Myth-busting the Warm-up Stretch

No matter where you go, you will see runners leaning against a wall, lamppost, park bench or car, statically stretching before a run, going through the stretching motions as part of their usual warm-up routine… but scientific research is proving over and over that stretching to warm up actually hampers your running performance.

Nobody is quite sure where or when it started, but somewhere along the way athletes were told that stretching before a run, workout or sports match would loosen up their muscles, thus making them better able to handle the exertion of the upcoming activity. Thus static stretching became part not only of many athletes’ warm-ups, but they also believed it would help protect against injury, as the muscles would have an increased range of motion and could better deal with repeated stress or sudden over-stretching.

However, in recent years, study after study has refuted the long-held belief that static stretching warms a muscle up. In fact, the research has shown that it can reduce muscle power, or slow you down, because your muscles are over-stretched and less elastic, and can actually increase the chances of pulling up with an injury. For runners who are already quite flexible, static stretching can even make them more injury-prone by pushing the joint too far, into a position which isn’t optimal for running.

LATEST RESEARCH


In a massive study done in 2013 by researchers at the University of Zagreb in Croatia, which was recently published in The Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports, the research team analysed 104 studies where athletes only stretched statically to warm up before they jumped, sprinted, lifted or otherwise had their muscular strength and power tested, with no running or other warm-up activity. They calculated that static stretching actually reduces muscular strength by 5.5%, especially when stretches were held for 90 seconds or more, and that stretched muscles are, in general, substantially less strong. In other words, athletes who stretch to warm up are likely to perform worse than if they hadn’t warmed up at all!

Another study, published in The Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, concluded that if you stretch before you lift weights, you may find yourself feeling weaker and more wobbly than you expect during your workout. For this study, young, fit men performed standard squats with barbells after either first stretching or not. The volunteers could only manage 8.3% less weight after static stretching, but even more interesting, they also reported that they felt less stable and more unbalanced after the static stretching warm-up.

NOT THE DONE THING!


Together, these studies augment a growing scientific consensus that pre-exercise stretching is generally unnecessary and likely counterproductive, with the various study authors writing that they suspect the problem is that stretching does exactly what we expect it to do: It loosens muscles and their accompanying tendons – which makes them less able to store energy and spring into action, like a worn-out elastic band. According to Dr Goran Markovic, who headed up the Croatian study, “After this study, we can now say for sure that static stretching alone is not recommended as an appropriate form of warm-up. A warm-up should improve performance, not worsen it, so a better choice is to warm-up dynamically, by moving the muscles that will be called upon in your workout.”

What that means is a runner warming up for a training run or race should rather jog slowly to warm up those leg muscles, stretching them dynamically by putting them through the range of motion they’ll need for the run, and this can then be complimented by gentle skipping or hopping… instead of trying to bend your foot all the way up to touch your butt, which stretches your cold quad muscle way beyond the range of motion it will be asked to go through while running!

BUT WAIT, THERE’S MORE…


Stretching does still have its benefits, though, and it’s just a matter of understanding how to incorporate the right amount and type of stretching into your training programme, instead of writing it off completely, says Dr Markovic. “Stretching and flexibility training can give you a wider range of motion in your joints, which can help them to perform better and improve balance and posture as well as reduce the risk of more severe injuries, but the key question is whether you feel you have adequate flexibility for the performance you’re looking to achieve.” So if you wish to train at a higher intensity, you may find you need a bit more mobility in your joints and muscles to take your training to the next level – but this should be done as a complimentary part of your overall training programme, not as a warm-up before you run.”

Your Race Day Plan

What do you eat before a run? When is the ideal time to drink and eat during your race? Here’s what you need to know to fuel a good run as well as your recovery after you cross the finish line! – BY CHRISTINE PETERS, REGISTERED DIETICIAN

If you’re looking to plan your perfect race-day eating plan, you need to understand that there are four main stages to your race day nutrition, and you need to focus on each stage in order to get your race day nutrition right.

