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Friday, December 27, 2013

Runners: Open the door to getting better.




Chris Shah
Owner, Fitness Coach










Hit the ground with your feet moving is a great catch phrase. So is practice makes perfect. But our knowledge of how our bodies optimally function and how our brain learns have greatly increased.

With that increase in knowledge we have now updated catch phrases.

In the breakthrough book, The Talent Code, Daniel Coyle
clearly demonstrates that “Practice doesn’t make perfect”, the mantra of the best performers and coaches is “perfect practice makes perfect.”

Part of that “Perfect practice” is learning and correcting your mistakes or inefficiencies. Simply going through the motions is the mediocre performer’s battle cry. You’re here to get better right?





The best runners in the world have many things in common; mainly efficiency of movement. They expend far less energy than most runners.

  • Their running stride is optimal
  • Their Tissue quality is optimal
  • Their hip and ankle mobility is adequate
  • Their hip and core stability transfers optimal energy into the ground
                                             
With the runners I work with they have all increased there PR times using the preceding principles and forthcoming warm- up methods.

Most runners don’t do anything to prepare their body for running and the result is less efficiency and increased chance of breakdown and pain. This is simply going through the motions… BOOOO!

“What separates the elite runner from the recreational jogger- is not simply a natural gift or mental toughness” Says World Renowned Olympic Endurance Coach Mark Verstegen, “as much as the mastery of an efficient system that allows the body to cover more ground and get more out of each stride or stroke.”


Imagine a race car team just bringing out their car from the garage to race without checking to see if tires are in alignment, power steering is on, brake pads and gas work? CRAZY!

Well this (Your body) is the only car you will ever have and it has equivalents to tires and power steering. It takes a few minutes and will take time off your running so it’s a win-win for the SMART person who values getting BETTER!

  WHY and Consequences of your system

·       Poor tissue quality = quicker breakdown and pain.
·       Sub-optimal stride = less ground covered/ slower times
·       Poor hip mobility= back pain/ knee pain and energy leaks
·       Poor Ankle mobility = knee pain and calve issues
·       Poor core stability = MORE energy leaks/weaker strides


Let’s get you to stop the mediocre battle cry and treat your only body like a high performance sports car.


When to perform A1-A5? Right before you run
How Long? Takes no more than 3-5 min

A1- Tennis ball (Runners Tooth Brush) foot rolls

A1- Tennis ball









Purpose:

  • To improve tissue quality throughout the entire back side of your body.
  • Better Tissue quality means your feet will absorb foot impact more efficiently.
  • It also increases your flexibility. Runners Tooth Brush


Setup:

  • Take your shoes off, and place a tennis ball on the ground. Place the sole of one foot on the tennis ball.

Performance:

  • Put the majority of your weight on the foot with the ball underneath, and roll the ball back and forth for 30-60 seconds each foot.

A2- Single – Leg Bridge 

Start 
End
 Purpose:

  • To improve hip extension, gluteal function and learn the difference between hip motion and spine motion. This means less energy leaks.



Setup:  

  • Lie on your back with your arms at your sides, knees bent and feet flat on the floor. Pull one leg towards your chest.

Performance:

  • Tense your abs and squeeze your gluts to initiate the movement.
  • Drive through your heel and push your hips towards the sky.
  • Hold top position 10 seconds for 3 reps on each foot.
  • Insider tip, if you feel this in either your back or hamstrings you have an energy leak and means this is the same faulty strategy you are using when your foot strikes the ground during running. If you fix it, your run times will decrease Guaranteed!

“Should I continue doing the exercise if I do feel it in my back or hamstrings?” “YES!” “You need to regress this to two legs on the ground”


Over the years, I have decreased run times with runners countless times just from plugging up energy leaks

  
A3- Wall Ankle Mobs

A3- Start

A4-End











Purpose:
  • To improve the mobility of your ankle joint. We need a mobile ankle for optimal knee health and

Setup:

  • Stand facing a wall, with the toes of one foot directly up against the wall. Stand up tall, and place your hands on the wall for support.

Performance:

  • Place the weight on your front heel approximately 3-4 inches away from the wall, and gently glide the knee forward, touching the wall. Make sure to keep your heel on the ground. Pulse in and out of this position several times.

If you can touch the wall, move the heel slightly back a half inch and repeat the pulse.

A4- Leg Swings

A4- Start
A4-Middle
A4-End





















Purpose:
  
  • Improve the mobility of your hip. We need a mobile hip for optimal knee and back health.

Setup:

  • Stand facing sideways to a wall, stand up tall, and place your hand on the wall for support.

Performance:  

  • Swing your leg in front of you, then behind you. Be sure to get the motion from your hip avoiding excessive low back movement. Repeat 10-15 times per leg.  

