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Register by The End of the Year and Save!
Your New Year's Resolution Solution
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December 11, 2009
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Greetings!
What a great past few months we have had at M3S
Sports. From the Oktoberfest Vier Miler to the Dead
Celebrity 3 Miler to the Buckeye
Classic presented by Nationwide Insurance to the
more than 3,000 of you that joined us for the sold out
Flying Feather
Four Miler on Thanksgiving morning, it has been
a tremendous Fall.
Join us this Sunday,
December 13th for the
wrap up event to
2009 season, the Holiday Run 4 Miler at Sharon
Woods Metro Park.
As many of you know, encouraging fitness and the
healthy active lifestyle is a passion of mine. As we get
to the end of 2009 and the healthy resolutions begin
again, I want our team to do everything we can
to encourage those in our community to "get
and
live fit" in 2010.
I came across a column
written by Froma Harrop about how
exercise and play are no longer integral to our lives.
Here is the full column. As
she points out, health clubs assume that more than
one-third of the people that join around New Year's
Day will never come back after January. The shiny
home fitness equipment bought for the holidays
seems to always become expensive clothes
hangers.
If you are one of the more than
70,000 receiving this newsletter, you already have
made "living fit" a
priority in your life. It is time to give a real gift of fitness
to your friends, parents, spouse, children and others
that
you care about and make this the year that their
fitness resolution becomes reality. It is time to show
them how much fun it is to have more energy, focus,
productivity and less stress. We can make it
happen.
I want to make The Capital City Half
Marathon and Commit to be Fit 5k your family and
friend's New Year's Resolution Solution!
Here is how we are going to achieve this
together:
First, register before the end of the
year and save $20 off the Race Weekend
price.
Second (and more importantly), you give
the "Gift
of Fitness" to everyone you care about. We are
going to give you an additional $10 off each entry to
make fitness a priority and hopefully change there
lives in 2010. This is the year. Go onto the registration
page, enter your registration first, then on
the "Submit Payment" page, click "Register Someone
Else," and proceed to register your next participant(s)
and you will receive an ADDITIONAL $10 off every
additional registration in your transaction.
Don't wait
as we will likely sell this event out in early 2010. Register Here!
Lastly, print off the registration confirmation and a training schedule and put it in a holiday card
and
we are off to the "races." Then encourage them sign
up for a training program like
Marathoner in Training and go
have some fun for the next 4 months. Our team will put
on a party to celebrate their accomplishment the likes
of which they have never seen on May 1.
"Life
is an occasion, help them rise to it."
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Where are you spending your Spring Break?
Come join M3S at the Arizona Distance Classic Half Marathon and 5k
This is the first-class destination event you have been
looking for! Fantastic weather, an amazing resort, a
high touch boutique event limited to 3000 participants.
Imagine this, you fly into Phoenix or Tucson then drive
to the Westward Look
Resort and Spa. You walk into your room and your
goodie bag complete with your Official Mizuno Race
Jacket and VIP credential are waiting for you. You
walk down to the pool and check out the spectacular
mountain views. When race morning comes, you
drive directly to the start and finish line with free
convenient parking.
You head over to the VIP tent for breakfast and private
portapotties.
You run one of the nicest and most scenic half
marathon (or 5k) courses in the country. You head
back to the VIP tent for a little lunch and you are back
by the pool at the resort by noon.
Are you
ready?
Don't
wait to register or book your room. In order to create
the first class experience for all of our guests, we have
limited rooms and registrations.
Register now!
The Arizona Distance Classic was written up in
Runner's World as the region's best kept secret.
Based on the huge increase in our registration
numbers to date, the secret
is out!
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Runners? Walkers? Run/Walkers?
We are all "Participants."
I am often asked why we don't have separate
divisions for runners and walkers. My response is
simple, we are all participants. We celebrate the fast
runners and walkers and those that are not so fast
exactly the same way with the same finisher medals.
We have so
many runners, walkers, walk runners, run walkers and
race walkers, it seems crazy and a bit discriminatory
to try and distinguish between all the types of
participants we have.
We keep our half marathon courses open
and fully supported for 4 hours, our four mile courses
open an hour and eighteen minutes and our 5k
courses open for an hour and half. We hire people to
be last so no one can finish
last.
I would love to hear your thoughts on this. Send me
an email and let me know what you think. Remember,
I am a recovering lawyer so I love to hear arguments
on both sides of an issue.
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Training Tip - Resistance Training
Steven T. Devor, Ph.D., FACSM - Our Sports Physiologist
It would be beneficial for all runners and walkers to be
engaged in a regular program of resistance training.