1. BEFORE THE RACE (2-3 HOURS)


If running a morning race, your meal shortly after waking up will be your last substantial meal before your race. This is your opportunity to top up the glycogen stores, which would have been partially depleted from your overnight fast. After eating, you should allow 1 to 3 hours for digestion before the start gun is fired.

Recommendation:
1 to 2g per kilogram of body weight;
Low in fat and fibre;
High carbs;
Moderate protein.

Ideal Meal/Snack:
Porridge or cereal with low-fat milk or yoghurt, and white toast with peanut butter or jam.
Don’t forget to drink some water, diluted fruit juice, low-fat milk or your sports drink to top up fluids.
If you lack an appetite in the morning, you can choose 500ml of carbohydrate drink and a sports or cereal bar.

2. JUST BEFORE THE START
If your nerves allow, you should have another small and easily digested carbohydrate-based snack in the hour before you start, so grab a small banana, half a sports bar or some sports drink. Consuming a carbohydrate drink may prime the stomach and improve gastric emptying. This will give you a little push in the beginning stages of your run.

3. DURING THE RACE
Start eating and drinking early in the run (within 30 to 45 minutes) and consume 30-60g low-fat and fibre carbohydrate each hour. During ultra-endurance events lasting more than 2½ to 3hours, you can consume up to 90g an hour. Remember, your race strategy should be well rehearsed before the actual race day, so practise it in training first.

Recommendation:
0.7g carbohydrate per kilogram of body weight per hour OR 30 to 90g of carbohydrate per hour. The body can oxidise 1g of carb per minute.
Start drinking early and continue drinking small amounts regularly. Combination carbohydrates increase oxidation (glucose, fructose, sucrose and maltidextrin are recommended, but not large amounts of fructose because of gastrointestinal discomfort).
Drink to thirst: Draw on your experience of hydrating from your training and races, and be aware of the weather conditions – hot and humid weather increases sweat-loss, which means you might need to adjust your drinking patterns, being careful not to overhydrate. A very basic guideline is to drink between 500ml and 2 litres per hour. Try ingesting frequent small amounts of fluid (150-200ml) every 15-20 minutes.

Ideal Meal/Snack:
Every 30-60min, try having 20-25g carbohydrates depending on size, intensity and duration:
½ sports bottle (375ml) of carbohydrate drink (6-8% carbohydrate solution);
1 sports bar/ cereal bar;
200ml Coca-Cola;
1 energy gel;
4-5 jelly babies;
1 large banana;
4-5 baby potatoes;
1 marmite sandwich (2 slices of white crustless bread);
45g dried fruit.

4. AFTER THE RACE
Refuelling assists with recovery and repairing muscle after exercise, and a good recovery snack or drink should consist of carbohydrate and protein to replenish muscle glycogen stores, fluid, energy and electrolytes.

Recommendation:
0.6-1.5g carb per kilogram of body weight during the first 30min, then again every 2 hours for 4-6 hours. This is especially important if another bout of exercise is to be done within the next 24 hours.
Adequate fluid, electrolytes, energy and carbs;
Small, regular snacks;
Compact carb-rich foods;
20-25g of high-quality protein.

Ideal Meal/Snack:
A sandwich with cold meat, tuna or cheese;
Low-fat flavoured milk;
Low-fat drinking yoghurt;
Fruit smoothie (with low-fat milk or yoghurt as a base);
A handful of lean biltong with an energy bar.

Gomez wins WTS Cape Town

Spain’s Javier Gomez Noya’s quest to become the second man to win four ITU World Championships gained strength in Cape Town yesterday, as he comfortably beat Jonathan Brownlee for his second consecutive ITU World Triathlon Series win in 2014.

As the series made its debut in Africa, Gomez put the hammer down with around 4km to go. Just like in the series opener in Auckland, Brownlee just could not stick with him. It means Gomez holds onto the lead in the Threadneedle rankings and looks the one to beat in the race for the 2014 world title. But Gomez revealed afterwards he was not confident at the start of the 10km run.

