"use the first 1, 2 or 3 km of your run for warm-up " me who only runs 4km D: Edit: So after 7 months ( with a few injuries in the middle ) I managed to run my first 10k! For those who are curious it was a pace of 5:13/km with downhills and uphills
I don't even consider my shoes broken in until I've gotten at least 500 miles on them. If you take good care of them they'll last along time. I recommend getting two pairs (or three if you're running twice a day) and rotating them.
@@meadowhaen yeah I think if you have good striking form they go way further. If you have proper dorsiflextion you theoretically don't need a ton of extra cushion in the first place
Here's a recap to properly run: 1. Have suitable running shoes. 2. Have consistent running speed over time. 3. Explore new refreshing areas when running. 4. Always land on each middle foot for balance. 5. Stick to your own running pace foremost. 6. Drink water to rehydrate yourself overtime. 7. Relax you upper body and arms when running. 8. Lift your knee more to have an efficient run. 9. Always stretch and warm up before running. 10. Rest for several minutes after you finish running.
I am surprised nothing on breathing in this list. I think getting a good breathing rhythm that matches your running pace is essential for reaching your running goals.
How ? I'm a pothead and a cigarette smoker for 17 years damaged knee and 3km is easy at 6 min pace I ran 45 km in 7 days I've run in the last 1 and a half week just started working out 3 weeks ago didnt do sports or any exercise for like 17 years haha...
In the last year of IB (12th school year) there was a 5km race at my school for everyone year 8-12 and teachers. I was never a runner and I expected to lose to most my classmates, but to my surprise at the start of the race 99% of the school ran ahead of me, including all the teachers. I knew they were all making a mistake, as I was going at the highest pace I expected myself to be able to hold, and almost everyone was going much faster. That gave me some confidence, and by the first kilometer I had already passed 90% of the school. By the halfway point I had caught up to the fastest guy, and for the rest of the race the two of us ran next to each other. I lost the sprint at the end, but had been able to keep a good pace and finished second in my school, wich is something I never expected.
I ran my 1st half marathon, (I was 63 years old) when finished I was in so much pain but not enough to stopped myself from walking to the registration table to sign up for my 2nd one. Crazy!
A tip I've found recently to prevent over striding is run with hands closer to your heart (look at video of African distance runners) instead of down by your sides (like sprinters). Helps increase cadence and forward lean and prevents over striding. Something to look into...
As someone who's coming from cycling and just bought running shoes to run for the first time, it's super hard to go easy. Lungs so go faster. Body says no.
Same here, running is so much harder on the body for me. I hope that at some point my feet are going to be strong enough that I can increase the distance and pace drastically without fearing for an injury. I run 4k for training and did a 10k so far but half marathon seems much more risky. I fear for plantar fasciitis and have some ankle pain.
Yeah cyclists are a very high risk group because you're too strong heh, basically the natural limitation in aerobic capacity just isn't there like with other new runners. You can go for long runs right away, so a lot of people get injured in their very first few runs due to the lower body musculature, joints, tendons, ligaments, fascia not being prepared for the stress. So you should probably think of your running exercise as training all the above rather than your cardiovascular system. So, go slow and steady, don't go too far, listen to any niggles and never exceed the 10% mileage increase rule. You will feel like you can break it (and you certainly have the aerobic capacity to) but that's how injuries are made. Also note that even on the absolute elite level, the total amount of time spent training is 30-50% lower for elite runners than elite cyclists, so if coming from cycling you might be used to getting a lot of hours in, and that's probably not the best idea with running at any level. So might be a good idea to treat each hour of running like 90 minutes of cycling.
@@magnusdagbro8226 thanks for the advice! I've started doing the couch to 5k thing. It's a pain following it when you have so much more to give but I guess worth it in the end.
One thing you can add to this is breathing. It's important to controll you breathing when you are going for long runs. This is something you will teach your self. Just think about it before you start and during your runing. Most people stress breath a lot when they run. You will be able run much long when you get a good breathing rhythm. Sorry for any typos :)
@@jollybkoy2046 lol opposite for me tho its like last night I went to bed super early at 8.30pm and woke at 5.30am feeling energetic resulting in a better run(5k) Feel hyper all day at work and bloody confident,but if i don't run i feel foggy/lazy legs at work its weird how we all react so differently.
Probably depends what you're doing, obviously pysical vs. sitting, yet, there also seems to be a 6 hour window (shower needs to fit into that) in which you are highly concentrated and serene, hence rather productive. Beyond that, sort of a end-of-the-working-day feeling's lurking in, which might be appropriate though.
Great tips! As a running technique coach, I would like to add bouncing too high is a common mistake and caused by running upright. Also tightening your muscles specifically your core muscles when you run is another big mistake because it affects your breathing and flow needed for running.
Guilty of "shoulders tightness" especially when racing, wasn't able to lift arms normally above shoulders after finish. Hopefully with more experience I will be more relaxed 😃 Thank you for the video!
I've been running a few times and always got shin splints and now thanks to this video I have noticed I was overstriding a lot. Now that I have corrected this I can run pain free (for the most part) thanks so much!!!
I had knee surgery after running for years. Turns out i should of been getting new sneakers and working on my form. Wish i had seen this video then thanks so much for posting more people should know this information before starting running!
@@AJ-ep9is it’s should’ve, therefore an accent thing. (obviously if they were to type long form OF Instead of HAVE then yes that’s a different story and Moronic ... and there are a lot of morons). Me thinks you’re hearing them incorrectly though 👍🏻
I fell victim to the " Too much too soon " mistake . I was increasing distance and trying to get a better pace all too quickly and I started getting shin splints . Those things are the worst . Now I can't wait to get back to running in the evenings as our lockdown rules are eased to allow evening running
Bas Bakker Honeslty I don’t even know, the fastest I’ve done a 5k is 17.22. I have done 10 more 5k races since then and stay around 17.22-17-50 constantly. I feel like I am at my genetic limitation for my height lol i usually time my laps around a track to train, i don’t count my steps.