Further, the exercises incorporated into the program
need to include those for both the upper and lower
body. A common misconception among runners is
that they do not have to lift with their legs because of
all the
running they do.
Generally speaking there are two primary reasons to
be certain your weekly training time includes a
planned program of weight lifting. First, lifting weights
increases the strength of the muscles in the legs and
upper body, which makes it easier for runners to
manage more intense workloads while actually
running. Second, weight lifting is not only good for
your skeletal muscles, but also serves to strengthen
all of the connective tissue in the joints. Tendons
(connect muscles to bones) and ligaments (connect
bones to bones) are the connective tissues that play a
crucial role in maintaining joint strength and integrity,
and many of the lower body overuse injuries
commonly suffered by runners could be significantly
reduced if the tendons and ligaments were
strengthened.
Several recent studies indicate that only six weeks of
weight lifting can significantly reduce or completely
eliminate the pain associated with the patella bone in
the knee joint, or "runner's knee". The strength
benefits of weightlifting can also diminish the
recurrence of many other common injuries, including
hip and low back pain. By increasing major muscle
group strength in the legs, hips, and upper body, as
well as their associated connective tissues, weight
training will aid in both injury prevention and also help
to reduce the severity of injury when it does occur.
Consistent weight training has also been shown to
improve running performance and lower race times.
Studies have shown that twelve weeks of weight
training can decrease 10K race times by
approximately 1 minute, and enhance running
economy, which is defined as the amount of oxygen
used for a consistent speed of running. Increased
running economy will prolong the time to exhaustion
for a runner, which will translate into less muscle
fatigue in the later miles of a long race, like a half or
full marathon.
Designing an Effective Program
Putting together the most effective and time efficient
weight training program requires attention to training
concepts many runners do not often consider.
However, the benefits in running performance are
worth the time invested. The key is utilizing a
progressive resistance program that incorporates
body weight, free weight, and machine exercises.
Once a program is designed (see sample program
below for an example), the following general
guidelines should be adhered to each week:
· Train regularly (at least three days per
week). Failure to hit the weights at least three days
week each week is not completely ineffective, but the
returns on your time investment are greatly
diminished.
· Training the muscles on both sides of a
joint is highly important for proper balance, strength
development, and injury prevention. In other words,
when training the legs for example, do both leg
extensions and leg curls; both sides of the knee joint.
· To keep improving, a progressive
resistance overload must be employed. Once an
exercise becomes too easy with the weight you are
currently using, it is time to increase the amount of
resistance slightly.
· Muscles move a joint through a full range
of motion, and it is highly important to lift weights in
that same manner. Never compromise range of
motion when lifting for additional weight.
· At least 48 hours is necessary recovery
time before a muscle or muscle group should be
stressed once again. For the best adaptation to occur
the muscles and connective tissue need time to
recover from the stimulus of the lifting session.
It is not necessary to have a gym membership in order
to begin your resistance training program. Some
simple dumbbells and a sturdy bench at home are all
that is necessary. You may wish to add a balance ball
to more fully train your core. During every exercise pay
close attention to your posture, be sure to keep
breathing while doing the lifts, and never perform the
repetitions too quickly.
Sample Resistance Training Program
Quadriceps, gluteals, hamstrings, and hips: Squats
down onto chair or bench, and walking lunges. To
make these two exercises more difficult add weight to
your hands by holding the dumbbells.
Calves: Standing heel raises. To make this exercise
more difficult do the raises on a stair step and let your
heels fall below the step and/or hold dumbbells in
your hands while doing the raises.
Shoulders and upper back: Shoulder shrugs, try to lift
your shoulders up to your ears with dumbbells in your
hands.
Back: Dumbbell rows. Put your left knee and left hand
on the bench to support your lower back. Let one arm
dangle down while holding a dumbbell. Pull the
dumbbell up as if trying to start a lawn mower.
Reverse with your other hand.
Chest: Push-ups with your feet up on a chair or
bench. Lower yourself until your chest nearly touches
the floor. Keep your back straight and your stomach
tight.
Biceps: Curls. Stand tall and curl the dumbbells up
one arm at a time.
Triceps: Tricep kickbacks. Same position as
dumbbell rows, then extend one arm back with a
dumbbell in your hand.
Lower Back: Superman exercise--lie stomach down,
lift your legs, lift your arms straight out in front of you,
and neck as if you were flying. Hold the "flying"
position for 20 - 30 seconds three times.
For each exercise do 2 - 3 sets of 12 - 15 repetitions.
Best wishes for your continued
training success.
Dr. Devor
For questions or comments to Dr. Devor you can
email him at devor.3@osu.edu.
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