Lateral Lunge Warm-Up - RunningDVDs.com
Before we go into the specifics of this week's tip, let me ask you
this. How do you know if a coach really believes in the information
they present at a clinic or in a post like this one? My answer would
be to simply ask the coach to show you what they assign athletes.
I'm lucky to have the opportunity to write Brent Vaughn's ancillary
work (see image below) and in that you'll see "LL" - short for Lateral Lunge
Warm-Up - assigned every day. Every damn day. It's so simple and can
be done anywhere and is a great way to make sure that're legs are ready
for the task ahead - runnning well.
Now, I'll be the first to admit that the LL warm-up is tough and
will make you sore; Brent didn't do this in September and only did the
Lunge Warm-up, or LM, before each run. We introduced this 2-3 times a
week in October, though he probably could have done it daily at that
point.
The LL warm-up is great because it fires the glutts and hamstrings,
while also challenging your abductors and adductors. We're annal about
the feet in the warm-up; you should always have your feet perpendicular
to the line/direction you're moving. It's difficult and frustrating
the first 7-10 days you try it and you'll prog have both feet splayed
out, yet that the fact that you're presenting that proprioceptive
challeng in the warm-up is important if you want your nervous system to
wake up. The single leg squats are not only a good general strength
exercise but they also provide you with a self-check to see where you
flexibility is. I was fortunate to be around Phil Wharton at a clinic
last winter and as he demonstrated his Active Isolated Stretching (AIS)
routine he made comment that "flexiblity changes from day to day,
workout to workout." So if you can't keep your heal on the ground
during the squat, or you're leaning to far forward on the squat then
you know that maybe you'll need a few extra minutes of AIS/rope
stretching before you begin your workout.
I should explain that I made up this warm-up 2 or 3 years ago after
watchign Dathan do a routine that Dan Pfaff had given him, though
Dathan would do this as post run/post workout ancillary work and his
routine had 8-10 exercises...I just picked the two that had the athlete
moving in the frontal plane. Dathan was anal about his feet during
both the lunge and the shuffle, so that's where the cue "good feet"
comes from. Again, this should be done imediately after the LM
warm-up, but the two of them together - LM and LL - take only 4
minutes. Then the athlete goes for their warm-up run or simply does
their run workout for the day.
Okay, that's it for the LL warm-up. Write your questions or comments below and I'll be happy to answer your questions.
Jay Johnson