May 23, 2024

 MAY 23

You’re Already Fit--Here’s How To Get Even Faster

How can you keep improving, even after you are already in very good shape? It’s not easy. After all, the “law of diminishing returns” sets in at some point.


Some believe you need to apply a little “shock therapy” at this juncture. A dash of sprint training could be just what you need.


That proved to be an excellent decision in this experiment with 19 college runners. As varsity athletes, they were already in top shape. 


Researchers put roughly half of them in a “sprint training” group. They did sprint sessions twice a week for six weeks. The control group continued their normal training.


Result: The control-group runners didn’t improve during the 6week period. But the sprint-trained runners got faster at distances from 100 meters to 3000 meters.


Conclusion: “A 6-week sprint training improved both sprint and long-distance running performance.” How? “The enhancement of long-distance running performance could be attributable to improved anaerobic capacity.” More at International J of Sports Physiology & Performance.


What’s The Best Marathon Training Plan? (From 92 Possibilities!)

I often tell would-be marathon runners not to obsess about what training plan to follow. In my view, they’re all basically the same--at least the good ones are.


Here’s what I mean: They all follow the same framework. This includes: mostly easy runs; a gradually increasing miles/week; an emphasis on long runs; and occasional “cutback” weeks.


The program you choose isn’t nearly as important as being honest with yourself, and selecting one that’s right for your current fitness. If you’re running 16 miles a week, don’t select a plan that begins with a 24-mile week.


Step 1: Pick an appropriate plan. Step 2: Focus on yourself, not on any slight differences between plans. They’ll all get you where you want to be as long as you do the work. 


Repeat: Focus on yourself. Organize your life as necessary to get the training done. Set aside the days and training time you’ll need.


Step 3: Don’t worry about missing runs here and there. That happens to everyone. If you do 90% of the runs, you get 99% of the results.


A new report supplies evidence for much of the above. The researchers hunted down 92 different marathon training plans.


They searched magazines, books, and the Internet. They found plans from all the big names: Daniels, Pfitzinger, Higdon, the Boston Marathon, Runner’s World, Marathon Handbook, and more


Then they divided the plans into 3 categories: High mileage (more than 56 miles/week), Medium (40-56 mi/wk), and Low (under 40 mi/wk). The 3 categories included longest “long runs” of about 21 miles/18 miles/16 miles.


Lastly, the authors analyzed the final 8 weeks of each plan (the most important weeks), and placed all specific runs into one of 5 Training Zones. I prefer to look at 3 Training Zones--roughly Easy Runs, Tempo Runs, Speed Work--because it’s simpler, and reflects the effort levels that most runners follow. Analyzing a training plan this way is called Training Intensity Distribution, or TID.


Here’s the 3-Zone TID of High/Medium/Low mileage plans: High (82-10-8), Medium (77-18-5), Low (78-17-5). In the case of the High mileage plans, this means the runners did 82% of their training at an easy pace, 10% at a medium-tempo pace, and 8% at a hard pace.


There’s a simple reason why the Medium and Low plans are slightly different from the High plan. The more you run each week--as in the High plan--the greater the percentage of your training that must be easy.


Nonetheless, the TIDs in these 3 plans are much more similar than different. I rest my case: Good marathon training plans follow the same basic pattern.


It doesn’t matter what plan you choose. It only matters that you stick to the plan as closely as possible. More at Sports Medicine--Open with free full text.


How Old Is Too Old To Keep Running? 

That’s a good question. Even an important one. Particularly for those who have long included running as part of their lifestyle and self-definition. 


If they have to stop running at some point, for some reason … well, that sounds like a significant life change, with unhappy repercussions.


Adam Tenforde is an excellent person to address this question. He was a champion 10,000 meter runner at Stanford two decades ago (and teammate with marathon great Ryan Hall), and now works as a sports medicine physician at the Spaulding National Running Center in Cambridge, MA.


This means his view may be a bit biased. He admits that he “continues to enjoy running as my primary form of exercise.”


Okay, it’s good to come clean about your biases. Now, how about that big question--when to stop running?


“In general, running can be done safely over the course of a lifetime,” says Tenforde. “Which doesn’t mean it won’t sometimes hurt.”


Tenforde brings up several useful strategies. First, if you experience pain while running, does it get better or worse as your workout continues? The former is probably a good sign that you’re not doing major damage. The second is a warning flag.


