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Top 10 Running Drills For Speed And Efficiency

August 29, 2014 12 Comments

2014-8-29-livewellbag

Happy Friday!

So I’m flying to Napa today to taste ALL the wine! Ha. I’ve been dreaming of this trip for a long time! (I’ve been to Napa 2x but never had time for wine tasting. Always running.)

Anywho, I have a very cool guest post about running drills from Mercedes who blogs at Perpetual Awesomeness! 

Before I hand it over to her, I wanted to thank Melissa (TheValentineRD) and Live Well 360 for this AWESOME BAG! I won the instagram contest at IDEA World and this bag is coming with me to wine country!

Moxie wants to come too, but she isn’t invited.
Wah wah.

What will Saturday’s run look like?

Okay, back to running. If you’re not sure what your run is going to be tomorrow, I think you’ll find some good ideas in this post!

Get to know Mercedes: Twitter | Instagram | Pinterest


TOP 10 RUNNING DRILLS FOR SPEED AND EFFICIENCY

Guest post by Mercedes of Perpetual Awesomeness! 

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Nike images courtesy of http://www.pinterest.com/nikewomen/

Our running club does this workout every Tuesday.
Each drill is performed for two lengths of a 100m track.
Take short breaks in between to catch your breath if you need to.

We warm up with a light jog around the track and do sprints afterward to maximize our focus on form when we are fatigued. It helps to choose a mantra like “dig”, “push” or “drive” to get you through the final laps. Bring the printed list (bottom of post) to your next cross-training or drills workout.

It’s a lot of fun, especially with friends!

1. BUTT KICKS

Butt kicks engage the hamstrings and accentuate the recovery portion of the running gait and improve leg turnover cadence. While running, kick yourself in the glute with your heel on each stride. If you’re not making contact, you need to improve your dynamic range of motion.

2. HIGH KNEES

The high knees drill improves knee lift and glute/hamstring power, which promote speed, efficiency, and powerful and leg drive. Taking short steps with a very quick cadence, alternate thrusting knees upward until your thigh breaks a plane parallel to the ground. Focus on soft, flat footstrikes near the ball of your foot while using your core to lower your leg down slowly instead of letting it crash to the ground.

3. GAZELLES

Bounding increases foot, calf and hamstring muscle power and develops stability necessary to maintain fluid running form while fatigued. Alternate leaping into the air off one leg in an exaggerated stag or gazelle style bounding motion. Your arm motion should be synced to the opposite leg’s action, holding steady for the brief moment while you’re off the ground.

4. GRAPEVINES

This drill increases hip and leg mobility while also using the lateral strength required to run with good form. We all know how to grapevine, right? Standing upright with your head and torso facing forward, move laterally in one direction by placing your trailing leg in front of the lead leg. Then move the lead leg in that same lateral direction and place the trailing leg behind the lead leg. Maintain a fluid motion with your arms, moving them to maintain balance.

5. SLOW SKIPPING

This drill helps develop calf and foot strength needed during the toe-off phase while also stimulating neuromuscular timing for running with high cadence. Skip like you would on the playground, but accentuate the high-knees section. This is basically high-knees with extra focus on your calves. Don’t forget to double-bounce on the bottom foot.

6. LATERAL BOUNDING

This drill develops lateral strength and agility necessary to stabilize the body and maintain single-leg balance during forward running motion. Specifically, this drill works the glutes, hip flexors, tensors, abductors and psoas muscles in ways that are otherwise neglected in forward running. The slow version of this is ‘step to the side and then bring your trailing leg to meet your lead leg’. Now go faster! You’ll probably need to swing your arms overhead in an opposite pattern to maintain balance.

7. HAMSTRING EXTENSIONS

This drill increases mobility of the hamstring and gluteal muscle groups and enhances forward hip extension necessary for running fast with efficient form. Hold one arm in front of you, parallel to the ground, and kick toward your hand with the opposite leg. Lower your leg, taking a step forward and then switch arms and kick with the alternate leg, focusing on form, not speed.

