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This Month's Magazine

Stand Winter Fitness on its Head

Its time to change the mindset. The opportunities to train outdoors will be limited over the next few months. This month we address fitness from two perspectives — Setting sport specific goals and using a fitness ball to stay in shape. In addition, you'll find the Metro Detroit Ski Council Ski Guide inside, filled with a ski club directory, a bunch of trips to try and information on skiing safely.

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Inspiration Leads to Gratitude, and More Inspiration

I just received a reminder to be grateful for the life I have and teh business I'm in.

On the Anniversary of being named the Subaru Athlete of the Year in our magazine in 2007, Mandi Tuite sent me an e-mail listing the things the award inspired her to accomplish.

It's an impressive list. Not only because of what is on it, but because last year Mandi was just beginning life as a cancer survivor.

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Weight Training for Runners

There are several different types of resistance training equipment available to you in your local fitness club—free weights, Universal systems, Nautilus, Cam Systems, etc. They use different types of resistance: air pressure, fluid resistance, friction, pulleys, free weights, etc.
Which of these is best? It doesn’t matter. As long as you’re pushing or pulling against resistance and overloading the muscle you’ll gain strength.

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Get Your Off-Road Nutrition. . . Without Falling off the Bike

Off-road nutrition is much more of a logistical mystery than a simple road triathlon, where you can use a bento box, carry a bar of some type or use gel packets. Off-road, you can’t take your hands off the bars to reach for a package, tear it open, and eat it anytime. Try doing that on a volcano in Maui, or on the twisty, winding roots of a single track trail and you’ll soon be licking fresh wounds.

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Sprint to the Top

Written by: Chris Lundstrom
Posted: Thursday, 31 July 2008
(0 votes)

You love them one minute and hate them the next. I am talking, of course, about hills. And more specifically, hill workouts. "Doing hills" can mean a thousand things to a thousand different people. Indeed, hill workouts come in as many shapes and sizes as hills themselves. You can build aerobic strength by doing hilly long runs, improve your VO2 Max with moderately hard repeats of a minute or longer, or learn the limits of your body by doing fartlek runs on a hilly course.

But this month, we're talking about speed.

We'd all like to be fast. Or at least faster. We'd love to possess the ability to accelerate down the final straightaway, sprinting by rivals with effortless, beautiful running form. But when most of us attempt to change gears, we feel more like a rusty hinge than a well-oiled machine.

Enter hill sprints. The following workout is designed to build power, strength, and improve running form. All of this translates into not only faster sprinting down the home stretch, but also greater efficiency at all paces, which means faster race times.

Many of the greatest runners from all over the world improve their speed through some variation of this workout. Not convinced? Perhaps it may help to mention another benefit: Unlike many of the sessions done by the world's top runners, this one is not too terribly grueling. In other words, a small investment of time and energy can lead to a great payoff.

Hill sprints consist of short, fast sprints up a sharp gradient. The high intensity effort stimulates the brain to recruit muscle fibers that may remain dormant during other types of training. In addition, the resistance of the hill forces runners to adapt their technique to attain greater knee lift and arm action, both of which are essential to faster running.

To do this workout properly, you will need to find yourself a steep hill. It can be quite short, as you will only be sprinting up it for 10-12 seconds at a time. If the hill is longer than that, no problem. Just choose a finishing point somewhere around that 10-12 second point.

Before beginning, warm up thoroughly in order to minimize injury risk. Do the first repeat at 80 percent effort, the second at 90 percent, and the third at 95 percent. Do the rest as fast as possible-near 100 percent intensity-while still maintaining good running form. It may feel awkward to run so fast at first, but over time, your best running form will emerge, and you will start to resemble that well-oiled machine you always dreamed of being.

The idea of running as fast as possible can be intimidating, but remember that each repeat lasts only 10-12 seconds. Just about the time you start to feel fatigued, you will stop and take a nice break. Because the repeats are so short, your body will be able to use stored energy in your muscles (the ATP-CP system), rather than relying upon the lactate system, which leads to the accumulation of all sorts of nasty, fatigue-causing by-products in your muscles and bloodstream.

During each sprint, focus on driving your arms and lifting your knees powerfully with each stride. Between repetitions, walk down the hill to your starting point. Take a minute or more of rest between repeats, making sure that you have caught your breath and are feeling good before you go again. Taking adequate rest is essential to maintaining the very high intensity of the sprints.

I recommend starting with about 5 repeats in your first session, and building up to 15 or 20 per session over a period of weeks. This workout should be done about once a week, with excellent results coming after just a few sessions. You may be just a few hill sprints away from a speedier you.

Chris Lundstrom, M.Ed., is a two-time Olympic trials marathon qualifier and a Team USA Minnesota athlete. He teaches in the School of Kinesiology at the University of Minnesota and coaches cross-country, Nordic skiing, and track and field at St. Paul Como High School.

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Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved.