
You want to become more versatile, more robust, and faster? Then you definitely need to integrate the following 10 points into your running training.

When was the last time you did strength and stabilisation exercises over an extended period? Never, or too seldom? You are not alone.
When was the last time you did strength and stabilisation exercises over an extended period? Never, or too seldom? You are not alone. The great majority of runners, cyclists, bikers, triathletes, and cross-country skiers tend to concentrate on collecting kilometres and training hours and neglect the other aspects of fitness. However, these are just as much a part of the complete puzzle! And they are even performance-defining. This is because they ultimately interact and affect your performance capability, training load tolerance, and recovery capability, among other things.
Just do it!
Stop looking for excuses and just get down to it instead by incorporating a 20 to 30-minute strength training sequence into your weekly program two times a week. You can do the training before or after an endurance unit or complete it as an independent unit after a short warm up. Since these exercises focus on strength endurance and you are working with your own body weight, a combination is perfectly possible. It would be different, however, if the focus was on maximum strength and you were working with very heavy weights.
Effect and dosage
Perform 10 to 15 repetitions of each of the following strength exercises and repeat them two times after a rest period of 15 to 30 seconds (a total of 3 sets). Aim for the highest possible quality and make sure that your movement patterns are controlled. Depending on the exercise, you will thus improve your core stability and strengthen your shoulder, abdominal, hip flexor, leg and back extensor muscles.
The extra strength will help your running motion to be more economic, technically clean and longer without compromising on quality. This will result in a more dynamic step, faster times and, above all, more fun!
Technique:
Get into the plank position and then push yourself up with one arm into the push-up position and then lower yourself down to the plank position again. Change arm after each round.
Focus:
Goal:
Technique:
Touch the ground with your nose. Make sure that your whole body is activated, particularly your legs. Now push yourself up into the push-up position.
Beginners should keep their knees on the ground.
Focus:
Goal:
Technique:
Extend your arm and leg upwards and move your pelvis slowly up and down. Keep your upper body erect and make sure you make a perfect diagonal.
Beginners should keep the legs parallel.
3 sets per side.
Focus:
Goal:
Technique:
Rock back and forth as silently as possible with closed legs and your arms stretched out over your head.
Focus:
Goal:
Technique:
Roll your spine out of the kneeling position. Rotate your arms and thumbs outwards, so that your palms are facing the ground at the end of the upwards movement.
Then pull in your abdomen, make your spine round, rotate your arms until the thumbs are pointing towards your body and you are able to look through your legs.
Focus:
Goal:
Technique:
Start in the lunge position with an erect upper body, push on the foot of the front leg and put your hands on your hips. Pull the rear leg up until the knee is at hip level. Hold this position for a brief moment and then go back to the starting position.
3 sets per leg.
Focus:
Goal:
Technique:
Perform the stork steps in a slow and controlled manner without losing your balance. Lift the rear leg to hip height and take a big lunge forward. Immediately take the next step with the other leg.
Focus:
Goal:
Technique:
Squat with your feet shoulder width apart and jump up quickly, stretching your entire body (from your finger tips to your toes) and land silently in the starting position. Follow this immediately with the next jump.
Focus:
Goal:

You want to become more versatile, more robust, and faster? Then you definitely need to integrate the following 10 points into your running training.

If you want to be successful, you need to train over as long a period as possible. Continuity is the key word here. For many, however, it is a foreign word because they always need to break off their training. Sometimes it’s the heel, at other times it’s the back or the knee that starts twinging.

When was the last time you did strength and stabilisation exercises over an extended period? Never, or too seldom? You are not alone.
When was the last time you did strength and stabilisation exercises over an extended period? Never, or too seldom? You are not alone. The great majority of runners, cyclists, bikers, triathletes, and cross-country skiers tend to concentrate on collecting kilometres and training hours and neglect the other aspects of fitness. However, these are just as much a part of the complete puzzle! And they are even performance-defining. This is because they ultimately interact and affect your performance capability, training load tolerance, and recovery capability, among other things.
Just do it!
Stop looking for excuses and just get down to it instead by incorporating a 20 to 30-minute strength training sequence into your weekly program two times a week. You can do the training before or after an endurance unit or complete it as an independent unit after a short warm up. Since these exercises focus on strength endurance and you are working with your own body weight, a combination is perfectly possible. It would be different, however, if the focus was on maximum strength and you were working with very heavy weights.
Effect and dosage
Perform 10 to 15 repetitions of each of the following strength exercises and repeat them two times after a rest period of 15 to 30 seconds (a total of 3 sets). Aim for the highest possible quality and make sure that your movement patterns are controlled. Depending on the exercise, you will thus improve your core stability and strengthen your shoulder, abdominal, hip flexor, leg and back extensor muscles.
The extra strength will help your running motion to be more economic, technically clean and longer without compromising on quality. This will result in a more dynamic step, faster times and, above all, more fun!
Technique:
Get into the plank position and then push yourself up with one arm into the push-up position and then lower yourself down to the plank position again. Change arm after each round.
Focus:
Goal:
Technique:
Touch the ground with your nose. Make sure that your whole body is activated, particularly your legs. Now push yourself up into the push-up position.
Beginners should keep their knees on the ground.
Focus:
Goal:
Technique:
Extend your arm and leg upwards and move your pelvis slowly up and down. Keep your upper body erect and make sure you make a perfect diagonal.
Beginners should keep the legs parallel.
3 sets per side.
Focus:
Goal:
Technique:
Rock back and forth as silently as possible with closed legs and your arms stretched out over your head.
Focus:
Goal:
Technique:
Roll your spine out of the kneeling position. Rotate your arms and thumbs outwards, so that your palms are facing the ground at the end of the upwards movement.
Then pull in your abdomen, make your spine round, rotate your arms until the thumbs are pointing towards your body and you are able to look through your legs.
Focus:
Goal:
Technique:
Start in the lunge position with an erect upper body, push on the foot of the front leg and put your hands on your hips. Pull the rear leg up until the knee is at hip level. Hold this position for a brief moment and then go back to the starting position.
3 sets per leg.
Focus:
Goal:
Technique:
Perform the stork steps in a slow and controlled manner without losing your balance. Lift the rear leg to hip height and take a big lunge forward. Immediately take the next step with the other leg.
Focus:
Goal:
Technique:
Squat with your feet shoulder width apart and jump up quickly, stretching your entire body (from your finger tips to your toes) and land silently in the starting position. Follow this immediately with the next jump.
Focus:
Goal:

You want to become more versatile, more robust, and faster? Then you definitely need to integrate the following 10 points into your running training.

If you want to be successful, you need to train over as long a period as possible. Continuity is the key word here. For many, however, it is a foreign word because they always need to break off their training. Sometimes it’s the heel, at other times it’s the back or the knee that starts twinging.