Find your super shoe, positive reframing, stride rate and injury risk, the microbiome, beat stress fractures, rehydrate with beer? More [View in browser]( [PodiumRunner]( [Follow PodiumRunner Online][Follow PodiumRunner on Facebook]( [Follow PodiumRunner on Instagram]( [Follow PodiumRunner on Twitter]( RUN LONG, RUN HEALTHY Training. Nutrition. Shoes. Injury Prevention. You. JULY 29, 2021 Boston Marathon winner Amby Burfoot, also the worldâs most experienced running editor, curates the latest and most useful content on running and health from around the internet. âI spend hours finding the best new research and articles, so you can review them in minutes.â THIS WEEK: Find your best super shoe. Powerful positive reframing. Proof that you should increase your stride rate. More knowledge on the microbiome. Beat foot pain and stress fractures. Should you rehydrate with beer? Best recovery strategies after long runs. More. Find the right super shoe I can pretty much guarantee that youâll want to try one or more of the 10 new âsuper shoesâ reviewed here. I know I do. Of course, you donât work for a running magazine, nor do I, so we arenât going to get the chance. Still there is plenty of good info: cushioning, ârockerâ action, heel-to-toe drop, weight, price. This can help guide you to the right shoes. Also, I appreciate that the author/wear-test runners make no outrageous claims, and understand that your personal pace, biomechanics, and preferences are more important than anything else. More at [PodiumRunner.]( The power of positive reframing Recently I complained to a very smart friend (a university PhD) that our current hyperspeed digital world makes us all feel like weâre constantly falling behind and not getting enough done. He replied: âYou could reframe that as: The sense of not reaching your goals is what keeps you focused on pursuing them.â Hmmmm. Then I saw what [Sara Hall posted on Twitter]( â basically that she reframes her bad runs to find something good in them. âWhen my pace slows in a workout because Iâm tired, I tell myself itâs simulating the end of a marathon.â I donât like glibness and oversimplifying, but this is powerful stuff if you learn to use it. Hereâs more on positive self-talk and reframing from [Womenâs Running.]( Olympic updates from around the Outside network The biggest story in Tokyo is Simone Bilesâ withdrawal from the womenâs gymnastics team competition and all-around event. Three-time gold medalist long jumper and sprinter Tianna Bartoletta has a powerful message for fans about [why mental health is more important than gold medals.]( Elsewhere, Tokyo 2021 rolls on: [Anniemiek van Vleuten obliterated her rivals]( by more than a minute to claim gold in the womenâs time trial bike race. She says she bounced back after her second-place disappointment in the womenâs road race by doing what maybe more of us should do: [tuning out the bad vibes of social media](. After abandoning the Tour de France and sputtering out at the menâs road race, Slovenian [Primož RogliÄ found redemption by steamrolling the field]( to take gold in the menâs time trial. [âI had nothing to lose,â]( he says. So far without a medal for the first time since 1976, [USA Cyclingâs hopes now turn to BMX and track](. As we await the [mixed triathlon relay](, aspiring triathletes can [race toward a perfect day]( by digging deep on the reigning individual championsâ [stats and techniques](. Thursday, track and field gets going in Tokyo â [here are five reasons]( you should watch. Winning by Knowing Your Strengths Emily Sisson knows she doesn't have the fastest closing speed in the field. Which means she can't sit in a pack and wait until the last lap to make her move. What she's very good at is hammering a strong pace lap after lap, mile after mile. To capitalize on this, she and her coach developed a plan for her to lead the 10,000m early, control the pace, then kick with 5 laps left in the race. They practiced this strategy in races and she did workouts to simulate the stresses she'd face. It worked admirably in Eugene. Tokyo will be a different story, with [a far faster field](, but it's a good bet Sisson will optimize her strengths and strategy to place as high as she's capable. Find more details on her training and strategy on [PodiumRunner.]( [Join Outside+]
Live Well. Live Active. Two yearly magazine subscriptions plus member-exclusive content from PodiumRunner and 18 Outside network brands. [Join Outside+ today â]( How to limit foot pain and stress fractures When it comes to runner injuries, we mostly hear about the knee, the calf-Achilles, and maybe hip issues. But wait, the foot has 26 bones, 33 joints, and a whole lotta tendons and support structures that can develop injuries from running. Hereâs a good article on how to avoid foot pain. It includes everything from âsocks matterâ to strengthening exercises for the foot. More at [Trail Runner](. Fifty years ago, I developed a metatarsal stress fracture in the foot. These stress fractures can happen anywhere in your lower half, and hereâs good advice for preventing and dealing with them at [Womenâs Running.]