Also, pay attention to biomechanical changes. If the pain forces you to alter your stride, you might simply move the injury from one area or joint to another. That’s no solution.


Another key point: “There’s a common myth that running is bad for joints, but that idea has not played out in the research.” 


What amount of running is too much, increasing injury risk? “From the literature on bone stress injury, it’s been proposed that more than 20 miles a week might put you at an elevated risk for injury.”


However Tenforde doesn’t draw a line in the sand at 20 miles/week. “A lot of people enjoy running more than 20 miles a week,” he notes. “If someone loves to run, you really have to give me a good reason why that would be a bad thing for them to continue. It comes down to risk-benefit ratio.”


In each stage of life, there is an appropriate opportunity to maintain physical activity. You need to consider your options, and find physicians and other medical providers who will support you. More at The Harvard Gazette.


Fuel Your Performance: A New Carbo-Loading Formula

Meghann Featherstone’s marathon reports--especially the precise steps she follows to carbo load sufficiently--are always detailed, informative, and just a little bit funny. It’s a good combination.


In April, she flew to London to complete her 6-Star journey of the Abbott World Marathon Majors. London worried her. How was she going to carbo load for 3 days (her preferred time frame) in a city not known for its bagels?


The long flight from her West Coast home to England didn’t help. She snacked on pretzels, granola bars, and peanut butter M&Ms. 


The next morning she tried to run a couple of miles, but felt so awful she turned around after a mile, and walked back. She began eating more granola bars, crumpets and jam, and sourdough pizza. Featherstone always keeps graham crackers close at hand pre-marathon, and she also snacked on these.


On marathon morning, she “set an alarm for 6 am, ordered coffee, and started eating my graham crackers in bed.” I love this twist from the typical vision of “breakfast in bed.”


It turns out she’s got a simple formula for carbs on marathon morning--at least if the marathon starts mid morning or later, as London does. She advises consuming enough grams of carbs to equal one-half your body weight (in pounds). If you weigh 150 lbs, you should aim for 75 grams of carbs (300 calories).


During the 2024 London Marathon, Featherstone consumed: “70 gm carbs/hour + 325 mg sodium/hour + 10 oz fluid/hour.” She also took a caffeine gel 10 minutes before the start, and after 50 minutes of running.


She finished in a strong 2:53:43--her 4th fastest marathon. That time was 65 minutes faster than her first marathon in 2009. She must be eating something right. More at Featherstone Nutrition.


Why The U.S. Air Force Loves Topo Running Shoes

Here’s one of six papers recently cited by the American College of Sports Medicine--the world’s biggest and most influential exercise science group--as “Best Of 2023 Articles.”

This paper appeared in the Translational Journal of the American College of Sports Medicine. Its title: “The Effect of Lightweight Shoes on Air Force Basic Training Injuries: A Randomized, Controlled Trial.”


There’s quite a saga behind this article. Hang on, here’s a short backgrounder.


In 2017, the U.S. National Defense Act decreed that the Secretary of Defense should do more to limit injuries during the military’s basic training camps. The Secretary was instructed to test more shoes from more U.S. manufacturers to determine which worked best for trainees. The goal: fewer injuries, and more satisfaction with the shoes. 


This was an excellent goal, because many trainees were developing bone stress injuries and other problems. The lost training time--and sometimes lost trainees--cost the military significant time and money.


The new shoes were introduced in 2019. Trainees in the Air Force basic training program at San Antonio/Lackland,Texas (35,000 recruits per year) were offered a neutral cushioned shoe, a stability shoe, or a motion control shoe. They didn’t like any of the three.


As a result, military sports medicine experts opted to try a different kind of shoe: a lightweight, neutral shoe. They wanted one manufactured in the U.S., but none were available. The best option was the modestly-priced Topo Fli-Lyte 4. The company was based in the U.S., but the shoes were constructed abroad.


Air Force researchers conducted a randomized, controlled, double-blinded trial of the Topos vs a traditional neutral, cushioned shoe. All shoes were designed to look exactly alike, and male and female trainee subjects (roughly 370 in each of the two shoes) wore them during their 7.5-week stint in basic training.


Result: Bone stress injuries dropped by 43% among those who wore the Topo shoes vs the traditional lightweight, neutral shoe. 


While both shoes were considered “neutral shoes,” the Topos had “lighter weight, more flexibility, smaller heel-to-toe drop, a more pliable heel counter, and a wider toe box.”


