July 28, 2020 (Morning)
Exercise Type: Run
Comments:
Worked in the AM, then home.
So like I wrote on Monday, I realized that my running stride (at least in the frontal plane) SSSUCKS! (Think Elaine in reference to "The English Patient").
So I went home and had Callie film me.
What I found out:
Take 1
Effort: "nothing"
Result: moderate pelvis drop R, TERRIBLE L
Take 2
Effort: PULL right only (and try to drive forward on the left)
Result: better (but mediocre) pelvis drop L, TERRIBLE right!
Take 3:
Effort: pull both
Result: mediocre pelvic stability
So I took that I ran a lap. The mile of Morse Ranch all the way around to Olive and back is a hilly-ass loop! I bet it climbs 300' or more. (Side note: even though running is really hard, the cycling has really given me uphill fitness!)
Mid-run I remembered a key point:
HIP FLEXION = LEVEL PELVIS
For a long time I believed - like MOST people believe - that the key to avoiding pelvic drop is to have "strong glutes". But that's only half (or less) of the story!
This goes back to a lesson I learned in March/April:
The key is to FLEX the opposite side!!!
So let's say you've landed on the R leg. The situation is:
* R leg intial contact --> stance
* L leg just pushed off --> swing
In order to prevent R drop, then L hip as to FLEX upward. This pulls both the leg AND the pelvis upward!
I figured this out about mid-lap. I came home and had Callie film again:
Take 4:
* Effort: pelvis PULL & flex up & through ("salazar stride")
* Result: mediocre/OK pelvic stability
Good lesson.
Distance | Duration | Pace | Interval Type | Shoes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1.5 Miles | Topo FlyLyte - Blue |