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Loss Weight - Make It With Natural Products
Nearly 66,5 percent of all adults in the United States are
overweight, and 30.5 percent are obese. Overweight refers to an
excess of body weight compared to set standards. The excess
weight may come from muscle, bone, fat, and/or body water....
Live Longer By Exercising - Part 1
The goal of this article is answer the question "why do we
exercise?"
Now, I know what you're all thinking: we exercise to lose fat so
we can look good! To be honest, that's the reason why most of us
exercise, and there's nothing wrong with...
How To Get Started On A Healthy Lifestyle
How many times have you gone to sleep at night, swearing you'll
go to the gym in the morning, and then changing your mind just
eight hours later because when you get up, you don't feel like
exercising?
While this can happen to the best of...
Fat Burning Workout
To succeed with an aerobic fat burning workout or cardiovascular
exercise fitness program, you need to pay attention to the
following issues
* The frequency at which you perform the workout
* The intensity of your workout
* your...
Are You Working Out Too Much?
There is a question that I would like to ask you to ask
yourself: Are you wasting too much of your valuable time by
going to the gym to lift weights?
Are you trying to convince yourself that the more time you spend
in the gym working out,...
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How To Develop A Strength Training Program To Run Faster!
Whether you are a sprinter,
middle distance, or long distance
runner, a properly executed
strength training program
will be the key to improving
your running times.
If you're a runner, you MUST
strength train correctly.
Running for distance, being
aerobic in nature, will begin
to break down good muscle
tissue. You need a strength
training program that will
keep the muscle you have,
and ultimately to build more
muscle, that will carry over
to faster running times.
Here are some tips to help
you develop a strength training
program exclusively for runners.
1. Emphasize Your Running
Muscles
You should train all of your
muscles thoroughly in any
strength training program.
The body works as a unit.
Never neglect body parts,
or favor other body parts
simply because you like to
train them. Give all of your
muscles attention, but emphasize
the ones that pertain to your
sport the most. The running
muscles, in order of importance
are: Buttocks, Thighs, Calves,
Shoulders, Chest, Back and
Arms. When you design a full-body
workout for running, try to
work the muscles in this same
order.
2. Train With Full-Body Workouts
Unless you're a bodybuilder,
you should train the full
body with each workout. A
bodybuilder who is trying
to gain a lot of muscle would
split their routine in order
to work more thoroughly on
each body part. An athlete
should use strength training
as a means to improve sports
performance. A full body routine
properly addresses the needs
of an athlete.
3. Train the Tibialis Anterior
The tibialis anterior is the
muscle on the front of the
shin. By working on this muscle,
you keep a balance with the
calves ie. the soleus and
gastrocnemius muscles. You
need to keep opposing muscles
in balance to maximize performance
and minimize injuries. The
tibialis anterior should also
be developed to minimize shin
splints. You can perform a
foot flexion exercise to work
on the T. A. muscle. If you're
serious about running and
don't have access to a foot
flexion machine, I'd suggest
you get one.
4. Emphasize Your Buttocks
Exercise
If you were asked to name
the fastest land animals,
you might say a cheetah, or
an ostrich. The interesting
thing about these animals
that run so fast, is that
they have skinny legs, but
very well developed hinds
(buttocks). The same with
humans. Any runner, sprinter,
middle, or long distance,
should emphasize exercises
that work on the buttocks
area. If you have access to
a Reverse Hyperextension machine
you can work the area directly,
with complete safety. If you
don't have one, a barbell
full squat with work just
fine.
5. Strength Train More Intensely
Than You Run
When you strength train for
running, you must strive to
perform a set until you can
no longer complete another
repetition in perfect form.
Obviously, you don't run until
you drop. That would be counter-productive,
and dangerous. Strength training
is completely different and
should be treated as such.
By strength training a muscle
to the point of momentary
muscular failure, you set
the stage for rapid strength
gains in the muscle.
6. Strength Train Slowly To
Run Faster
Any strength training exercise
should be performed slowly
and deliberately. This takes
the momentum out of the exercise,
and therefore maximizes the
amount of muscle fibers that
are stimulated. A proper cadence
when strength training should
be about 2 seconds to lift
the weight (when you contract
the muscle) and at least 4
seconds to lower the weight
(lengthen the muscle).
7. Add Weight or Repetitions
Whenever Possible
It is so important for runners
to try to add weight to an
exercise as often as possible,
or keep the weight the same
and add repetitions whenever
possible. This forces the
muscles to adapt by increasing
in strength. Runners need
to do this because the very
nature of frequent long runs
catabolizes muscle tissue.
Strength training in a progressive
fashion will help preserve
muscle, and ideally, add more
muscle and strength to run
faster, longer.
Copyright 2006 Sports Strength
About The Author
Steve Preston is a Sports
Performance Specialist in
Virginia Beach, Virginia.
He specializes in developing
sport-specific strength training
programs for athletes. He
is available for phone consultations,
and clinics. For more information
go to http://www.sports-strength.com.
He has recently developed
the Champion Strength Training
for Runners DVD program. You
can check it out at http://www.sports-strength.com/swimming.html.
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