“The run, I didn’t feel very fresh I think we all were pretty tired. I had heavy legs but I just went as hard as I could on that third lap and I could make this little gap with Jonathan and luckily I could commit,” Gomez said. “I just didn’t look back and went as hard as I could.”

Brownlee was filled with nothing but praise, admitting he just did not have Gomez’s measure again.
“I was even more impressed this time, to be honest with you, In Auckland I let him kind of run the race at the front,” Brownlee said. “Here I thought I would change it up a bit but every time he went for it, I kind of counter attacked and then he counter attacked again and dropped me. It’s as simple as that. He was very impressive today. He was strong on the bike, strong in the swim and then on the run. He was a lot better than me on the run, so well done to him.”

It added yet another chapter to their rivalry, as Gomez now just leads in WTS encounters. In 19 races, Brownlee has five wins and Gomez six. It is also the third consecutive time Gomez has beaten the younger Brownlee brother, after last year’s London Grand Final and the season opener in Auckland.
While the top two podium places were again filled by Gomez and Brownlee, it was Russia’s Dmitry Polyanskiy who re-captured his best form to collect another career WTS medal.

The men’s race started with a two-lap 750m swim in the V&A Waterfront. Slovakia’s Richard Varga assumed his regular position at the front of the pack and the frenetic pace he set started to string out the field quickly. While Gomez and Brownlee were just on his heels, pre-race podium threats Mario Mola and Richard Murray had already lost significant time after the first lap, falling more than 20 seconds back. That gap increased on the second lap of the swim, and those at the front made it count by forming a 14-strong lead group on the bike.

Led by South Africa’s Henri Schoeman, Jonathan Brownlee, Javier Gomez Noya and Aaron Royle, a 14-man lead group came together on the first lap and worked together to push the pace. While a quad of men that included Joao Silva and Gordon Benson was initially in touch with the leaders, they quickly fell back to the large chase group. With the technical course providing less breakaway opportunities, the trailing group of 25 struggled to regain time across the 40km bike.

Although Australia’s Declan Wilson, Cameron Good, Mola, Murray and company sweated to keep the pace steady, their effort was not enough to close the gap on the leaders. At the halfway point of the 40km bike, the gap to the chase pack was 53 seconds, while a third chase pack led by Conor Murphy was 2 minutes and 25 seconds down. That gap increased slightly at the second transition, to 1:20, just enough to see Mola and Murray out of podium reach.

With five WTS medallists in the lead group, including Brownlee, Gomez, Royle, Polyanskiy and Vincent Luis, and two others who have recorded top-5 finishes in Schoeman and Alessandro Fabian, positioning became paramount. It was Germany’s Justus Nieschlag who stepped out in front from T2, but Brownlee and Gomez quickly moved to the front to resume yet another battle in an epic rivalry.

Behind them the experienced Polyanskiy looked to have found the form that carried him to series podiums in the past, leading a small group that included South Africa’s Wian Sullwald, France’s Aurelien Raphael and Luis and Royle. The Russian opened up the lead on the second lap to 20 seconds and did not look back, claiming his first podium since 2012.

In another impressive comeback run performance in Cape Town, Mola and Murray crashed their way back from the chase pack into the top five, claiming fourth and fifth places respectively.

Says Richard Murray: “Wow, this was amazing. It was like the Olympics with the people going crazy! It was hard. I didn’t feel myself today and couldn’t work as hard as I would’ve liked to on the bike. Sorry to the guys. I actually thought my swim was quite good. When I came into transition I saw, to my surprise, there weren’t many bikes left! Mario and I went together on the run and on the second lap he said ‘Let’s go’ and I thought oh no! I’m happy with fifth, but I know that I need to improve. It was something special to race in front of family and friends and I’m looking forward to doing it again next year. This was something spectacular.”

Stimpson too Strong in Cape Town

Great Britain’s Jodie Stimpson asserted her status as the female triathlete to beat in 2014, collecting her second consecutive World Triathlon Series win as the series made its debut in Africa on Saturday.

