Creating Bomber Calves & Hamstrings to Support Pain-Free Running

How I Spent My Summer Vacation, few years back

It’s been a fun summer of pain-free running. My blog, linked, is how I got back into a slow, and very satisfying, run groove.

Recently, I’ve been managing common niggles. My niggles were a reminder that it’s much easier to prevent injury, than treat one.

The niggles stayed minor because I never ran through pain, and shut down immediately when I started to tighten up.


Previously, I shared my Hamstring Protocol (Google Doc) for a return to activity.

From the protocol:

  1. Reduce the stress that’s hurting you
  2. Reduce long periods of sitting
  3. Remember: if you are constantly injured then you need to change your overall lifestyle

Time to consolidate and follow my own advice.


Goals:

  • Enough stress to make progress
  • Not so much stress we trigger injury

This means we need to reduce stress while we strengthen our weak points.

For nutrition, it is the exact same advice to lose body fat. Drop stress before moving forward.

If we layer on additional stress, while seeking change, not going to make it.


I’m going to run you through to components of my program:

  1. Daily Habits
  2. Damage Limitation Strategies
  3. The Cycle of Injury
  4. Strengthening Prior To A Return to Loading

Daily Habit of Mobility Work

10 minutes per day, minimum, every day.

It’s done wonders for me.

  1. Hip Progression (PDF Link)
  2. Daily Barefoot Flexibility Routine (Video Link)

I also added the Couch Stretch (Video link) as it helped balance my increased time on the bike.


Damage Limitation Strategies

As soon as you feel tightness…

Stop making things worse and…

Get eccentric load into the problem area!

In my case:

Both of these provide relief faster than rest alone.

Relief doesn’t mean I’m ready to return to the cycle that caused the issue in the first place.


The Cycle of Injury

My issues arrive via : (a) equipment; and (b) load.

My hamstring issue came from my bike position. My saddle was too far back.

Easy fix => acute phase exercises combined with position change

My calf issue had a source in my training load. Here, I want to share a lesson from an Orthopedic Surgeon buddy…

Overuse injuries take six weeks to form

So it’s not the workout where you noticed the issue… it is much more likely the six weeks of training that occurred prior to the issue.

In my case:

  • Uphill bounding (20s efforts)
  • Uphill sprints (5-8s efforts)
  • Bike sprints (5-30s efforts)

All of the above are stressful on my calves, particularly after years of not running.

Another heuristic passed down to me:

A tight muscle is a weak muscle

Before any of us progress to injury, there is tightness. Often chronic tightness that doesn’t go away with dedicated mobility work.

Time to strengthen!


Strengthen Prior To A Return To Loading

Autumn is the ideal time to address a weakness, likely to cause injury as soon as we seek to ramp load in the Spring!

Again, whatever your long term limiter happens to be (technique, body composition, emotional stability, finances, posterior chain)… NOW IS THE TIME

I asked my Twitter Pals for help and they came up with a solid range of suggestions (Thread Link)

  1. Single-leg deadlifts (weighted & unweighted)
  2. Jump Rope (too advanced for me, right now)
  3. Foot-elevated Calf Raises (Video Link)
  4. Double Leg Pogos (2 x 20) (Patrick’s Tweet has a vid)
  5. Reverse Lunges (torso over hip)
  6. Front Squats (heels elevated, vertical torso)
  7. Vibration Gun
  8. Self-Massage

To these, I would add:

Biomechanical Challenges, specific to running:

  • Rate of loading – even a slow jog has faster loading than many traditional gym movements
  • Lower leg loading across the footstrike – often as the arch collapses
  • Hamstring loading as the leg swings forward

The challenges are addressed by the plyometric component of the program.

Drop load when you add plyometrics AND always add plyometrics gradually. They are strong medicine.

The suggestions split themselves into three categories

Post-Run

  • Daily Mobility Routine
  • Self-Massage
  • Vibration Gun

Strength Routine

  1. Unweighted Single-leg Deadlifts
  2. Reverse Lunges (torso over hip)
  3. Front Squats (heels elevated, vertical torso)
  4. Hinge Lift

Plyometric Routine

  1. Foot-elevated calf raises
  2. Double Leg Pogos
  3. Mini-Blasters

Most of us will need to split the strength routine away from the plyometric routine. When I combine, I find the fatigue is a bit like 2+2=5.