Conclusion: “This information might be reasonably generalized for footwear recommendations to broader populations of 17- to 39-year-old novice runners engaging in similar training (including running, calisthenics, and bodyweight strength training).”


Sub-4-Minute Milers Outrun The Grim Reaper

In case you missed it, a group of researchers took advantage of the recent 70th anniversary of Roger Bannister’s first sub-4 mile (May 6, 1954). They had fun with the title of their article: “Outrunning The Grim Reaper.” 


But after that, they were deadly serious (pun intended). They published a study looking into the average lifespan of the first 200 runners to break 4 minutes in the mile. 


This is significant because you don’t break 4 minutes in the mile by jogging 150 minutes a week to meet your federal exercise guidelines. You’ve got to subject yourself to really hard interval training. 


These intense efforts are exactly what exercise critics often advise us to avoid. They’d like us to do only moderate exercise, and not too much.


But running 10 x 400 meters in 60 seconds, a somewhat typical workout for sub-4:00 milers? Nope, that’s way too extreme.


The data obtained from this study indicate the critics are missing something. Result: “Sub-4 min mile runners lived an average of 4.7 years beyond their predicted life expectancy.”


An interesting sub-result: This figure was even larger--9.2 years--during the 1950s when advanced medical technologies did not contribute as much to enhanced longevity as they do today. 


Yes, medicine is making progress, and that’s mostly a good thing. But it’s always best to remember that “Exercise is Medicine,” and the risks and side effects of exercise are much lower than those associated with advanced medical treatments (drugs and surgeries).


Conclusion: “Sub-4 min mile runners have increased longevity compared with the general population, thereby challenging the notion that extreme endurance exercise may be detrimental to longevity.” More at British J of Sports Medicine.


Run Your Best … Without Trying So Hard

Everyone advises us to seek balance in our days and years. After all, the Good Life can’t be just the weight on your bathroom scale, your total step count last week, or your time in a recent half marathon. There’s got to be more.


Yet balance can be harder to achieve than it sounds. We live in an age of optimizing, biohacking, and AI-ing everything. We want shortcuts and “10 easy steps.” We have FOMO--fear of missing out.


Many of us are highly motivated, self-actualizing individuals who believe we succeed in life when we are focused, intent, and working hard for that success. Fortunately, we have philosopher-runners like Sabrina Little in our midst to remind us to avoid the all-or-nothing approach. 


She writes: “Sometimes I wonder whether paying outsized attention to optimizing our bodies misses the mark. For example, I can’t track joy on a fitness tracker, but joy plays a considerable role in my racing.”


Sure, we want a little optimization. We want to explore our limits at times. “If you want to run a personal best,” says Little. “Then paying attention to sleep and nutrition, with greater precision, is beneficial.”


But trying to biohack every corner of your life has limits. Little, a philosopher-professor and champion ultrarunner, identifies 3 key problem areas. I was struck by her observations about adopting a “controlling stance.” This means that you’re trying to control, overcome, or improve everything. 


Whew, that’s exhausting. The alternative: To accept and appreciate.


That sounds like a better way to train and live. And maybe even run faster. More at I Run Far.


There’s Magic In Those Bright Red (And Blue) Juice Drinks

You’ve probably noticed a few articles about beet juice and other red-colored fruit juices like cranberry and tart cherry. They all seem to have potential to improve performance and enhance recovery, as noted in this article at Run Outside. 


A recent and much-deeper systematic review focused specifically on endurance effects, which distinguished it from previous reports covering all sports. It concluded that “Polyphenol supplementation boosts aerobic endurance.” 


It looked into a few juices, particularly black currant juice, but also investigated dark chocolate, green tea extract, and Haskap berries (blue honeysuckle that produces a blueberry-type fruit but with an oblong shape).  


Result: A systematic review of 11 studies using polyphenol drinks and supplements demonstrated “discernible enhancements” of several endurance measures. These included time to complete a given test, and time to fatigue from exercise. 


Conclusion: This review suggests that 6 weeks of “supplementation with polyphenols or polyphenol complexes may improve aerobic endurance performance and promote fat oxidation in the human body.” The effect seems to extend to both professional athletes and recreational enthusiasts. More at Frontiers in Physiology with free full text.


