5 Easy Ways for Runners
to Recover Between Training Sessions
In order to improve as an athlete you need to make rest and
recovery a key part of your training schedule. Yet most beginning
and intermediate runners tend to neglect this, and unfortunately
pay the consequences in the form of a soft-tissue injury,
or a general feeling of overtiredness.
So, how do elite athletes maintain schedules of a hundred
miles a week full of intense training? Because it is training
like this that gets them to the top, and keeps them there.
Often they are one or two sessions away from an injury, but
they know from experience when to take it easy.
Here's five easy ways to recover between training sessions,
and make the improvements you desire without getting injured:
1) Treat rest and recovery as seriously as you take the rest
of your training. Don't be tempted to do another training
session when you have got a day's rest scheduled.
2) Stretch both before and after a run. Many authorities
recommend stretching mainly after your training sessions,
but to neglect stretching before running will put you at a
greater risk of injury. Don't wait until you get injured to
realize the importance of stretching.
3) Use ice and cold water. Elite athletes like the women's
marathon world record holder, Paula Radcliffe, take regular
ice baths before and after hard sessions or races. You do
not have to go this far, but the regular use of ice or cold
water can help to ease any muscular aches and pains.
One recommendation is to hold an ice pack to a troublesome
joint for ten minutes, then allow it to warm up again for
an hour. Then reapply the ice for another ten minutes. You
can also alternate hot and cold water on your leg in the shower.
This can help your legs recover after a hard session.
4) Vary your training. Variety adds spice to your running,
as it does the rest of your life. So, vary the speeds at which
you run. Perhaps twice a week you can run fast-- do structured
speed sessions with your local running club, for example.
But, you cannot run fast every day. To recover for your next
hard training session you need to run slowly, as well as take
days off.
You don't want to be always running with the same people
either. If you always run in a pack you are more likely to
get injured as you will get drawn into running faster than
you would like. Vary your training partners, and run on your
own as well as this will help you to listen to your body.
5) Listening to your body is probably your best defence against
overtraining and injury. This takes practice so don't be surprised
if you DO get injured a few times before you realize when
to take it easy, and when to train hard.
If you follow these five guidelines you will recover better
between training sessions, avoid injury, and become a better
runner.
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