Where to start depends on what you’ve been doing for the last six weeks. I’ve been slowly developing overuse injuries… 

If you haven’t been strength training then you’ll need to come in very gently.

With the mini-blasters, each cycle takes a minute and I take a minute between cycles. Five rounds, when combined with the rest of my program, proved more than I could handle!

Here’s my plan:

  1. 1-2 sets of each exercise
  2. Split Strength Away from Plyometrics
  3. Do each program once every ~10 days
  4. Repeat for ~60 days

With every intervention, the first “little bit” has the highest return. This is particularly important with respect to mobility work.

Finally, powerwalk the first ten minutes of every single run workout.

Both of these are Google Docs.


I put the key bits of the program into a Google Doc for you.

Sunday Summary 26 June 2022

Top Threads

  1. Dead Simple Nutrition
  2. Three Part, Submax Bike Benchmarking Workout
  3. Using the benchmark data – How To Endurance
  4. Extreme Plyo – drops (read comments!)
  5. Johan and I work on Swedish Article Readiness Test (SART)

Working Out

High-Performance Habits

How To Build A Summer Training Program for Fit Teens and Athletic Kids

“Yes, Sweetie, that’s me”

Last month, my daughter was asked:

Do you have a Dad?

In Boulder, that’s a loaded question.

She smiled and said, “Yes, I have a Dad.”


The question has come up before.

I stay invisible around my kids’ sports.

I do this with intention.

I want them…

  • to be INTERNALLY motivated
  • to keep our RELATIONSHIP separate from their athletic success, or otherwise
  • to INTERACT with them – I’m a player, not a spectator

Living in a town that places excessive glory on sport, my actions:

  1. Support Internal Motivation
  2. Lower Athletic Stakes
  3. Focus on Shared Experiences

My daughter put me in a bind when she asked me to coach her.


Top Five Hug, all-time, right there

Remember my advice to place the RELATIONSHIP ahead of performance

In January, we started a simple program – 20 minutes, done every Sunday, I’m not in the room

This went well – she loved it

For the summer, I asked myself…

What do we want to achieve?

  • For next season => get off the wall FAST
  • Over the next 1,000 days => set up capacity to go heavy at 16 yo

I came up with three 20-minute sessions per week:

  1. Continue the dryland program
  2. Street sprints
  3. Gym skill development & personal limiter mobility work

Let’s look at each

DRYLAND => keep what’s working, an all-around program she enjoys => good enough


Uphill is an effective place to coach speedy run form
AND
Bio-mechanically safer than other alternatives

SPRINTS => to get her off the wall FAST => choose an activity with close to max lower body recruitment

Uphill, street sprints – with casual walk downs

This tweet from Gerry explains more – it was a reminder of techniques we used in New Zealand.

Review & consider Gerry’s graphics – Hierarchy of Sports Performance and Motor Unit Recruitment

To set up the street sprints, she’s doing intramural track right now.


What’s your pleasure?
80#, 60# and 15#

SKILLS => with ~8 swims a week, street sprints and dryland… plenty of load.

A 1:1 session gives me a chance to assess her fatigue while teaching:

  • Squat Variations
  • Cleans (I have a 20# “kid” bar)
  • Sandbag Variations (I have a 15# “kid” bag)
  • Hip flexor openings
  • Eccentric rehab techniques

Let’s pull together the key points:

  • KEEP what works
    • maintain the sport-specific schedule from last summer
    • her load is increasing naturally by getting faster
    • she’s enjoying the 20-minute dryland from YouTube
  • Train general SKILLS – often missed at the sport-specific level
  • PICK ONE thing that would make a difference
  • RAMP LOAD GRADUALLY

Be patient – three summers until she’s 16.

As AC/DC remind us, it is a long way to the top (if you wanna to rock ‘n’ roll).

🤟