SHORT STUFF You Don’t Want To Miss

>>> Take a stroll: How to deal with those painful, nighttime leg cramps

>>> Return from injury: Dry needling beats immobilization for calf injuries

>>> Worth a sip? “Functional sodas” gaining in popularity with low sugar plus fiber and probiotics


GREAT QUOTES Make Great Training Partners

“Mental will is a muscle that needs exercise, just like the muscles of the body.”

--Lynn Jennings, 9-time U.S. cross country champ


May 16, 2024

 MAY 17, 2024 xx


Intervals Made Easy = You Get Faster

Here’s a Reddit post for a training method that the main proponent calls the “Easy Interval Method,” EIM. He’s trying to sell a program, so buyer beware.


But reading what’s here is free, and interesting, and you can put the pieces together yourself.


Klaus Lok believes that too many midpack runners spend too much time running slow and easy, which of course is a great way to train yourself to run slow. But what if you want to get faster?


Since Lok has won 24 Dutch national championships from 1500 meters (3:38) to 10,000 meters (28:24), he’s got plenty of credibility. He also says that his coach developed many of the EIM principles from interval wizard Mihaly Igloi.


In this article, Lok proposes an alternative to slow, easy training. He says his approach is simpler, builds fitness faster, takes less time, and may even reduce injuries.


The secret? Do many speed workouts every week, but make the speed “slow speed” in small doses with long recoveries. Hence, the easy interval method.


This approach to interval training bears little resemblance to the many hard repetitions, with ever-shorter recoveries, found in traditional interval programs.


Lok also believes in several modest tempo runs a week to build lactate clearance. Overall, I think it’s a refreshing, wholesome approach. I’ve been trying it myself recently to break out of a winter of slow, marathon-training runs. More at Reddit Running.


How Long Does A $500 Running Shoe Last?

When Tigist Assefa ran a 2:11:53 world record in the Berlin Marathon last September, that was pretty good proof that the Adidas shoes on her feet were fast--really fast. But there were a few drawbacks for regular runners interested in the shoe.


First, the price tag: $500. Also, Adidas told the NY Times that the shoe would last for just one marathon, “plus an unspecified ‘familiarization period.’”


This made the shoe--named the Adizero Adios Pro Evo 1--a non starter for most runners. After all, you can get a different type of really fast shoe from other companies for a mere $250. :)


But what if the shoe actually lasted longer? Then the calculus might change.


In this article, a reviewer ran in the shoe “until it gave out.” When did that happen? “I’ve logged more than 300 miles and, while they’ve passed the point where I’d want to run a marathon in them, I’d still feel as confident lacing them up for shorter distances like 5Ks and 10Ks as I did when they were new.”


Not only that, but the shoes also felt fantastic from the first step. Running in them was “pure bliss, mixed with a bit of disbelief. How could a shoe be this lightweight yet have so much cushioning and a stack height of 39mm in the heel, 33mm under the forefoot?”


After 300 miles the shoes continued “to deliver a speedy, lightweight, and responsive ride superior to non-carbon-plated uptempo trainer/racers, and even other super shoes, given how much less they weigh.”


Adidas is even changing its tune vis a vis the shoe’s limited durability. A Running VP at Adidas now claims: “What we said is that it is optimized for one race--not that it’s one and done. Optimized means you get the best performance in your first race.” More at Run Outside.


Revealed: A “Top-Down” Approach That Prevents Running Injuries

There have been many efforts to design an injury-prevention program for runners. Few have worked. Here’s one that seems to make a difference.


It involves a “top-down” approach to prevention vs a “bottom up” program. What that means: Focus on strengthening your hips and core rather than the ankle and foot muscles.


A team from Finland divided adult novice runners (average age 40, mostly female, running 5K a week) into three groups: One received physiotherapist instruction in core and hip strengthening exercises, one got PT-guided foot exercises, and the third got PT-guided static stretching exercises. Each group included about 120 subjects.


All received the same general run-training advice, including “good running form” instruction from a veteran coach (but no guidance as to foot strike). The subjects followed a 4-times a week running routine for 6 months. It included gradually-increasing distances. 


Result: The hip-core group had a 39% lower rate of injuries than the control group (static stretching), and a 52 percent lower rate of “substantial overuse injuries.” The ankle-foot group had slightly more injuries than the stretching group.


What made the difference between these injury-prevention programs? The researchers hypothesized that the hip-core exercises (like squats, lunges, planks, and single-leg hip raises) targeted the large muscles of the upper leg and calf that are most likely to suffer overuse injuries in running.