At 62 yrs young I train not as if my muscles , especially the heart muscle is 52yrs old or 42 yrs old , but so I can be healthy enough 5 to 10 yrs from now to run .So train looking forward , not backwards . Running for health not PR'S or podiums .Same with swimming or biking . Girlfriend with 30 yrs as cardio othro rehab RN see's 50 to 70 yrs with damaged hearts, hip's knee's and back's and that is 15 patients each week that cant run anymore . 6 pairs of shoes rotating , 1 mile warm up and cool down . Time focused , not pace or miles . Started running in 1984 and triathlons in 1985, no major injuries .
Lew Ironman 1995 know someone my age that is proud of running everyday for the last five years. He has had so many injuries and is slower than five years ago. I am 58 years old been running 15 years run five days a week, one day hard run, one day long run 10 miles plus. Other days are just easy 3 to 4 miles. Day off from running I doe core workouts. Going to be running in my 80s
Ok, I am 50yrs old nd I never warm-up, I do however start off pretty easy nd a must cool-down is a large part of my run discipline...More to the point; I enjoy GTN nd follow your posts. thx so very much guys! Proudly South African
450 miles is a *very* high lowest margin for how long shoes last. Plenty of shoes, particularly at the lower end of quality/cost spectrum, will last much less than that.
He said 450-550 kilometers not miles. For reference you typical 20-30$ Avia from Amazon/Walmart will last at best 100 miles and stink from the start. While a 140$ VJ XTRM RD Pro or Inov-8 XTalon will last over 250 before you start to see wear that you should worry about.
illizard8 yes u can tell by if ur shoes are still able to grip onto the ground as well and push off, repeat. if they arent doing it well, its time for a new pair.
I think I do all the mistakes you talked about plus maybe many more. I started to run, I'm fit, comming from cycling area, but running gives me a lot of pain. Not because I'm tired, it's for sure, because I do all the possible mistakes. Thanks for sharing it. I'll try to fix them one by one. Starting with the easiest one. Warm up!
I got my ego deleted by this magnificent video. 3 weeks and half of running, I hit the 5.65 miles marker under 50 minutes. Now my right leg is kinda broken, my knees hurt, I should have been more wiser, that crazy energy I get while running, the expectation of the high, the mental fortitude. Now I know that I must be more systematic. I am going to be stretching longer and better, doing some core and leg workout to get them strong. Thanks for the video, good runs everybody!
I just got challenged to do the 'Run 5K, Donate £5 (to NHS)' challenge whilst in quarantine. I've never been a runner, and in fact, I didn't realise how much of a sedentary lifestyle I lived until AFTER I tried to do this challenge. I'm a 26 year old 6ft5 male, weighting 175lbs - I thought I was in decent shape. I went from doing no exercise to running this 5k (rather foolishly). It took me 39m 12s. All my friends completed in 20-25mins. This was the kick up the backside I needed, but enjoyed the run and I'm kind of addicted and want to improve my time!
I see this video was made some time ago but quite timeless and relevant. Back in 2016, I ran my longest race ever, the half marathon. I was so proud. A few days later I did not recover properly and pulled a muscle. It was painful to even walk. I quit running as a result for a long time. Overstriding, yes, I am 6 ft tall and prone to long strides. Got my belt for water reserves on the long runs. Lots of good pointers here, thank you!
I find running at a pace a 180 bpm works best. I have a metronome app which I listen to to set the pace. Take a short stride to go slow, open up the stride to go faster and lean more forwards from the ankle. Always at 180bpm . This is about the best bpm to maximise elastic recoil Also swing the arms in time from hip to nip. You know when you have the timing nail with your arms and legs as you feel like you are just gliding across the ground. Landing mid ish foot I find just natural when bpm is maintained. I never have any injuries if above is maintained.
Exactly. Unfortunately, there's no recoil action when heel strike running as shown in this video, and when wearing shoes that are higher in back than in front, and keep the heel from landing after the mid-foot lands, thus tensioning the calf musle so that it returns all that spring loaded energy.
I use a metronome too, I set it at 58 bpm for one click every three steps which gives 174 steps pm. Depending on the length of your legs and fitness you can set whatever's conformable between 55 and 63 (165-190 steps/minute). I found that maintaining a high cadence is very important in preventing injuries. Most important injury prevention tip though is gradual weekly increases in distance (max 10 %) and do most of the distance at slow pace.
I did some running 5 years back but had some things on my mind, later on i got longcovid. Just before i got that i wanted to start running again. So..now i'm 15 months after covid, feeling slightly stronger and recovery seems shorter and want to pick running up. Definately got caught by your enthousiasm. And taking your advises as a reminder. Thanks for the vid.
“Run your own race” is the best advice ever. Also, on race day, the first half of a marathon (or half marathon for that matter) should seem a very easy pace. It will get much harder, I promise. My favourite marathon was not my fastest, rather the one that I paced myself so well that I had my fastest 5k interval at the end of the race. Felt good, passed so many people and was still smiling. It is so hard to go slow in a race but it is worth it when the last 10k are upon you. Most marathons, I am in agony for the last 5k. Not fun.
Hey GTN I really like your videos, great stuff. Just a bit of concern from my side. Some of the points in this list are inaccurate. Mistake 4: Always land in the middle of your foot. - There is no evidence from science that there is any advantage to that. Performance wise you have professional runners who land on their heel, some on their middle of their foot and some on their front of the foot. Injury wise you just put pressure on different bones and joints, depending on your landing point. But there is no evidence that landing on the middle of your foot leads to less injury. Mistake 9: Stretching. - Science has only been able to show that stretching helps making you more flexible. There is no evidence that it reduces your recovery time. However, not based on science, stretching might make you feel better and there may be benefits that have so far not been look at by science.
great advice MT you must have had a good Physical Education - looking for videos for my current students to help them stay active during lockdown and you'll be pleased to know the St A's community will get the benefit of your experience - all the best Mr P
I have just recovered from a bruised heel. It was caused by coming down too hard on my heel afrer 5 miles but running another 3. So, I will run after doing my paper round (warmup+more time), not running too far and being careful how I place my feet. Great video, thank you 😉
Powerade sponsors a marathon each December. I don’t even have a perfect running technique but I want to participate next year (2021). Wish me luck! I’ll start training January 1st!! 😅
I really liked the examples of the mistakes followed by the way to do things properly. It's much easier to see it, recognize it, and then make improvements. Looking forward to giving these a try. Thank you!
