Seriously.
Right now.
It is a horrible idea.
(N.B.
throughout this article, I am referring to static stretching and
stretching that approaches the limit of a muscle's extension, before a
major effort. Light, active "stretching" which more or less mimics the
actions you plan on doing is a different thing.)
We
have been told for years to stretch before running. As runners gather
around before a run they sometimes nervously stretch. God forbid that
they be caught doing nothing. People will think they aren't a real
runner. (Sort of like the person coming in to the finish line at a 6
minute sprint when their overall pace will be 11 minutes.We can do the
math. It's cool that you are slower.) Before a race, as the nervous
energy kick in, people start doing stretches they haven't done in a
decade. They push against poles and vehicles. They grab their leg and
pull their shoe up to their quad. They more or less are not only not
doing anything beneficial but they are probably doing a great deal of
harm. (I cannot tell you how much I hate this stretch, if only because
anytime
I did a news story the photographer would ask me to do that for the
pictures. I used to oblige. Now I tell them to take a shot of me
running.)
But
what do I know? I haven't stretched since the year began 19xx. My 150th
marathon is in 10 days and the only injuries I have had stem from
bicycle crashes. Go right ahead and ignore me. However, ignoring science
might be a bad thing. What science? Oh, you know, basically all of it.
Read this fella's blog for all kinds of sciency stuff. He echoes or is saying many of the things I have said for years.
Why
am I telling you this? Because my goal has not been about getting
people to run. Motivating people for brief periods of time for specific
goals is fairly easy. My goal is to keep people running. The
best way to keep someone doing something is to make it enjoyable and
make it safe for them o do. If they are injured, they are not going to
want to run. Plain and simple. (This also goes to the point of streak
running but that is another day's article.)
So many
runners continue to think that flexibility is the key to being a good
runner. They are wrong. For our sport the key is to keep everything
going in a forward motion. Our need for lateral motion is very little,
even for trail runners.The most efficient runners, especially as the
distance gets longer are those who exerted the least effort to maintain a
pace. Those runners are often the stiffest, or not at all that
flexible.
Knee injuries, almost never caused by running,
are however often caused when the ligaments are loose and allow the
knee to slide and grind. Guess how ligaments get loose. Go ahead. I'll
wait. (It's in the title of this article.)
Yet people continue to stretch. They also continue to smoke/chew tobacco and drink alcohol
in spite of the overwhelming evidence for how bad those things are for
the human body, so I guess I shouldn't be surprised. However, I hope
this will help drive home the point that stretching is not only
overrated but detrimental to your success as a long-term, healthy
endurance runners. (Same as ice baths. Again, another article.)
So
stay tight, warm-up appropriately before your running with some light
jogging or other aerobic activity, and leave the stretching for the
Armstrongs. (Google it, you damn millennials.)
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