A5- Groiners

A5-start
A5-End








Purpose:

  • To improve hip movement, dissociation and glut activation.

Setup:

  • Assume a push up position.

Performance:   

  • Tense your abs and step forward with one leg on the outside of your elbow. Tense your back leg glut. TRY TO RIP YOUR PANTS. Hold for 2secs and alternate legs 10 times






Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Runners release the breaks to Ultimate fitness performance Part 1-





Chris Shah
Owner, Fitness Coach

I coach allot of runners and frankly most of you are CRAZY! (I mean that as a compliment) Steve jobs was crazy. You will wake up at UN Godley hours to run up monster hills. ….

Are you really doing everything you can to become a better runner?

Imagine you’re a high performance sports car and you boast of your running times. This is called your PERFORMANCE.
















But there is another neglected or not understood world of the systems that support your sports car (body) or enhance your ability to perform optimally. This is called your DURABILITY.  Think as Durability as resistance to wear, tear, breakdown and inefficiency. 













You want to run a half marathon, do your first pro MMA fight, tuff muddle obstacle course or simply lose weight.

First things first is to push on the gas pedal speeding to your goal right? On the surface it seems like the right plan of action.
















Image the excitement of planning a cross country road trip with your friends or family. Everyone wants to hurry up and get on the road. But not so fast! 













Will your car make the trip without breaking down?
Do we have enough money for the trip?
How much gas will we need?

What if a mechanic did a diagnostic test and found that your high performance sports car has misaligned tires, worn down brake pads, sub optimal power steering and its leaking oil? Would you ignore it?

That translates to misaligned knees, ankles, poor shock absorption, breakdown, pain, aches, poor running mechanics, poor gas mileage and SLOWER RUNNING TIMES.


 















We seem to be very logical with replaceable cars but completely missing the boat when it comes to something non replaceable “our bodies”

We have DECREASED RUNNING TIMES by paying attention to and increasing durability.
 
















When we have poor durability and continue to run or perform a fitness program Physical therapist and strength coach Gray Cook calls this PUTTING FITNESS ON TOP OF DYSFUNCTION


What limitation break do you have that needs to be released in order to maximize your training program?

Muscle tone
Flexibility
Mobility
Stability
Coordination

Strength
Power
Endurance
Skill (running, swinging, throwing ect.)

Any limitation of the first group will limit your ability to efficiently steer and control the second group. Also lots of research clearly shows us the possibility of injury or breakdown increases with such limitations. (Put reference)


NOT ALL WORKOUT ROUTINES ARE CREATED EQUAL


To better illustrate this point and why one workout routine will not produce the same results with another person I introduce you to the Optimum performance pyramids. – Grey Cook



The Optimum pyramid the athlete has a nice wide base of functional movement.
This athlete has optimum mobility and stability to control and steer their power, endurance and skill.  














The over-powered pyramid the athlete does not have adequate Functional movement (mobility and stability) to optimal control and steer their power, endurance and skill. They have breaks on.








Who cares? If you care about longevity, injury and optimum performance you will. If you care about quicker running times you should. Without a nice wide base of mobility and stability your injury or breakdown potential greatly increases.

When you have a narrow base of functional movement you have to exert more energy as well as waste more energy. This means you Fatigue faster.

One fitness program will not get the same results with two different people who exhibit different performance pyramids and needs. 

When someone has breaks on it’s like those old school light bulbs. They light up your room but waste energy that translates into poor efficiency. In running efficiency is the name of the game.  


















BUT! …………………………

When you release the Breaks you are like the new more efficient light bulbs that do the job even better and are far more energy and money efficient.

 



Our bodies operate in very much the same manner. It’s what separates a good runner from an elite runner.

The best runners are very energy efficient with few or no breaks.








The runners with breaks on (limitations in mobility, stability) are leaking energy like a water hose with a hole.
That means less energy or force being pushed into the ground along with slower run times and more physical exertion.






“ Some runners assume their mechanics are not bad, but perhaps they’re only looking at specific running mechanics with little consideration of the fundamental mobility and stability … that’s supports running mechanics. “ Grey cook- Movement



Congrats to Jessica Stone who improved her durability and recently finished FIRST overall in the Pacifica Education 5k fun run. 




TAKE HOME MESSAGE

Combine pushing on the gas peddle and finding and releasing the breaks of performance.  

In part 2- Of the series I will go over specific assessments to see if you have any breaks holding back ultimate performance.

About the author: Chris Shah is the founder and head Fitness Coach of Terra Nova Fitness in Pacifica. He received his mentorship through Legendary Strength and conditioning Coach Mike Boyle of the Boston Red sox and US Olympic Woman’s 2013 world hockey champions.