Wow so I apparently have been running incorrectly forever then. I was always told heel to toe, not mid foot, even in my days of being in the service. I’ve always dealt with unbelievably painful shin splints and no one ever said this to me before. I’m total going to try and focus on that tomorrow and see if it helps with those. If they do, you Sir, are my hero
I have a huge checklist of things before a jog and during the jog. Because if something isn’t right or in place, I have to adjust it or stop completely and that just interrupts the whole jog. I like not stopping.
I really struggle with my shoulders when out running (not on a treadmill though strangely), to the point I can't jog more than a couple of minutes outside as they ache so bad under the shoulder blades, so I really appreciated your section on the shoulders, and will give your checklist a try next time I'm out.
Just wanted to come back to this, i ran my first 5k today and the tips in this video were a massive help in gutting me over that initial hurdle I was struggling with, especially with my shoulders and back in general. It really helped my technique making me able to run every other day building up the distance slowly until today when I finally got to 5k in dead on 30mins. Its not the fastest, but just to run that distance, a distance I've never come close to running before was really big for me, so thank you so much for the tips that helped me get there.
Love your channel and advices they are so useful and easy to follow, I was wondering if you would be willing to make a video about basic gear that won’t brake the bank for my first triathlon in open waters (hot weather), greetings from Costa Rica!!
Wonderful, marvelous and outstanding video! I would love to know more about what part of the food one lands on. I see that you wear runners with a very flat sole and that you land on the middle of the foot. I think in the past it was taught to land on the heel? I myself tried to adapt a mid food running technique 🧐 thank you in advance 😇
Hi, thnx for the video. One question regarding your first point. In my city and country I have no specialized stores for running shoes where you can get advice and a recommendation for choosing a proper running shoe. We have just regular sport stores and I mostly buy online. Are there any recommendations on how to choose a proper training shoe? Thnx!
A quick question, I see few runners running on bare feet. My question is while we emphasize on wearing shoes which are ergonomically designed for the respective sport, what is your take on bare feet running? How high are the chances of injuring oneself?
@@imadeyoureadthis1 so you mean one shouldn't query an expert rather research on their own on Google. I fail to understand was my question inappropriate in any manner or you have problem with me specifically?
@@debashistalukdar5523 i have no further intention to feed your drama lust. I offered what I know. I couldn't care less what you do with your life. I was sincere.
I ran my first marathon in Dublin. Absolutely zero training, heaviest weight I've ever been and a raging hangover from the Dublin night life haha. Ran it a little under 4 hours. Couldn't walk for a week and couldn't run for a couple months. Worst mistake of my life haha
Very interesting video my friend! I'm physical education graduated and running lover that like watching videos like this at the same time that learn english. Keep up the good videos mate!
My mistake most of time: dragging my feet. I dont know how many times I trip and scrape my knees and hips😅 I got better these past few weeks and pace is a lot better too. I started watching different types of videos because I wanted to increase my endurance and to prevent injuries.
Just regarding shoes, this is one where 'your mileage really will vary'. I'm about 70kg. Many of my pairs of road shoes are over the 1000 mile mark and I'll happily still go run 10 miles in them. I will say though that I have 8-10 pairs of road running shoes, of several different brands and models, and they all get rotated and used fairly evenly. So there's variety there - I'm not ever running in the same pair day after day week after week. I do also think I would invest in a fresh pair or two if I were still training for marathon distances - but presently I'm not. Years ago when I had shin splints, I dutifully bought new shoes every 400-500 miles in case the cause was worn out shoes. But what really helped that problem go away was shortening my stride and increasing cadence. So afterwards I just started running in these old shoes again. They're fine. We all have different running styles and 500 miles is just a generic number. Yes if you only have one pair of shoes then make sure they're a good pair - but if all is good I don't see any reason to ditch them after 400-500 miles.
I use to run heal first, my personal trainer pointed it out to me. I had to learn how to run again more on the ball, it felt so weird at first but I got there.
The mid foot tip helps. I often run on my toes with high knees because I’m much more acclimated for sprinting (football and throwing background) but I want to get my running better now that I’m doing some cross training. I’m 240 w a 8:10 mile. I would like to eventually break under 7:15 when I get to goal weight of 205. I used to do cc in middle school and elementary so I try to implement 400 m split workouts and 800s. Always cool down. Any runners on this side of RUclips have other tips for me or workout styles? Really only pushing 2 miles at top distance so shorter stuff but any tips help. Thanks
1:28 was why I run just to hate running and feels I'm never capable of doing it. I never run, except some little experiences in high school activities decade ago and started to run again only when I joined the class; the coach forces us in that time span and never stops. It was so torturing that running hurts me. Now when I did it myself, I started it all with just walking, followed by fast walk, and only jog and run when it gets into my capacity. This makes me wanna jog and run even more the next day, even if I started off with just 30seconds of it.