After being part of a 12-strong lead group on the bike that left T2 just over two minutes up on the chase, Stimpson hit the run course in Cape Town with intent. While it initially looked like it would be a repeat of Auckland, where Stimpson was not headed across the 10km, Helen Jenkins had other ideas. The two-time ITU World Champion caught Stimpson at the halfway mark, before a frenzied final five kilometres where the lead changed multiple times. But Stimpson pulled out another gear in the final 500m as the blue carpet came into sight, and stormed home for her second win of 2014.

““When Helen passed me it was just all about trying to hang on, I was going through a bad bit, I had a stitch and I was just like, come on, just hold on to Helen,” Stimpson said. “I tried to break her going onto the last lap and then I couldn’t, so I just sat behind and I gave it all I’ve got and managed to get on top today.”

While Stimpson and Jenkins’ battle rightly headlined Cape Town, the USA’s Gwen Jorgensen almost stole the show with another breath-taking run. Jorgensen was part of the chase that left the second transition 2 minutes and 12 seconds behind the leaders, but the American speedster did not let that deter her as she blew through every other member of the lead group – including Sarah Groff in the final kilometers – to take her place on the podium with bronze.

The swim was shortened to 750m in Cape Town due to low water temperatures at the V&A Waterfront and Carolina Routier and Lucy Hall led the field out of the water and onto the bike. In a chaotic first lap, a group of 12 formed including three of Hall’s British teammates, Helen Jenkins, Jodie Stimpson and Vicky Holland, as well as Sarah Groff, Yuka Sato, Kirsten Sweetland, Anja Knapp, Ainhoa Murua, Pamela Oliveira and South Africa’s own Marie Rabie, in her first WTS race since 2010.

What began as a 25-second lead, quickly amounted to more than a minute halfway through the bike thanks to the experience and organisation of the lead pack. Jenkins may have missed the 2012 season, but the talent that carried her to two world championship titles was alive and back in action.

Despite being led by cycling cyclone Anne Haug, the group just could not muster up the speed to close in on the dazzling dozen.

At the end of the sixth lap, the third chase pack bridged up, but the added muscle did little to increase the group’s tempo. The leaders flew into T2 with a 2 minute and 12 second lead and got to work pushing the pace to ward off the powerful Haug and Jorgensen behind them.

Continuing on her stellar form from Auckland, Stimpson went straight to the front. While Holland stuck on her shoulder initially, she fell back and it seemed like Stimpson had her second straight victory all but wrapped up. But that was not in Helen Jenkins plan, as she steadily reeled Stimpson back in, catching her at the halfway point of the run. From there the pair’s intensity only increased, with multiple lead changes before Stimpson gained the upper hand in the final 500m.

The win means that Stimpson moves further ahead in the 2014 Threadneedle rankings, after two rounds of the World Triathlon Series. Jenkins sits in second, while Anne Haug’s strong sixth place – after leaving T2 in the same place as Jorgensen – means she sits in third just ahead of Groff, who has now recorded two consecutive top-5 finishes to start the 2014 season. Jorgensen is currently in fifth place.

It was Stimpson’s third career World Triathlon Series win, while it was Jenkins’ 12th career WTS podium. Ainhoa Murua’s fifth place was her highest career WTS result.

African Triathlon Champion Gillian Sanders finished in fifteenth place. Says Sanders: “It was so tough out there. I was in the second bike pack and it was mostly a day of catching up. I realised that I’d have to run really hard and I’m happy with my result. I’m a proud South African today. You can’t beat this venue. Discovery World Triathlon Cape Town was so awesome and everybody loved it. I think it bodes well for the future of this event.”
Compatriot Mari Rabie finished 27th in a 46-strong field: “My expectations weren’t high. It’s been two years since I’ve competed as I’ve been focusing on my studies. I’ve only been training for four months and I knew the run would be the big challenge. I’m somewhat disappointed with my swim because I’m usually a strong swimmer. I’m so happy though that I have competed today and it’s great to be back!”

Murray ready to lead SA charge

Not only is the Discovery World Triathlon Cape Town a first for the African continent, but it is also a first ever for Richard Murray when he lines up against the best triathletes in the world on home soil.
Murray (25) along with brothers Alistair and Jonathan Brownlee (GBR) and Javier Gomez (ESP) are headlining the ITU World Series race on Sunday at the V&A Waterfront.

