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| Running - Time to Jog Memory on Ways to Stretch by Budd Bailey |
| Buffalo News article from 3-12-2006 |
| It's that time of year when runners return to the streets in large numbers. Which means it's time to think about stretching. Some warm-up time is always a good idea before a run of any sort - particularly a race - but some people don't know how to warm up, and how long to do it. |
| Michael Adesso, director of physical therapy and athletic training at University Sports Medicine in Williamsville, as well as a contributor to The News' Life and Arts section, starts with the good news. |
| "You only need to warm up for as little as 10 to 12 minutes," he said. But you have to make sure it's the right type of warm-up. Adesso told the recent Runner's Medical Forum at the University at Buffalo that runners shouldn't grab their ankles and pull them up to touch the back of their thighs - which is the stereotyped pose for a runner's prerace stretch. "That shuts down your nervous system," he said. "It doesn't prepare you for what you are about to do." Adesso is a believer in doing exercises that mirror the activity, which makes a great deal of sense. In this case, that includes a little light running. |
| Try some of these exercises: |
| • Make a variety of chopping motions with your arms - first up and down, then on a diagonal, and finally from side to side. |
| • Do leg lunges, in which you'll squat down a bit into a lunge position and then take exaggerated steps and swing your arms while keeping your chest up. A mere 10 to 15 yards on lunging will do. |
| • Grab on to something and swing one leg forward and backward like a pendulum, and then repeat with the other leg. Repeat 15 times. To get even closer to the running motion, bend the knee when the leg comes forward. |
| Adesso believes slow, steady stretching can wait - "afterwards or on the next day," he said. |
| Michael Adesso, PT, ATC Director of Physical Therapy University Sports Medicine Amherst Location |