Hi Mark, I wanted to thank you for all the video content you produce is of a high standard. I just struggle with English when it gets too technical. Thanks to practice for the video where you explain the posture during the run that you say to imagine a thread that pulls you from above, I'm running thinking about that and in fact my posture has improved and even when I'm tired imagining the thread improves the running efficiency, thank you and keep up the good work #mitrimilano
Once you are in the running groove, 3 to 5 times a week is not unusual for me doing at least an hour of running. I run not just for the run, but to enjoy the new area I am covering. It might not be very fast, it doesn't need to be when you are trying to take in new areas. I ran a few days ago, there was a chance of showers, it was small. Once I got to running for 30 minutes or so I noticed a black cloud too close for comfort. I could see it was raining there. Stopping ten minutes later I wanted to see where it was going, so I watched it for a minute or two. It looked like it was moving to the east and I would be ok. It was ok for the next two miles as I kept my eyes on the clouds, there were bright and dark ones. It looked like another one was coming, so I decided to go back. Even though I was going back to my car, there was this no outlet street I was about to pass. Well I can't just pass it, I should just do it now and explore it, right? So I do that and all of a sudden as the few heavy raindrops start to fall as I pass these grapevines on a chain-link fence. I'm like yep, figures it is going to rain on me. The good thing is that I remember that there is a fire station nearby, so running in the rain I make my way there. Scouting the area by running the main roads a few days before helped me. I dove under the alcove even though I was wetter than I would have liked to have been. I had to wait at least 5 minutes for the rain to let up, but then it did and I finished my run.
I've recently started distance running but I'm more of a natural sprinter actually very quick if I'm honest. If I get my endurance in would I be more likely to break a sub 40min 10k because of my natural speed.
needed to see this, am 19 now trying to beat my pb from when I was 15 lol, ran a 19:28 5k then and just did a 21 minute 5k today but my body isn't as invincible as it was then
51.23 in my first 10k marathon . Took 7 months off . My trainings this year are 59,53,56,52 for 10k this year. Maybe better pace and energy management lacking. 10k marathon is 3 weeks away
For me I will give some tips 1 _ start easy if your are new to running increase your miles step by step by weeks same things goes for your speed 2 _ pick up good shoes you feel comfortable with it . Every one is different what works with you may not be ok with others 3 _ always warm up and put a target for your run 4 _ take a 2 days off weekly as running is pushing your body through alot believe me
I've been doing the same route for months. Each run I think about throwing myself in front of traffic, just to get some more variety.
Try doing it in the morning sometimes. It will look different
Hahaha ohh God
@@isaaconyach9401 In the morning there's a lot more traffic! Good pick!
Just do it
Add cocaine for some razzle dazzle
OK, I followed your video exactly and my running is perfect but now I've got a British accent
Sean C. That‘s the exact opposite of a problem. ;)
Sean C. - 😂
I'm laughing so hard 🤣😂🤣
It helps in Hollywood
ahhh, so in other words, you're disabled😂
"use the first 1, 2 or 3 km of your run for warm-up " me who only runs 4km D:
Edit: So after 7 months ( with a few injuries in the middle ) I managed to run my first 10k!
For those who are curious it was a pace of 5:13/km with downhills and uphills
1 km in itself is pretty long.......... 😄
@@kenchung2675 Just do the Run/walk training and youll get there ^^
Most definitely. Keep up the good work! 👍
@@kenchung2675 You too!
✌️
Your trainers don't last forever. Your trainers only last about 450 miles...
Me: So... Forever? xD
i'm a bug guy soo my trainers last only for 250-300 miles.
I don't even consider my shoes broken in until I've gotten at least 500 miles on them. If you take good care of them they'll last along time. I recommend getting two pairs (or three if you're running twice a day) and rotating them.
@@meadowhaen yeah I think if you have good striking form they go way further. If you have proper dorsiflextion you theoretically don't need a ton of extra cushion in the first place
Regular Guy Running that’s a lot of trainers then if your a bug
Infinitely... Lol
Here's a recap to properly run:
1. Have suitable running shoes.
2. Have consistent running speed over time.
3. Explore new refreshing areas when running.
4. Always land on each middle foot for balance.
5. Stick to your own running pace foremost.
6. Drink water to rehydrate yourself overtime.
7. Relax you upper body and arms when running.
8. Lift your knee more to have an efficient run.
9. Always stretch and warm up before running.
10. Rest for several minutes after you finish running.
thank you so much! I have a race today and i'm nervous but i'm going to use these
10 - not "rest", the exact opposite: move, but don't press
@@cloudy9337 how did you do? I hope "your best" is included in the answer
@@Prodmullefc tbh I don’t even remember the exact race I was in bc I typed that a year ago but these tips did help me and still help me
I am surprised nothing on breathing in this list. I think getting a good breathing rhythm that matches your running pace is essential for reaching your running goals.
“Do the first one, two or three kilometres at a nice easy pace to warm up” bruh that’s longer than my entire run 💀
Are you still running now friend?
Exactly! 😅
How ? I'm a pothead and a cigarette smoker for 17 years damaged knee and 3km is easy at 6 min pace I ran 45 km in 7 days I've run in the last 1 and a half week just started working out 3 weeks ago didnt do sports or any exercise for like 17 years haha...
@@bac3276 I hope he/she still is.
@slavplaysgames it may surprise you that everyone is different 😂
"Run your own Race!'" also applicable in life.
In the last year of IB (12th school year) there was a 5km race at my school for everyone year 8-12 and teachers. I was never a runner and I expected to lose to most my classmates, but to my surprise at the start of the race 99% of the school ran ahead of me, including all the teachers.
I knew they were all making a mistake, as I was going at the highest pace I expected myself to be able to hold, and almost everyone was going much faster. That gave me some confidence, and by the first kilometer I had already passed 90% of the school. By the halfway point I had caught up to the fastest guy, and for the rest of the race the two of us ran next to each other. I lost the sprint at the end, but had been able to keep a good pace and finished second in my school, wich is something I never expected.
Maybe you got some talent! Keep practicing man
Inspiring story. It’s cool that even the teachers run at you’re school.
What was your time
One mistake I made was signing up for another Marathon.
I know this feeling
After finishing first: Never again
1 month after: I can beat that 1st time
@Alex O'Toole no his 1st marathon he finished it then he wants to beat his own time in his 2nd marathon
Humble brag, nice
I ran my 1st half marathon, (I was 63 years old) when finished I was in so much pain but not enough to stopped myself from walking to the registration table to sign up for my 2nd one. Crazy!
