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Whether you’re training for your first 5K, a half-marathon, Ironman triathlon or 100 mile ultramarathon, you have to put in lots of miles. To keep logging miles, increasing your speed and building your strength…you have to avoid injury.
The real game with building strength and fitness in long distance running is to systematically stress your tissues so those muscles, bones, tendons and ligaments all have to rebuild themselves and become stronger.
So whether you are self-coached, you purchased an online training program, or you have hired a professional coach to help you, the task is to help you choose workouts that will deliver the maximum amount of tissue damage that your body is capable of rebuilding before your next key workout.
But if you do more tissue damage than your body is capable of rebuilding, and then you do another hard workout, you get an over-training injury. In this podcast we’re talking about overtraining myths, and other B.S. that you need to know to avoid an overtraining injury.
By Dr. Christopher Segler4.8
8181 ratings
Whether you’re training for your first 5K, a half-marathon, Ironman triathlon or 100 mile ultramarathon, you have to put in lots of miles. To keep logging miles, increasing your speed and building your strength…you have to avoid injury.
The real game with building strength and fitness in long distance running is to systematically stress your tissues so those muscles, bones, tendons and ligaments all have to rebuild themselves and become stronger.
So whether you are self-coached, you purchased an online training program, or you have hired a professional coach to help you, the task is to help you choose workouts that will deliver the maximum amount of tissue damage that your body is capable of rebuilding before your next key workout.
But if you do more tissue damage than your body is capable of rebuilding, and then you do another hard workout, you get an over-training injury. In this podcast we’re talking about overtraining myths, and other B.S. that you need to know to avoid an overtraining injury.

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