Health and Fitness Coach
18 September 2009 6:21 pm
What’s your training program like? Do you focus on increasing your miles each week, maybe a bit of speed work here and there, and of course a token stretch at the end of each session? Well hats off to you because unlike 85% of the population at least you are doing something! But whether you are an amateur runner or a competitive athlete, adding a resistance session each week might just be the thing you need to take your further, faster and with fewer injuries. This article looks at the reasoning behind resistance training for runners and identifies the top resistance training exercises all runners should do.
Conventionally we think of resistance training as weights machines, dumbbells, slow movements and heavy weights (with lots of grunting). Resistance training for runners is quite different. It’s about loading the muscles in a manner that replicates running to improve their strength power, endurance and most importantly coordination. It’s about identifying the weaker muscles in the body and developing them to prevent injury. It is NOT about building unnecessary bulk or damaging already fatigued tissue and I must stress that incorrect resistance training can tighten you up and slow you down.
There are four key areas that resistance training will help you with: Speed, muscular endurance, efficiency of running technique, and injury prevention.
Click here for a printable program you can take to the park/oval for your resistance session. Ideally you will need a stop watch and a skipping rope, but exercises can be performed without them.
Click here for a printable program for Core Stability and VMO/Glute Activation. You will need a swiss ball and leg extension machine for these.
The below animations will help you understand the exercises in the programs. Familiarize yourself with these exercises before printing out your workout sheets:





1. Start in a standing position and bend your knees and place your hands on the ground.
2. Extend your legs back into a push up position. Bring your knees back in towards chest and explosively jump in the air.
3. This should be a continuous motion and be fluid.






2 x 2 min

3 x 15 reps

3 x 12 each side

Click here for Printable resistance program. Click here for printable Core and VMO/Glute activation program
For more detailed core stability exercises, click on my core stability four part series linked here.
Have you got any other Resistance training exercises that would be good for runners? Link to them in your comments below.
Tagged As: circuit, injury prevention, Resistance training, running, swiss ball
This is great, Amelia! I love the little moving men. I’ll be working on the checklist (except the burpees – I hate those!)
[...] Resistance Training for Runners to Prevent Injury, Run Faster and … [...]
lol re the burpees is all i can say after today! hahaha
Hi, great article. Thanks for the PDF too. I’ll be giving it a try.
You’re welcome Peter! Be sure to print up the pdf and take it with you as you train.
Amelia
Hey Toni and Aimee,
Suck it up! Those burpees are fabulous. Why do so many people hate them…?
AB
Amelia,
I just did the Core Stability for Runners this morning prior to my 5-mile training run (I had printed it out a while ago and just found it). I have extremely tight hips and so I did this along w/ a 10-min dynamic stretch scheme and honestly I had one of the best runs of my life today! I’m going to work these into my daily routine to loosen (and strengthen) up.
Thanks for the tips and I look forward to more!
Hi Hugh,
That is awesome news! Thanks for the feedback. Combining strength with dynamic stretch is an awesome combo. Many runners underestimate the correlation between strength, stability and therefore injury prevention.
Keep up the great work!
Amelia.