A tip I've found recently to prevent over striding is run with hands closer to your heart (look at video of African distance runners) instead of down by your sides (like sprinters). Helps increase cadence and forward lean and prevents over striding. Something to look into...
veuri0 dude!!! Thought I was the only master that thought of this hahahahaha
Jerome Trickster Harte what do you mean by this? Like how do I swing my arms?
Enrique Guzman elbows should be a little bit out and your hand should be going near your heart. I think thats a decent way to explain it?
Most Unique weird question but open or closed hands?
Enrique Guzman not weird at all. Keep your hands relaxed and open. Pretend your holding a small bird in your hands pretty much
As someone who's coming from cycling and just bought running shoes to run for the first time, it's super hard to go easy. Lungs so go faster. Body says no.
Same here, running is so much harder on the body for me. I hope that at some point my feet are going to be strong enough that I can increase the distance and pace drastically without fearing for an injury. I run 4k for training and did a 10k so far but half marathon seems much more risky. I fear for plantar fasciitis and have some ankle pain.
This my exact problem!! My lungs and legs feel absolutely fine as I’m a mountain biker, my knees are just not having it though
Yeah cyclists are a very high risk group because you're too strong heh, basically the natural limitation in aerobic capacity just isn't there like with other new runners. You can go for long runs right away, so a lot of people get injured in their very first few runs due to the lower body musculature, joints, tendons, ligaments, fascia not being prepared for the stress. So you should probably think of your running exercise as training all the above rather than your cardiovascular system. So, go slow and steady, don't go too far, listen to any niggles and never exceed the 10% mileage increase rule. You will feel like you can break it (and you certainly have the aerobic capacity to) but that's how injuries are made.
Also note that even on the absolute elite level, the total amount of time spent training is 30-50% lower for elite runners than elite cyclists, so if coming from cycling you might be used to getting a lot of hours in, and that's probably not the best idea with running at any level. So might be a good idea to treat each hour of running like 90 minutes of cycling.
@@magnusdagbro8226 thanks for the advice! I've started doing the couch to 5k thing. It's a pain following it when you have so much more to give but I guess worth it in the end.
Same. I bike ride enough. I thought I'd try running. I hardly made a mile in 10 minutes....
Thank you. These tips help because I started running on a 30 day challenge. So far I am on day 25 and have ran over 60 miles so far.
What the is this here?
when he first said trainers, i thought he was talking about people 😳
Dialects am I right 😂
Danielle Sweet, I didn't realize that he wasn't until this comment, so thank you.
Yeah trainer shoes are to train in and spikes are to race in. (For cross country at least)
In the UK, what we call trainers are called sneakers in the US.
Me too
One thing you can add to this is breathing. It's important to controll you breathing when you are going for long runs. This is something you will teach your self. Just think about it before you start and during your runing. Most people stress breath a lot when they run. You will be able run much long when you get a good breathing rhythm.
Sorry for any typos :)
One would be sleeping at 2:30 drunk, waking up at 9 and thinking you can then run and beat your time. Made that mistake before
An observational study among my running club friends suggests that Parkrun PBs are closely correlated with hangovers.
It's a greater feeling doing a really good run early in the morning and feeling really energetic yet calm before work
That is exactly what I like before going to work
Jogging in the morning, sleepy and tired at work
@@jollybkoy2046 lol opposite for me tho its like last night I went to bed super early at 8.30pm and woke at 5.30am feeling energetic resulting in a better run(5k)
Feel hyper all day at work and bloody confident,but if i don't run i feel foggy/lazy legs at work its weird how we all react so differently.
Probably depends what you're doing, obviously pysical vs. sitting, yet, there also seems to be a 6 hour window (shower needs to fit into that) in which you are highly concentrated and serene, hence rather productive. Beyond that, sort of a end-of-the-working-day feeling's lurking in, which might be appropriate though.
Great tips! As a running technique coach, I would like to add bouncing too high is a common mistake and caused by running upright. Also tightening your muscles specifically your core muscles when you run is another big mistake because it affects your breathing and flow needed for running.
So when we run, do we want to have a mostly relaxed upper body right?
Guilty of "shoulders tightness" especially when racing, wasn't able to lift arms normally above shoulders after finish. Hopefully with more experience I will be more relaxed 😃
Thank you for the video!
Aliaksandr Apanovich I have the same problem
i felt this lol my posture is usually good while running but sometimes my shoulders be like "nope"
My shoulders are killing he right now 😅
I've been running a few times and always got shin splints and now thanks to this video I have noticed I was overstriding a lot. Now that I have corrected this I can run pain free (for the most part) thanks so much!!!
totally agree about the race pace & not starting out too fast.
I had knee surgery after running for years. Turns out i should of been getting new sneakers and working on my form. Wish i had seen this video then thanks so much for posting more people should know this information before starting running!
Should 'have' OMG. Where did British people get the lousy habit of using 'of' after 'should'?
@@AJ-ep9is it’s should’ve, therefore an accent thing. (obviously if they were to type long form OF Instead of HAVE then yes that’s a different story and Moronic ... and there are a lot of morons). Me thinks you’re hearing them incorrectly though 👍🏻
My trainers are still like new and it's done over 50k miles.
In my car 😂
Didn't expected that
You win
As a new runner, thank you for sharing all these informative tips!
My warm up is is a 2 mile run then i go home
I fell victim to the " Too much too soon " mistake . I was increasing distance and trying to get a better pace all too quickly and I started getting shin splints . Those things are the worst . Now I can't wait to get back to running in the evenings as our lockdown rules are eased to allow evening running
Do you have a video about dynamic warm up? For all, running, cycling and swimming?