A secondary finding: Stretching did make a contribution. It was most effective at reducing acute muscle injuries that occurred with speedwork or uphill/downhill running. However, these acute injuries represented such a small percentage of total injuries that this finding did not change the primary outcome.


Conclusion: “A physiotherapist-guided hip and core-focused exercise program was effective in preventing lower leg injuries in novice recreational runners.” More at British J of Sports Medicine. 


8 Ways To Run Smoother And Faster

We’d all like to improve our Running Economy (RE) because enhanced efficiency leads to faster times in most races from the 5K up. This article summarizes the best methods to improve your RE. 


And the advice is all good, although it doesn’t include a really big factor: Choose your parents well. At some level, RE is related to your genetic foundation--the structure of the muscles you were born with.


That said, you can do things to boost your RE. Every mile you run--and, in particular, every year you run--inches you forward on the RE continuum.  


Changing your biomechanics and neuromuscular connections is a complex challenge. But substantial research indicates that excessive bouncing--”vertical oscillation”--has a negative influence on your RE. Also, landing with your foot ahead of your knee and center of gravity lessens your RE.


So run with a modestly short stride, and push forward--not upward.


Plyometrics, hopping, and similar drills can smooth out and strengthen your body movements, increasing RE. Many also believe in doing “strides” during or after a run to increase your speed efficiency. 


I chuckled a little over the last of the 8 strategies presented here: “Try carbon plated running shoes.” Yes, you can pay more for shoes with more expensive technologies--super foams and carbon plates. 


This is rather like buying premium fuel at the gas tank. It usually works, but you have to decide what best fits your finances and your goals. More at Marathon Handbook.


Great New Running Tool (Free!)--A Sweat Rate Calculator

Hydration experts have long argued that we should all take a personal hydration test to determine our sweat rate (since rates differ substantially from individual to individual)


So you strip naked, weigh yourself, go run for an hour, keep track of any fluids you drink, finish your run, strip naked again, wipe off any sweat on your body, and weigh yourself again.


I know approximately no one who has ever bothered with this laborious routine. Besides, it doesn’t do you any good unless the day of your test has the same weather as the day of a big, upcoming race. You also have to run at your race pace.


A group of researchers from Australia recently decided to try another approach. They gathered a large group of runners and cyclists, and put them through a 60 minute test in conditions that included different temperatures and humidities and wind speed.


When finished, they crammed all their data into an online calculator that “can guide individualized hydration management in advance of outdoor running and cycling.”


They put their new tool at SweatRateCalculator.com with nice “sliders” that let you adjust your weight, height, distance covered, and the temperature data as necessary. The Calculator asks for your Power rather than your running pace, so I just left it at the preset 175 watts. Your final output will tell you how much water you need to consume per hour, and whether or not you will become more than 2% dehydrated if you don’t drink.


More at J of Applied Physiology and Sweat Rate Calculator.


They’ve Run 100+ Marathons. What’s Their Physical & Mental Health?

What can be said about those relatively few runners who have completed more than 100 marathons? Quite a bit, it turns out, if you interview 830 of them (from 40 countries on 6 continents), as this paper did. 


First, they have an average age of 51, are 60% male, and run about 35 miles/week. That’s not much given that 12% report running a marathon every week, and 80% say they do one a month.

They get most of their mileage in races.


Otherwise, the stat that jumps off the page is the 94% who responded that “multi-marathoning was positive for their mental health.” That’s a self-report, of course.


The multi-marathoners also said their hobby provided: a way to stay fit and healthy (18.32%), a sense of accomplishment (16.26%), a “way of life” (13.62%), enhanced social engagement (11.53%), travel opportunities (8.82%), and the achievement of reaching certain milestones (8.3%).


Shoe use: 45% preferred cushioned shoes, 27% stability shoes, and 20% minimalist shoes. Also, 93% used GPS watches, and 44% ran with headphones in training.


You might imagine that these folks had lots of injuries, but that wasn’t the case. “No specific multi-marathoning injury types or specific overuse injuries were noted.” In fact, the subjects reported little more than blisters and chafing issues. At the same time, 67% took “medications that relieve pain around events.”


Conclusion: “The active participation of older individuals, including those in their sixties, seventies, and even eighties, challenges stereotypes associated with age. It suggests that multi-marathoning offers opportunities for lifelong engagement in physical activity and underscores the importance of promoting inclusive practices within the sport to cater to diverse age groups.”


