The Distance Dr: In Practice

Ep 16: Your Rehab Is Making You Faster (Change How You Think About Rehab, Strength & Performance)

22 min · I går
episode Ep 16: Your Rehab Is Making You Faster (Change How You Think About Rehab, Strength & Performance) cover

Beskrivelse

Here's something almost nobody tells you, that your rehab might actually be making you faster. We tend to treat strength training, physio, and endurance training like three separate things, but they're really one connected system, and in this episode I'll show you how the exact same work that settles a sore Achilles or a dodgy knee is also quietly making you a more economical, more powerful runner, using the Achilles and the knee as the clearest examples. Then I'll flip it around and show you how the training you do purely to get faster, things like plyometrics and heavy strength work, is at the very same time building your resilience and lowering your injury risk. It all comes back to one simple idea, that your body responds to load, not to whatever you call the session. I also get into the practical side, how you can shape your strength work around what your endurance training is doing in a given block, what to actually do when you feel like you've got no time, and why the strength work is so often the wrong thing to cut. And as always, the science is pulled straight from the primary research, with the genuinely mixed bits, like whether isometrics help Achilles pain, left honest rather than tidied up. Nick and I coach runners and triathletes this way, building strength, physio and endurance together as one thing, and we've just opened a few coaching spots, so if that's what you've been looking for, here's the link: https://www.thedistancedr.com/coaching [https://www.thedistancedr.com/coaching] And if this gave you a new way to think about your training, I'd love it if you followed the show and told me what you'd like me to dig into next.

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21 episoder

episode Ep 16: Your Rehab Is Making You Faster (Change How You Think About Rehab, Strength & Performance) cover

Ep 16: Your Rehab Is Making You Faster (Change How You Think About Rehab, Strength & Performance)

Here's something almost nobody tells you, that your rehab might actually be making you faster. We tend to treat strength training, physio, and endurance training like three separate things, but they're really one connected system, and in this episode I'll show you how the exact same work that settles a sore Achilles or a dodgy knee is also quietly making you a more economical, more powerful runner, using the Achilles and the knee as the clearest examples. Then I'll flip it around and show you how the training you do purely to get faster, things like plyometrics and heavy strength work, is at the very same time building your resilience and lowering your injury risk. It all comes back to one simple idea, that your body responds to load, not to whatever you call the session. I also get into the practical side, how you can shape your strength work around what your endurance training is doing in a given block, what to actually do when you feel like you've got no time, and why the strength work is so often the wrong thing to cut. And as always, the science is pulled straight from the primary research, with the genuinely mixed bits, like whether isometrics help Achilles pain, left honest rather than tidied up. Nick and I coach runners and triathletes this way, building strength, physio and endurance together as one thing, and we've just opened a few coaching spots, so if that's what you've been looking for, here's the link: https://www.thedistancedr.com/coaching [https://www.thedistancedr.com/coaching] And if this gave you a new way to think about your training, I'd love it if you followed the show and told me what you'd like me to dig into next.

I går22 min
episode Ep 15: The Late-Race Fade Nobody Talks About cover

Ep 15: The Late-Race Fade Nobody Talks About

Every distance runner and triathlete has felt the wheels slowly fall off late in a race. Late-race fatigue is multifactorial. Glycogen depletion, central fatigue, thermoregulation, dehydration, and neuromuscular fatigue across multiple muscle groups all play a role. But there's one specific component of the late-race fade that's grounded in solid biomechanics research, doesn't get the attention it deserves, and is one of the most trainable pieces of the puzzle. In this episode, Kate walks you through what happens to your calves and Achilles tendon over the course of a long race, why this complex is so central to running economy, and the specific evidence-based strength training approach that can offset the late-race cost. This won't fix everything that goes wrong in the final third of a marathon or ironman, but it will fix one meaningful piece of it. This episode is for runners and triathletes training for half marathon, marathon, 70.3, and Ironman distances who want to understand why their pace falls apart late in long races and what the research actually says about preventing it. In this episode: The deterioration of running economy and the concept of durability as the fourth determinant of endurance performance How the Achilles tendon works as a spring and why muscle-tendon decoupling matters The role of enthalpy efficiency in the soleus muscle What happens when the Achilles tendon loses stiffness mid-run (Fletcher and MacIntosh 2018) How calf fatigue redistributes propulsive work up the leg to the knee and hip (Sanno 2018, Nahan 2025) How female runners may experience this differently (Quan 2021) The Bohm 2021 protocol and the tendon strain threshold for adaptation Plyometric programming for running specificity The complete lower-body strength picture for long-distance athletes Companion episodes available for the role of the calf and Achilles complex in runners and triathletes specifically, plus an upcoming dedicated calf training programming episode. Key research referenced: Fletcher and MacIntosh 2018, Sanno et al. 2018, Nahan et al. 2025 (preprint), Bohm et al. 2021, Arampatzis et al. 2007, Quan et al. 2021, Melaro et al. 2021, Jones 2024. If this episode helped, please subscribe, leave a rating, and share it with a training partner. Your support is what keeps this kind of research-grounded content going. Kate Baldwin, PhD The Distance Dr Physiotherapist, sports scientist, strength and conditioning coach