I haven't ran in 2 weeks been sticking to the gym I think RUclips is telling me I need to get back out there
That girl you’re running with is just all around goals
I take like 30 thousand steps every mile because im 5 ‘2 😪
Bas Bakker Honeslty I don’t even know, the fastest I’ve done a 5k is 17.22. I have done 10 more 5k races since then and stay around 17.22-17-50 constantly. I feel like I am at my genetic limitation for my height lol i usually time my laps around a track to train, i don’t count my steps.
Bas Bakker no it’s just a regular watch for time lol
Nothing wrong with being 5'2.
Robbie Vargas that’s a damn good 5k
Honey Rills: A Cooking Show after 7 years of training it’s not tbh, it’s frustrating. I maybe improve a couple of seconds every year but eh. Thanks
I just ran 5k in 17:07 by following these tips and came 2nd in the race
Well done! 👏👍🏼
Wow ! My pb for 5ks is 22.48...
That’s extremely fast !! I do it in 25:55. *was ment to say 27:55
Damn that's fast. My average 5k is 22 to 24 minutes
I took 55min for 5km .. lol
At 62 yrs young I train not as if my muscles , especially the heart muscle is 52yrs old or 42 yrs old , but so I can be healthy enough 5 to 10 yrs from now to run .So train looking forward , not backwards . Running for health not PR'S or podiums .Same with swimming or biking . Girlfriend with 30 yrs as cardio othro rehab RN see's 50 to 70 yrs with damaged hearts, hip's knee's and back's and that is 15 patients each week that cant run anymore . 6 pairs of shoes rotating , 1 mile warm up and cool down . Time focused , not pace or miles . Started running in 1984 and triathlons in 1985, no major injuries .
Lew Ironman 1995 know someone my age that is proud of running everyday for the last five years. He has had so many injuries and is slower than five years ago. I am 58 years old been running 15 years run five days a week, one day hard run, one day long run 10 miles plus. Other days are just easy 3 to 4 miles. Day off from running I doe core workouts. Going to be running in my 80s
Congrats on your longevity as a runner sir, that is what I look forward to
Ok, I am 50yrs old nd I never warm-up, I do however start off pretty easy nd a must cool-down is a large part of my run discipline...More to the point; I enjoy GTN nd follow your posts. thx so very much guys! Proudly South African
450 miles is a *very* high lowest margin for how long shoes last. Plenty of shoes, particularly at the lower end of quality/cost spectrum, will last much less than that.
Indeed. They may physically last that long but put on a new pair and one with 450 miles on it and bet they will feel very different.
He said 450-550 kilometers not miles. For reference you typical 20-30$ Avia from Amazon/Walmart will last at best 100 miles and stink from the start. While a 140$ VJ XTRM RD Pro or Inov-8 XTalon will last over 250 before you start to see wear that you should worry about.
Paul Leatham he said miles
But how can you tell? Feel? Isn't it a gradual change in feel maybe it would be hard to even notice
illizard8 yes u can tell by if ur shoes are still able to grip onto the ground as well and push off, repeat. if they arent doing it well, its time for a new pair.
basically my wife and I are doing EVERYTHING wrong haha thanks for the video very helpful
We're all about starting a race at around 4:05 pace for a solid 1/16 of a mile!! : ) Great video guys.. Lots of high quality tips!!
Idk why it cracked me up so much when you kept changing scenery but it did XD
I think I do all the mistakes you talked about plus maybe many more. I started to run, I'm fit, comming from cycling area, but running gives me a lot of pain. Not because I'm tired, it's for sure, because I do all the possible mistakes. Thanks for sharing it. I'll try to fix them one by one. Starting with the easiest one. Warm up!
I got my ego deleted by this magnificent video. 3 weeks and half of running, I hit the 5.65 miles marker under 50 minutes. Now my right leg is kinda broken, my knees hurt, I should have been more wiser, that crazy energy I get while running, the expectation of the high, the mental fortitude. Now I know that I must be more systematic. I am going to be stretching longer and better, doing some core and leg workout to get them strong. Thanks for the video, good runs everybody!
I just got challenged to do the 'Run 5K, Donate £5 (to NHS)' challenge whilst in quarantine. I've never been a runner, and in fact, I didn't realise how much of a sedentary lifestyle I lived until AFTER I tried to do this challenge. I'm a 26 year old 6ft5 male, weighting 175lbs - I thought I was in decent shape. I went from doing no exercise to running this 5k (rather foolishly). It took me 39m 12s. All my friends completed in 20-25mins. This was the kick up the backside I needed, but enjoyed the run and I'm kind of addicted and want to improve my time!
I see this video was made some time ago but quite timeless and relevant. Back in 2016, I ran my longest race ever, the half marathon. I was so proud. A few days later I did not recover properly and pulled a muscle. It was painful to even walk. I quit running as a result for a long time. Overstriding, yes, I am 6 ft tall and prone to long strides. Got my belt for water reserves on the long runs. Lots of good pointers here, thank you!
I find running at a pace a 180 bpm works best. I have a metronome app which I listen to to set the pace.
Take a short stride to go slow, open up the stride to go faster and lean more forwards from the ankle. Always at 180bpm .
This is about the best bpm to maximise elastic recoil
Also swing the arms in time from hip to nip. You know when you have the timing nail with your arms and legs as you feel like you are just gliding across the ground.
Landing mid ish foot I find just natural when bpm is maintained. I never have any injuries if above is maintained.
Exactly. Unfortunately, there's no recoil action when heel strike running as shown in this video, and when wearing shoes that are higher in back than in front, and keep the heel from landing after the mid-foot lands, thus tensioning the calf musle so that it returns all that spring loaded energy.
I use a metronome too, I set it at 58 bpm for one click every three steps which gives 174 steps pm. Depending on the length of your legs and fitness you can set whatever's conformable between 55 and 63 (165-190 steps/minute). I found that maintaining a high cadence is very important in preventing injuries. Most important injury prevention tip though is gradual weekly increases in distance (max 10 %) and do most of the distance at slow pace.
