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5 Moves To Prevent Injury

 

Long runs, hill repeats, and intervals make your body strong. But to propel you forward, it relies heavily on a few specific muscles that can become so mighty that they overpower lesser-worked areas like your glutes, back, and certain muscles in your shins and quads.By Jessica Girdwain

 

This imbalance can put stress on joints, ligaments, and the muscles themselves, says Dr Kevin Vincent, PhD, a sports clinic director. Strengthening weaker supporting players keeps muscle groups working in complementary fashion so you can perform your best and ward off injury.

These exercises target common imbalances: perform the sequence two or three days a week, on cross-training or easy run days.

Bonus: do them barefoot to give the stabilising muscles in your feet and ankles an extra challenge.

Heel Taps

Works the tibialis posterior, a muscle in the shin that is often weaker than its counterpart, the anterior tibialis, also in the shin.

To do:

Single-leg Deadlift

Activates the glutes and the piriformis, common runner weak spots that can be overpowered by stronger quads or hamstrings.

To do:

Walking Lunge With Twist

Strengthens the entire length of the quad – the lower portion of the thigh above the kneecap tends to be weaker than the top portion.

To do:

One-legged Bridge

Targets under-worked muscles in your lower back, which oppose stronger abs, to create balanced core strength to power your runs.

To do:

Seated Row

Builds your upper back, to counteract stronger chest muscles and help you maintain good running posture.

To do:

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