chats with Running Influencers, Researchers, Olympians, Experts & Everyday Runners
Health:Fitness & Nutrition
Today I am excited to welcome Max Prokopy to the show. Max has his masters degree in exercise physiology and a member of the UVA Speed Clinic. At the Speed Clinic they help people runners and walkers optimize their gait to remain injury free and increase their performance. Max and his team have helped both elite level runners to age groupers, and from age 10 to 80 come through their 2.5 hour evaluation process.
When you arrive at the clinic you will run a little, watch a lot of video, and perform a battery of examinations to gauge your current abilities. After this thorough examination you’ll have not only a grasp on where you can improve, but precise instruction on how to improve that form in your daily running.
This includes a 3-D representation of your running from the sensors placed on your body during the testing, along with another dozen pages of charts, graphs, and detailed instruction on what your “homework” is after you leave the clinic.
The beauty of the Speed Clinic is that it’s not just for the injury prone runners, but for runners at any level who want to improve their performance. The key to getting the most out of your visit, regardless of where you are in your running, is to have an open mind to the information you’ll learn there, and how long it will take to implement.
One of the most common questions that Max gets is whether orthotics are a good thing for runners. This is a tough topic and one that is tough to nail down with a concrete answer. As running is a dynamic activity and the fitting of it is static, monitoring of an orthotic must be done over time, and incremental changes should be made over this time. This can be a process that takes up to a couple of months and is a process you should go through with the fitter of your orthotic.
Other topics we discuss are:
Max says that the most common gait faults in his examinations include things that can be adjusted in your daily life. Tight ankles, tight hip flexors, and weak buttocks are often the result of these environmental factors impacting your running form in the end.
If you’re not able to make it to UVA, you can do a quick self assessment yourself (one straight on and one from the side), be sure to look at:
What Every Runner Needs to Know About How to Lose Weight- Mark Cucuzella
7+ Ways Cross Training Will Make You A Better, Stronger, Runner- Alan Webb, Darren Brown & Lynda Huey
What are Psychosocial Factors, and Why You Need to Know- Greg Lehman
You'll Never Know Unless You Try. What Are You Capable Of?- Mike Wardian
The Absolute Expression of Running is the Marathon- Carey Pinkowski
Why You Need to Believe You are Good Enough- Dr Stan Beecham
Runners and Fertility: What You Need to Know- Sarah Crouch
What Can You Do to Change the World?- Kathrine Switzer
Could These Shoes be What You Need to Run Faster?- Ken Riess
What Choices You Need to Make to Commit to Your Running Goals- Susan Loken
How to Balance Kids, Working Full Time, and Marathon Training- Angie Spencer
Could Eating More Butter Help You Run Faster? The Sock-Doc
3 Simple Ways to Determine if You are Running Easy Enough: Matt Fitzgerald
8 Easy Ways to Improve Your Nutrition
How to Unlock the Hero Inside You- Chris McDougall
How to Use the Ultra Running Mindset to Improve Your Running (and Life!): Travis Macy
What is the Secret to a Sub 3:00 Marathon?- Doug Kurtis
What Can You Take (Legally) to Improve Performance- Alex Hutchinson
Everything You Need to Know About Injuries: Jeremy Stoker
From Never Eating Again to Racing the Himalayan 100 Mile: Sarah Russell
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