I did some running 5 years back but had some things on my mind, later on i got longcovid. Just before i got that i wanted to start running again. So..now i'm 15 months after covid, feeling slightly stronger and recovery seems shorter and want to pick running up. Definately got caught by your enthousiasm. And taking your advises as a reminder.
Thanks for the vid.
7:22 that look😂😂 what did Heather say?😂
“Run your own race” is the best advice ever. Also, on race day, the first half of a marathon (or half marathon for that matter) should seem a very easy pace. It will get much harder, I promise. My favourite marathon was not my fastest, rather the one that I paced myself so well that I had my fastest 5k interval at the end of the race. Felt good, passed so many people and was still smiling. It is so hard to go slow in a race but it is worth it when the last 10k are upon you. Most marathons, I am in agony for the last 5k. Not fun.
The way Fraser chugged that water! He’s gonna feel sick 10 minutes into his run 😂
Hey GTN
I really like your videos, great stuff.
Just a bit of concern from my side. Some of the points in this list are inaccurate.
Mistake 4: Always land in the middle of your foot.
- There is no evidence from science that there is any advantage to that.
Performance wise you have professional runners who land on their heel, some on their middle of their foot and some on their front of the foot.
Injury wise you just put pressure on different bones and joints, depending on your landing point. But there is no evidence that landing on the middle of your foot leads to less injury.
Mistake 9: Stretching.
- Science has only been able to show that stretching helps making you more flexible. There is no evidence that it reduces your recovery time.
However, not based on science, stretching might make you feel better and there may be benefits that have so far not been look at by science.
great advice MT you must have had a good Physical Education - looking for videos for my current students to help them stay active during lockdown and you'll be pleased to know the St A's community will get the benefit of your experience - all the best Mr P
Some of that footage takes place either in Lanzarote or Fuerteventura
I have just recovered from a bruised heel. It was caused by coming down too hard on my heel afrer 5 miles but running another 3. So, I will run after doing my paper round (warmup+more time), not running too far and being careful how I place my feet. Great video, thank you 😉
Powerade sponsors a marathon each December. I don’t even have a perfect running technique but I want to participate next year (2021). Wish me luck! I’ll start training January 1st!! 😅
Perfect timing! It's been a month but Imma get back into it.
Wow kept wondering why I was having such bad shin splints... thank youuu
I really liked the examples of the mistakes followed by the way to do things properly. It's much easier to see it, recognize it, and then make improvements. Looking forward to giving these a try. Thank you!
Wow so I apparently have been running incorrectly forever then. I was always told heel to toe, not mid foot, even in my days of being in the service. I’ve always dealt with unbelievably painful shin splints and no one ever said this to me before. I’m total going to try and focus on that tomorrow and see if it helps with those. If they do, you Sir, are my hero
no warm up no pleasure with run for first 5km. no cool down no pleasure next day - at least in my case
Zygfryd Homonto You really nailed the downsides of not warming up/cooling down! 👊🏼
I have a huge checklist of things before a jog and during the jog. Because if something isn’t right or in place, I have to adjust it or stop completely and that just interrupts the whole jog. I like not stopping.
I really struggle with my shoulders when out running (not on a treadmill though strangely), to the point I can't jog more than a couple of minutes outside as they ache so bad under the shoulder blades, so I really appreciated your section on the shoulders, and will give your checklist a try next time I'm out.
Just wanted to come back to this, i ran my first 5k today and the tips in this video were a massive help in gutting me over that initial hurdle I was struggling with, especially with my shoulders and back in general. It really helped my technique making me able to run every other day building up the distance slowly until today when I finally got to 5k in dead on 30mins. Its not the fastest, but just to run that distance, a distance I've never come close to running before was really big for me, so thank you so much for the tips that helped me get there.
Been running 2 weeks went from 4 miles to 5... legs feel great
Love your channel and advices they are so useful and easy to follow, I was wondering if you would be willing to make a video about basic gear that won’t brake the bank for my first triathlon in open waters (hot weather), greetings from Costa Rica!!
The most satisfying thing for me is when I shortened my stride, it’s amazing how much easier it is to control breathing when you do this 😎
This is the most British comment section I’ve ever seen
Hello 🙏 from India 🇮🇳 🙏😊🙏
Brilliant video, answered a lot of questions for me, thank you.
Wonderful, marvelous and outstanding video! I would love to know more about what part of the food one lands on. I see that you wear runners with a very flat sole and that you land on the middle of the foot. I think in the past it was taught to land on the heel? I myself tried to adapt a mid food running technique 🧐 thank you in advance 😇
nice explained. Have fun and keep healthy. I hope to see and hear you again
The shoulder thing is me all the way. I've gotten cramps in my traps several times because I'm basically holding a shrug the entire run.
Loooved the video! Thank you so much! Any tips about breathing tehniques to improve stamina?
Great video, as I'm getting back into running since 2006, after I damaged my back.
Thanks for all the info. . here a new runner. Thank you dude and everyone.
I ran 750km last year. New shoes time
Hi, thnx for the video. One question regarding your first point. In my city and country I have no specialized stores for running shoes where you can get advice and a recommendation for choosing a proper running shoe. We have just regular sport stores and I mostly buy online. Are there any recommendations on how to choose a proper training shoe? Thnx!
A quick question, I see few runners running on bare feet. My question is while we emphasize on wearing shoes which are ergonomically designed for the respective sport, what is your take on bare feet running? How high are the chances of injuring oneself?
Depends where you run? If you run next to a dumpster that has broken glasses on the ground or happen find a nail, well...that would be troublesome.
@@imadeyoureadthis1 seriously that's your best reply
@@debashistalukdar5523 yes. Also, Google is your friend.
@@imadeyoureadthis1 so you mean one shouldn't query an expert rather research on their own on Google. I fail to understand was my question inappropriate in any manner or you have problem with me specifically?
@@debashistalukdar5523 i have no further intention to feed your drama lust. I offered what I know. I couldn't care less what you do with your life. I was sincere.
Just found your channel ... Loved the videos... Greetings from Brazil!
