MIHP Think Tank Brainstorms… Movement Training Specialists

15May/110

Strength Training the Endurance Athlete

This strength training blog will be delivered in a series over the next week and geared toward the runner, triathlete and walker. I hope this series will leave you with a handful of exercises to maintain strength through your season.  However, a biomechanical assessment of your individual needs should be considered at the conclusion of your season so that you are able to make optimal use of your off-season time to improve specific strengths.

The first exercise of this series is the Leg Press.  Those who have worked with me or other MIHP staff in the past, know our lack of love for any machine training, but I often recognize the need that individuals have for that "burn" they get from machine training.  The beauty of the leg press is that you are able to produce a co-contraction of the leg muscles vs an isolated contraction that the knee extension or leg curl machine  offer.  In function, the leg muscles never work independent of each other, they must rely on the stabilizing muscles to do their jobs so that they can contract correctly at the right times.

The runner and walker need to emphasize strengthening the  hip stabilizers called on in a single -legged stance or narrow base stance (glute medius and maximus). The cyclist need to consider strengthening of this same muscle group, as the over-use of their quads and calf muscles often predispose them to an injury.

My leg-press prescription is to perform this exercise in a "shallow" fashion and single legged.  Meaning you will come from a fully extended position of the knee to only 30-45 degrees of knee bend.  I prefer a sled-fashion machine where the platform is non moving, however you can still perform this exercise on the machine with a moving platform. Initiate this exercise by placing your feet approximately hip width apart on the platform.  Choose a weight that is going to be challenging (probably over 40# for most).  Your feet should be placed high enough on the platform that the knees are bent only 90 degrees.  Push yourself out using both legs to a fully extended position, before dropping one leg off the platform.  Proceed to lower yourself no further than 30-45 degrees of knee bend and back out.  Repeat 15-20 reps on one leg before placing your other leg back on the platform to return yourself to the starting position and repeating on the other leg.  Your resistance should be heavy enough that you are left feeling fatigued at the end of the set  (like you couldn't do two more reps).  The burn should be centered in the glute, hamstrings and hip area greater than the quad burn felt with a traditional leg press.  Begin with 3 sets and progress to 3 sets of 15-20 reps 3x per week.

24Nov/093

Fire up the glutes!

I really don’t mean to keep picking on Men’s Health Magazine, but I just can’t help it.  I guess it’s because it’s the only fitness magazine that comes to my house, and I really enjoy reading it.  So, as I was perusing the December 2009 issue, I came across an article entitled “Work Your Buns Off”.  My heart started to pound.  Yes, an article about firing the glutes!  Under the title, it reads, “Too much junk in the trunk?  Here’s how to make your gluteus or maximus”.  Clever and inviting!

It’s actually a very good article describing how most people’s glutes “forget how to fire”.  So true! We see that every day.  When I got to the exercise portion, it left me a little flat (like a lot of peoples’ butts).  Anyway, the article describes nine different exercises.  SEVEN of them are in the sagittal plane and the other two in the frontal plane. All of the exercises are good for getting the glute max to initially fire, however, they need to be trained how they are used.  Since our bodies move in THREE planes of motion, with the transverse plane being the most used in normal movement, you would think there would be at least one exercise in that plane.  Plus, when you train in the sagittal and frontal plane and then move and play in the transverse plane, you are setting yourself up for an injury.

A great exercise to work the glute max in the tranverse plane is a simple lunge with a twist.  To do this exercise, stand with your feet shoulders width apart with your toes pointed straight ahead.  Step forward and slightly out to the side with your right foot into the lunge position.  Be sure that your knee does not move forward over your toes and does not “fall in or out”.  Keep your back straight.  As you lunge, twist your torso to the right as you reach with your left hand toward your right foot.  Push up from the right foot back to the starting position.  Repeat this motion ten times and then do it on the left leg.

A:L lunge w: opp reach2

Make sure you feel the glutes (butt muscles) working, because you know, “it’s almost always about the butt!” (Sherry McLaughlin, MSPT)

'til next time......