15. maj 202631 min
episode Tired, Sick or Injured: How to Adjust Your Running Plan: Distance Dr Daily cover

Tired, Sick or Injured: How to Adjust Your Running Plan: Distance Dr Daily

Training plans look neat on paper. Real life does not always behave that politely. In this episode of Distance Dr Daily, I talk through what to do when you are following a marathon, half marathon, triathlon or running plan and suddenly things change: you feel run down, you get sick, or an injury starts to niggle. The big question is usually: do you catch up on missed sessions, swap things around, take a break, or just jump back into the plan? I break this down into three common scenarios: fatigue or feeling run down, illness, and injury. We talk about when it may make sense to swap a session, when to reduce intensity, when to rest, and when symptoms mean you should stop and seek medical advice. I also cover why suspected bone stress injury is different, why altered gait matters, and why jumping straight back into hard sessions after a flare-up can backfire. The goal is not to follow the plan perfectly. The goal is to make smart decisions so your body can actually adapt to the training. In this episode: * What to do if you wake up exhausted on interval day * When to swap, reduce or skip a session * Why you usually should not “catch up” missed runs * How to modify training when you are sick * How to return after time off or altered training * How to think about pain during running * When injury symptoms need medical advice * Why your plan needs to bend before your body breaks This is a practical episode for runners and triathletes who want to keep training moving without forcing the plan at all costs.

1. maj 20265 min
episode Easy Runs Are Not Junk Miles: Distance Dr Daily cover

Easy Runs Are Not Junk Miles: Distance Dr Daily

PODCAST EPISODE TITLE Easy Runs Are Not Junk Miles PODCAST DESCRIPTION Easy runs are one of the most commonly misunderstood parts of a running program. They are meant to be easy, yes, but that does not mean they are throwaway runs. In this episode of Distance Dr Daily, I explain why easy runs matter, what adaptations they help support, and why letting them creep too hard can interfere with the rest of your training. We cover how easy runs contribute to aerobic development, running load tolerance, fat oxidation, plasma volume, capillary and mitochondrial adaptations, and why doing them too fast can leave you carrying fatigue into the sessions that are actually meant to be hard. I also explain how to use the Talk Test to check whether your easy runs are actually easy, plus a few simple signs that your easy days may be drifting too hard. If your intervals, long runs, or key sessions are starting to suffer, your easy runs might be the first place to look. In this episode: * Why easy runs are not junk miles * What adaptations easy running supports * How to use the Talk Test * Why easy runs creep too hard * How “too fast” can affect fatigue, injury risk, and key sessions * Signs your easy runs are no longer easy Easy means easy, but easy still has a purpose.

1. maj 20264 min
episode How To Do Your Marathon Long Run Properly: Distance Dr Daily cover

How To Do Your Marathon Long Run Properly: Distance Dr Daily

On today's episode of The Distance Dr Daily with Dr Kate, she discusses how long runs are the cornerstone of marathon training, but most of the questions runners actually have, how far, how often, how hard, when to peak, and what to practise, don't always get answered clearly in a generic training plan. I walk through five evidence-based considerations for getting your long run right, drawing on recent research and applying it practically for runners building toward a half marathon, marathon, or longer. I cover: How often to do your long run, and why every 7 to 10 days can work better for some athletes, particularly those who are injury-prone, postpartum, or new to marathon training. How long your long run should actually be, based on what research shows works across different weekly training volumes, and why staying under 25 km may cost you on race day. Where to place your peak long run in the training block, and how far out from race day it should sit. How to progress your long run distance safely using the 10% rule, which applies specifically to your long run rather than your overall weekly volume. How hard your long run should be, where marathon pace work fits in, and why it shouldn't be every week. What to practise during the long run, including fuelling, hydration, cadence, and biomechanics under fatigue. This is for runners who want to train smarter, not just harder, and who want to understand the why behind the long run rather than just ticking off the kilometres. Study references: Fokkema T, van Damme AADN, Fornerod MWJ, de Vos RJ, Bierma-Zeinstra SMA, van Middelkoop M. Training for a (half-)marathon: Training volume and longest endurance run related to performance and running injuries. Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2020 Sep;30(9):1692-1704. doi: 10.1111/sms.13725. Epub 2020 Jun 3. PMID: 32421886; PMCID: PMC7496388. Knopp, M., Appelhans, D., Schönfelder, M., Seiler, S., & Wackerhage, H. (2024). Quantitative Analysis of 92 12-Week Sub-elite Marathon Training Plans. Sports medicine - open, 10(1), 50. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40798-024-00717-5 [https://doi.org/10.1186/s40798-024-00717-5]

29. apr. 20265 min