Where might I find the recipe for the grain and fruit bar shown in the Drinking and Fueling section (4:57)? Thanks!
I ran my first marathon in Dublin. Absolutely zero training, heaviest weight I've ever been and a raging hangover from the Dublin night life haha. Ran it a little under 4 hours. Couldn't walk for a week and couldn't run for a couple months. Worst mistake of my life haha
Nice video to avoid injuries ... Increase capacity only 10%at a time, mix up different routes, land on center of foot ..
Very interesting video my friend! I'm physical education graduated and running lover that like watching videos like this at the same time that learn english. Keep up the good videos mate!
Thumbs up on the advice about foot drag. Broke my foot due to bad foot drag.
My mistake most of time: dragging my feet. I dont know how many times I trip and scrape my knees and hips😅 I got better these past few weeks and pace is a lot better too. I started watching different types of videos because I wanted to increase my endurance and to prevent injuries.
Just regarding shoes, this is one where 'your mileage really will vary'. I'm about 70kg. Many of my pairs of road shoes are over the 1000 mile mark and I'll happily still go run 10 miles in them.
I will say though that I have 8-10 pairs of road running shoes, of several different brands and models, and they all get rotated and used fairly evenly. So there's variety there - I'm not ever running in the same pair day after day week after week.
I do also think I would invest in a fresh pair or two if I were still training for marathon distances - but presently I'm not.
Years ago when I had shin splints, I dutifully bought new shoes every 400-500 miles in case the cause was worn out shoes. But what really helped that problem go away was shortening my stride and increasing cadence. So afterwards I just started running in these old shoes again. They're fine. We all have different running styles and 500 miles is just a generic number.
Yes if you only have one pair of shoes then make sure they're a good pair - but if all is good I don't see any reason to ditch them after 400-500 miles.
Minor tips but worth taking note of. Should one take them into consideration, then can prove to be a blessing in disguise.Please keep it up.Thanks.
I would mention to regularly stretch before or after the exercise. Pays off when ur older ....
Thank you for this video! Training for a 5k and this has helped so much!
I use to run heal first, my personal trainer pointed it out to me.
I had to learn how to run again more on the ball, it felt so weird at first but I got there.
Really good tips guys! Thanks for making a video!
The mid foot tip helps. I often run on my toes with high knees because I’m much more acclimated for sprinting (football and throwing background) but I want to get my running better now that I’m doing some cross training. I’m 240 w a 8:10 mile. I would like to eventually break under 7:15 when I get to goal weight of 205. I used to do cc in middle school and elementary so I try to implement 400 m split workouts and 800s. Always cool down. Any runners on this side of RUclips have other tips for me or workout styles? Really only pushing 2 miles at top distance so shorter stuff but any tips help. Thanks
1:28 was why I run just to hate running and feels I'm never capable of doing it. I never run, except some little experiences in high school activities decade ago and started to run again only when I joined the class; the coach forces us in that time span and never stops. It was so torturing that running hurts me. Now when I did it myself, I started it all with just walking, followed by fast walk, and only jog and run when it gets into my capacity. This makes me wanna jog and run even more the next day, even if I started off with just 30seconds of it.
Hi Mark, I wanted to thank you for all the video content you produce is of a high standard. I just struggle with English when it gets too technical. Thanks to practice for the video where you explain the posture during the run that you say to imagine a thread that pulls you from above, I'm running thinking about that and in fact my posture has improved and even when I'm tired imagining the thread improves the running efficiency, thank you and keep up the good work #mitrimilano
this is a great video! I'm an over-strider and its hard to fix.
Once you are in the running groove, 3 to 5 times a week is not unusual for me doing at least an hour of running. I run not just for the run, but to enjoy the new area I am covering. It might not be very fast, it doesn't need to be when you are trying to take in new areas.
I ran a few days ago, there was a chance of showers, it was small. Once I got to running for 30 minutes or so I noticed a black cloud too close for comfort. I could see it was raining there. Stopping ten minutes later I wanted to see where it was going, so I watched it for a minute or two. It looked like it was moving to the east and I would be ok.
It was ok for the next two miles as I kept my eyes on the clouds, there were bright and dark ones. It looked like another one was coming, so I decided to go back. Even though I was going back to my car, there was this no outlet street I was about to pass. Well I can't just pass it, I should just do it now and explore it, right? So I do that and all of a sudden as the few heavy raindrops start to fall as I pass these grapevines on a chain-link fence. I'm like yep, figures it is going to rain on me.
The good thing is that I remember that there is a fire station nearby, so running in the rain I make my way there. Scouting the area by running the main roads a few days before helped me. I dove under the alcove even though I was wetter than I would have liked to have been. I had to wait at least 5 minutes for the rain to let up, but then it did and I finished my run.
Always good info 👍
That cake you show when talking about fueling up looks tasty. What is it?
It looks like a raisin flapjack to me.
I've recently started distance running but I'm more of a natural sprinter actually very quick if I'm honest. If I get my endurance in would I be more likely to break a sub 40min 10k because of my natural speed.
Thanks for sharing! Great info 👟😁✌🏽
Appreciate the vid! Thx!
Great tips there, thanks for sharing
Very good tips. Would like to see more videos regarding feet positioning, for example that mid-feet thing you talked about.
needed to see this, am 19 now trying to beat my pb from when I was 15 lol, ran a 19:28 5k then and just did a 21 minute 5k today but my body isn't as invincible as it was then
51.23 in my first 10k marathon . Took 7 months off . My trainings this year are 59,53,56,52 for 10k this year. Maybe better pace and energy management lacking. 10k marathon is 3 weeks away
Route advice is so good. 👍
For me I will give some tips
1 _ start easy if your are new to running increase your miles step by step by weeks same things goes for your speed
2 _ pick up good shoes you feel comfortable with it . Every one is different what works with you may not be ok with others
3 _ always warm up and put a target for your run
4 _ take a 2 days off weekly as running is pushing your body through alot believe me