Worth repeating: 94 percent felt frequent marathon running was good for their mental health. More at PLoSONE with free full text.


Have We All Gone Protein Crazy?

At the beginning of a run last week, my training partner told me she had just listened to an NPR report about the need for more protein, particularly among older women. 


Strange. An hour earlier, I had read an article stating that our current protein obsession is basically a myth.


In the myth article, I chuckled over the explanation from Harvard nutrition expert Dariush Mozaffarian. “It’s the only micronutrient left standing,” he said. 


Here’s what he meant: We’ve vilified carbs and fats as bad guys. That leaves protein. Since one of the three basic micronutrients must be good for us, it seems protein is the logical good guy.


And of course it is. (As are carbs and fats, in the right amounts from the right sources.) But are we lacking in protein consumption? Do we need to eat more protein to stimulate muscle, health, and endurance?


Protein supplements are surely the most highly promoted and advertised supplements on the market these days. If you simply did squats while holding those big powder-filled canisters, you’d build plenty of strength without ingesting any of the powder at all.


When I review the available research, that’s the first and most important point I see from the most credible experts. To build strength, you’ve got to do strength (resistance) training. Consistently.


Second, protein does build muscle. But there’s little evidence that any of us are lacking in protein--even vegans and vegetarians. Here’s a paper by top nutrition experts concluding that “protein-rich foods, such as traditional legumes, nuts and seeds, are sufficient to achieve full protein adequacy in adults consuming vegetarian/vegan diets, while the question of any amino acid deficiency has been substantially overstated.”


Third, older adults can suffer from frailty and sarcopenia (lack of muscle). This often results from poor diet and poor exercise combined. Improve the diet, add some exercise (especially strength training), and the problem begins to resolve. You don’t need more protein. You need exercise and a healthy, well-rounded diet. More at Inverse.


Marathon Great Eliud Kipchoge Attacked On Social Media       

The last time I saw Eliud Kipchoge up close, at the 2022 NYC Marathon (where he was a guest, not a competitor), he was surrounded by two burly security guards. At the time, I thought this a bit excessive. Now, I’m not so sure. 


People of his stature, even if just runners vs politicians or rock stars, are lightning rods for the worst sorts of attention. Now, in a horrifying interview with BBC Sport Africa, Kipchoge has disclosed that he received online threats last February after the car accident that claimed Kelvin Kiptum’s life.


In October, Kiptum had broken Kipchoge’s world marathon record. The online trolls accused Kipchoge of purposefully killing his young countryman, and warned that reprisals were imminent. "I received a lot of bad things,” he said. “That they will burn the (training) camp, they will burn my investments in town, they will burn my house, they will burn my family.”


He worried especially about his children, biking to and from school, and around town. “We had to stop them. We started to drop them off, and pick them up in the evening.”


The mental stress on the two-time Olympic Marathon champ was almost overwhelming. When he traveled to the Tokyo Marathon in early March, he didn’t sleep for 3 nights, and finished an unusual and disappointing 10th.


Kipchoge is widely known as a quiet, serious, respectful, and even philosophical human being. He likes to read self-help books, and apply the lessons he has learned. 


He has traveled widely, been honored and feted, and won millions in prize money and appearance money. Yet when it comes time to prepare for his next race, he returns to a basic training camp with his teammates, and performs shared kitchen and bathroom chores with the others.


Now, he will try to recoup and recharge in time for the Paris Olympic Marathon on August 10th. No one has ever won 3 Olympic Marathon gold medals.


"It's about getting up and going straight again, to your goal," he said. “I want to go into history books, to be the first human being to win back-to-back-to-back."


That won’t be easy, especially now. But the whole world will be following his quest, and no doubt rooting for him. More at BBC Sport Africa.


SHORT STUFF You Don’t Want To Miss

>>> Vive la difference! Sports are different, and so are bodies. Here are 5 great infographics on body composition, including two (one male, one female) on unhealthy views and practices.

>>> Running post knee replacement: The first case study concludes, “It is possible to return to running.”

>>> Medical school Rx: Medical students lose significant fitness during their academic study years. They should place “greater emphasis on exercise” during their school years.


GREAT QUOTES Make Great Training Partners

“I need solitude. I need space. I need air. I need the empty fields around me; and my legs pounding along roads; and sleep; and animal existence.”

—Virginia Woolf