Murray, like many other athletes, have been preparing in Stellenbosch for the past few weeks. The whole Joel Filliol squad of which Murray is part and includes another red-hot Spaniard Mario Mola is training in Stellenbosch. “Training has been going great. I mostly did sharpening up before the Cape Town race. I’m very keen to see how the past five months’ training has gone and how I’ll perform this early in the season.”

Murray has thus far won the SA Championships in East London and the ATU African Sprint Cup and finished second at the Mooloolaba World Cup in Australia and the African Championships in Harare, Zimbabwe. “With four races under the belt, I feel confidant and sharp leading into the Discovery World Triathlon Cape Town.

Murray, along with Henri Schoeman, will be the two prominent South Africans in the race. But youngsters Wian Sullwald, Travis Johnston and Wikus Weber are some of the other locals that will be racing on a very fast and flat route. “With a few other African boys on the start line, with family, friends and sponsors in support, it’s going to be something very special for me. I’m super-amped to race against the best triathletes at home.”

This is not only a great opportunity for Murray and other local athletes to race internationally on home soil, but it is a chance for the sport of triathlon to get some much-needed national exposure in the country. “Triathlon and Cape Town are getting some great exposure and publicity. Our sport really needs this. For the athletes and the sponsors.”

Are you a cheat if you use pain killers?

There is much literature on the dangers of using pain medication and anti-inflammatories while running, particularly during marathons and ultra-marathons. The short answer is DO NOT DO IT! It could cause renal failure and ultimately death. Besides the physical dangers, there is also an ethical question around the use of these types of medication during races like the Comrades Marathon too. Is using these medications considered cheating and do you gain an advantage by using them?

Most of these drugs are not on the list of banned substances and are freely available over the counter at your local pharmacy, but does using them during a run make it ethically right? Isn’t the attraction of running hard races not to overcome the hardship and prove to yourself that you, and you alone without the help of outside assistance, can accomplish anything? Is it true to say that running a race like Comrades is not easy and if it were everyone would have a Comrades finishers’ medal?

I spoke to the Comrades Coach Lindsey Parry this week about the use of pain killers and he has some strong opinions on the subject. Listen to our chat and let us know your thoughts by commenting below.

Javier Gomez leading the way in Auckland.

History Rewritten at the 2014 Boston Marathon

It was a historic Boston Marathon in Massachusetts on Monday. South Africa’s Ernst van Dyk became the first athlete ever to win ten titles at the marathon showpiece. The 41 year old wheelchair racer finished in a time of 1:20:36, his second fastest finish time ever, slower only to the course record of 1:18:27 that he set in back in 2004.

The veteran South African, who dominated the race from start to finish, crossed the line 38 seconds ahead of Japan’s Kota Hokinoue, who claimed second in 1:21:14.

It was also a historic day too for Meb Keflezighi who won the overall men’s race in a time of 2:08:37 and in doing so became the first American to win the Boston Marathon since Greg A. Meyer did it in 1983. Eritrean born Keflezighi broke the 29 year American duck just a year after a terrorist attack at the 2013 edition of the race killed three people and left more than 260 injured. The 38 year old, who won the New York Marathon in 2009, honoured the victims of the bombing by running with their names on his race bib.

The 2004 Olympic Silver medallist finished 11 seconds ahead of Kenya’s Wilson Chebet. South Africa’s Lusaho April claimed 15th position in a time of 2:14:59, more than six minutes behind the eventual winner Keflezighi.

History was also rewritten in the women’s elite race with Kenyan Rita Jeptoo defending the title she won in 2013 in a new course record of 2:18:57. Jeptoo claimed her third Boston Marathon title with a winning margin of over a minute from Ethiopia’s Buzunesh Deba who crossed the line in a time of 2:19:59 with countrywoman Mare Dibaba in third. All three of the leading ladies ran faster than the previous course record.

