doma, Ph.D., of James Cook University, toldRunner's World Newswire his findings have practical implications for how runners should arrange their workouts.

First, Doma advises, don't schedule a hard running workout later in the day of a weight session. "Running at maximal effort is impaired six hours [after] lower-extremity resistance training, and therefore trained to moderately trained runners will need more than that to recover for running sessions set at high intensities," he says.

In addition, "running at maximal effort is still impaired 24 hours after lower-extremity resistance training," Doma says. "Therefore, in the case of trained and moderately trained runners undertaking high-intensity running sessions after lower-extremity resistance training, they may need more than one day to recover."

Second, Doma found that running performance at lower intensities was unaffected by the weight workouts. "Runners could undertake strength training and running sessions on the same day six hours apart as long as the running session is set at submaximal intensities," Doma says.

If possible, Doma says, try to arrange your schedule so that on days that you run and lift, running comes first.

"I found that lower-extremity resistance training performed six hours prior to running sessions at moderate to high intensities cause carryover effects of fatigue the next day to a greater extent than the reverse sequence," he says. "Therefore, if undertaking lower-extremity resistance training and running sessions on the same day, it is best to undertake a running session before a strength-training session, for example, running in the morning before work and lower-extremity resistance training in the evening after work."

In this scenario, it would make sense to have that morning run be one of your harder workouts of the week. Your workout the following day would then be an easy recovery run, which would be warranted even without the evening lifting, but is that much more called for on the basis of Doma's research. This sequence would also mesh with many coaches' recommendation to have great discrepancy between your hard and easy days, so that you can better recover from your toughest workouts, instead of including hard elements of non-running training on your easy running days.


List of Articles
번호 제목 글쓴이 날짜 조회 수
공지 달리기 초보자를 위한 계획표. 3 이재홍 2014.11.10 5406
공지 올바른 달리기 의 기본(초보자는 물론 중급이상도 참고하실 수 있습니다) 1 이재홍 2014.11.10 3589
공지 러닝화(running shoes)추천... 3 David Yoo 2012.10.15 4743
70 페어필드 하루전 (The Day Before Fairfield) 1 David Yoo 2012.06.23 735
69 추운날씨 팔스리브 사용하세요 1 David Yoo 2012.10.23 889
68 천천히 뛰시면 부상안나요 (Slow and Steady = No Injury) 3 David Yoo 2012.06.27 874
67 주말, 마라톤 할 때 무릎 부상 조심하세요 :조선 정혜경 2013.12.07 2073
66 좋은 컨디션으로 꾸준히 운동하려면 이것을 지켜라:월스트리트저널 1 정혜경 2014.09.02 1900
65 족저근막염: 중앙 1 정혜경 2014.11.18 1159
64 일요일 훈련 과 센트를 팍 마라톤 자원봉사 2 David Yoo 2013.02.24 705
63 운동 전엔 꼭 아킬레스 스트레칭 1 조앤김 2014.05.09 3660
62 운동 많이 한다고 마음대로 먹어도 될까?:월스트리트저널 2 정혜경 2014.03.29 951
61 스피드 훈련과 인터벌 훈련의 목적:서울마라톤 saturn1218 2013.09.11 2957
60 사진] 마라톤 완주 男 ‘셀프 마사지라도…’:중앙 정혜경 2014.03.01 1520
59 무릎통증-장경인대 증후군 :인터넷 5 정혜경 2013.12.05 4611
58 무릎이 아프다. 운동을 해야할까? 쉬어야할까?:러닝라이프 1 정혜경 2013.12.07 51151
57 무릎 바깥쪽 통증:중앙 정혜경 2014.10.11 1987
56 마라톤을위한 훈련 10 Tips For Running In The Cold 5 정준영 2014.02.08 82670
55 마라톤을 위한 훈련 5-- 바른 자세 for 12/2013 1 정준영 2013.12.07 2049
54 마라톤을 위한 훈련 4- Tapering , 11월 첫 토달 퀸스모임에서 나눈 정보 5 정준영 2013.11.03 4495
53 마라톤을 위한 훈련 3--음식, 퀸스 2013, 10 5 1 정준영 2013.10.31 3006
52 마라톤을 위한 운동 2 ( 트레이닝의 종류와 방법):Jay Jung 2 saturn1218 2013.09.16 1842
Board Pagination Prev 1 2 3 4 Next
/ 4