8. CAKEWALKS

This drill helps stimulate neuromuscular timing for quick-cadence running, while also reinforcing a balanced foot strike. This helps eliminate the counterproductive braking associated with a heel-striking gait. With an upright torso, straight legs, and pointed toes, start bounding forward with quick cadence.

9. RUNNING BACKWARDS

Running backward helps strengthen the glutes and upper hamstrings, as well as core muscles. Although it will seem awkward at first, try to replicate your forward running motion while moving backward. You’ll still be pushing off of your forefoot and swinging your arms, but you’ll be lunging backward with your hamstrings and using core muscles to stabilize differently than you’re used to while moving forward.

10. BURPEES

Because everyone loves burpees, Right? Roll some dice or draw cards to decide how many you have to do. (Try to shoot for 100 in a row by the end of the season!)

HANDY PRINTABLE:

2014-8-29-guest-top10_runningdrills

2014-8-29-mercedes

Hi, I’m Mercedes!

I work in business development for social profit and currently spend a lot of my time promoting the important role of women in science and entrepreneurial careers. I live in a Canadian version of the fictional town of Star’s Hollow, with my husband and our dog, Emily.
I read once that you can have a great body, a great relationship, and a great job, but only two at once. I come from a family that never put limits on what we could do, and I think that if you work hard, there’s no reason that you can’t have all three and more.
I write about taking care of your body, loving the people around you, making a difference in your career, and the joys of life.

Get to know Mercedes: Blog | Twitter | Instagram | Pinterest


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Comments

ADD COMMENT
  1. Rachel @RunningRachel says

    August 29, 2014 at 9:09 am

    I must book mark and save this!! I have been slacking on speed (er… even running lately *gasp*) 😉

    Reply
  2. Katrina says

    August 29, 2014 at 10:09 am

    Run drills are so important – congratson the bag win too!

    Reply
  3. PavementRunner says

    August 29, 2014 at 11:20 am

    #pinning

    Definitely need to work on my speed game… that might be an easier fix than my circuit training.

    Reply
  4. happylifehealthylife says

    August 30, 2014 at 10:43 pm

    Ooo these look great! I’m always looking for new drills and ways to freshen up my running routine. I’ll have to give these a shot one day. Thanks for sharing! 🙂

    Reply
  5. Kyle Kranz says

    September 11, 2014 at 4:08 pm

    This is a great warmup routine to a harder workout.

    When doing drills, it’s always important to remember to perform them with purpose and to be mindful of your movements. Don’t do them if fatigue sets in. These should be stimulating, not tiring.

    Reply
  6. Marge says

    February 20, 2015 at 10:08 am

    I can’t quite make out how to do the cakewalks. Any help? Are legs bent? Straight. I know you said bounding forward but are they the same as bounding then?

    Thank you!

    Reply
    • Mercedes says

      February 21, 2015 at 8:41 pm

      Hi Marge,

      We do cakewalks with straight leading legs (the one you lift). You can start the movement as a stationary step, basically bouncing from foot to foot with the opposite leg extended. Then, use your supporting leg to propel yourself forward. the work here is in the calf muscle and stabilizing muscles in the lower leg, ankle, and foot. Keep the leading legs low for the first while, until you get the hang of it. Then, use this movement to improve strength in your hip flexors.

      Hope this helps!

      Mercedes

      Reply
  7. samanthamacmaster says

    April 12, 2015 at 7:46 am

    gonna say, my legs are feeling it today! Esp those calves. I didn’t take breaks, but there was some walking involved instead of jogging inbetween! Shared on my blog, https://runnerwithablog.wordpress.com, but gave full credit to you with a link to your blog 🙂

    Reply
  8. samanthamacmaster says

    April 12, 2015 at 7:48 am

    oops, I lied: it will be shared tomorrow when I post!

    Reply

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Coach Tiffany Henness.
I am a scattered-creative, transracial adoptee, forest dweller, organ donor, and #boymom, who writes, runs, and believes living out my faith in Christ involves seeking justice. I write about many things, but at the heart of it all is the desire to challenge and inspire us to see ourselves as God intended: whole in mind, body and soul. Contact me.

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