Ingeli Skymarathon (photo credit: ©Anthony Grote)

World Champ Gomez Wants Cape Town Win

He hopes spectators pitch in their masses for the ITU’s Discovery World Triathlon Cape Town, because World Champion Javier Gomez believes all the world-class triathletes are ready to put on a show that won’t easily be forgotten.

The Cape Town event in the ITU World Triathlon Series will be held at the V&A Waterfront. The women’s race is on the Saturday (26 April) and the men on the Sunday (27 April).

Spain’s Gomez won the first race in the ITU World Triathlon Series in Auckland earlier in April. He is also the current World Champion. “It’s always great to start the season with a victory, but Auckland’s course really suits me and there is still seven races to come in the World Series.”

The Discovery World Triathlon Cape Town course is flat and promises some fast racing. “It’s going to be a very fast race with both the Brownlees (Alistair and Jonathan) in action. Competing against them never gets boring. They’re the best rivals I’ve ever had. They have no weak points. But also keep in mind that the gap between the three of us and the next group is not that big. Mario Mola won two World Cup events this season and Richard Murray is a super strong athlete – he’s had some chances. If you want to win an ITU race you have to be 100%”

Gomez believes that people should use this opportunity to come and witness some international triathlon action. “I think spectators will be surprised with the intensity of the race and how aggressive the athletes race. They’ll have many opportunities to see us with the laps and I really hope they come and enjoy the show.”

Even though Olympic distance races are sometimes less than 2 hours, Gomez warns that longer is not always harder. “The intensity of this kind of racing really hurts! It’s very intense, not to mention tactical. There are some very important decisions you have to make and when your heart rate is at 180 you’re not thinking that clear! You have to be fit, strong and smart.”

Gomez is ready to battle the Brownlees, Mola, Murray and the usual suspects for a victory in Cape Town. “It’s good to have both Alistair and Jonathan back. Because I won in Auckland, there is less pressure on me. I do like to keep going though and be on top of the podium again.”

Ingeli Skymarathon (photo credit: ©Anthony Grote)

Back-up, I Can’t Run!

There are few injuries that are as debilitating as a back injury. Running with a sore back is not only extremely uncomfortable but it can also be extremely dangerous. On today’s episode of the Ask Coach Parry Podcast Nonkululo Mcuntula asks about running with a sore back. She picked something up and felt a tweak in her back, she is obviously concerned because of the pain caused by it but she is also worried about how long she is going to be out of action for.

 

Trail runners in action during the 2013 FNB Platinum Trail Run presented by ISUZU.  Photo Credit ~ Cherie Vale / NEWSPORT MEDIA

The Forgetful Runner’s Checklist


You have trained hard for the Two Oceans Marathon and you don't want to hit a night before panic by discovering that you left some running essentials back home. It might be something replaceable like safety pins or gels.

But maybe you forgot to pack both your racing shoes(confession) or left your favorite socks or lucky underwear at home. When traveling to a race, I always travel with my race day essentials in my carry-on back pack, in case my checked-in luggage gets lost.


For a change the weather forecast is looking good for Saturday, but be prepared for any weather.
To avoid the forgetful runner panic, make a checklist and check it TWICE!

Pre-race


– Hotel-and flight confirmation
– Race confirmation and address where to pick up your race number.
– Course map
– Chargers for cellphone and GPS watch
– Vaseline
– Safety pins
– Sunscreen, hat and sunglasses
– Pre race breakfast
– Water bottle

Race day


Get your racing gear ready the night before, to avoid last minute chaos in the early hours of saturday morning!


– Race number
– Racetec timing chip
– Running shoes or Racers
– Running shorts
– Sports bra
– Running Vest
– Sunglasses and sunscreen.
– Shocks
– Compression shocks
– Energy drink and gels
– Stopwatch or GPS watch FULLY CHARGED
– TOILET PAPER

Post Race


– Recovery drink
– Post race snack
– Dry clothes
– Socks
– Rain jacket
– Towel
– Plastic bag for wet sweaty clothes.

Enjoy every moment of the World's mosts beautiful marathon!