( The microbiome may be the ânext frontier,â but we still have lots to learn The microbiome â all those bacteria in your gut â has been heralded as âthe next frontierâ of big health-medical advances, but it still feels like we understand almost nothing. A skeptical NY Times article concluded that the promise is well ahead of the delivery, especially when you consider âmicrobiome rewildingâ to restore your system to a sort of paleo state. I almost had to try this a half-dozen years ago, via a fecal transplant from one of my children, when I had a bad case of clostridium difficile. Fortunately, I got better before I needed to take that step. I remain interested in this topic but canât find a simple, take-home message beyond: Consume more fiber by eating more plants and veggies. [More.]( Proof that increasing your stride rate can decrease injuries The University of Wisconsinâs Bryan Heiderscheidt has been a leader in research on the potential of [higher stride frequencies]( and shorter lengths. Here he and colleagues followed 54 Wisconsin cross-country runners prospectively over three seasons to investigate their strides, bone densities, ground forces, and links to injuries. In a simple analysis, risk of bone stress injuries was strongly related to prior bone issues but not related to sex or body mass index. In âmultivariable analysis,â low stride frequency (i.e, over-striding) was the only variable linked to bone injuries. Risk of bone density stress injuries âdecreased by 5 percent for each 1 step/minute increase in step rate.â There were additional trends for stride bounce, ground reaction forces, and bone density score. At Brit J of Sports Medicine. [More.]( Molly Seidel, the surprise Olympic marathoner, has some great tips Thereâs something about Molly Seidel thatâs easy to like. Apparently GQ magazine, not your usual go-to running resource, feels the same. Here GQ interviews Seidel, the surprise second-place finisher in the 2020 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials. Surprise, because it was her first marathon. Surprise, because a few years back she checked herself into an eating disorders clinic. Seidel talks about how she deals with pain, copes with the boring side of running, uses runs to slow down an often-buzzy brain, and keeps an open mind about her Olympic race on August 6. [More.]( The army is always looking for an edge â and finding many Folks who have been following me for a while know that I like studies performed by the military. The researchers can control and manipulate their captive subjects better than those working with, for example, college students. Also, the armed forces are highly focused on performance, cost-effectiveness, and simple-but-useful solutions. In Food Science & Nutrition, a military research group found that a food ration bar with beta-alanine, L-arginine, and Nigella sativa could âimprove anaerobic performance and reduce inflammation following intense physical activities.â Also, what goes around, comes around. I remember when Lasse Viren and other top Scandanaivan runners from the 1970s were supposedly getting a boost from bee pollen. Now a new study on military cadets reports that bee propolis âmight have beneficial effects on oxidative stress and inflammation following intense activities.â Lastly, at Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, a high-quality, multi-component protein supplement increased muscle more than a single-ingredient supplement. [More.]( Is beer a good rehydration beverage? I know a few runners who talk more about beer than their favorite carbohydrate foods, so it was inevitable that some researchers would eventually investigate beer and exercise, and they did, in research published recently in Int J of Sports Nutrition & Exercise Metabolism. (The senior author, Patrick Wilson, is a frequent [PodiumRunner](writer and recognized expert on the athleteâs gut.) Hereâs the first. âDespite beer's popularity, no review has explored its effects on exercise performance, recovery, and adaptation.â The findings, particularly with regard to post run rehydration: Non alcoholic beer is probably a better choice than high-alcohol beer. If you choose the latter, youâd be smart to alternate non alcoholic beverages along with your preferred brew. In another article, here at [Trail Runner,]( some arguments against alcohol for recovery. [More.]( SHORT STUFF you want to know [⢠After a long run, how much recovery do you need?]( ⢠Nitrates (beets) are good for strength training as well as endurance training [More.]( ⢠When resilience is not necessarily the best path forward [More.]( GREAT QUOTES MAKE GREAT TRAINING PARTNERS: âGreat is the victory, but the friendship of all is greater." âEMIL ZATOPEK, winner of the 5000, 10,000, and marathon at the 1952 Olympics. That's it for this week. Thanks for reading. See you next week. âAmby FORWARD TO A FRIEND [Join Outside+] Live Well. Live Active. Two yearly magazine subscriptions plus member-exclusive content from PodiumRunner and 18 Outside network brands. [JOIN OUTSIDE+]( [You are currently subscribed to PodiumRunner] You are receiving this Weekly PodiumRunner âRun Long, Run Healthyâ Newsletter because you are subscribed to PodiumRunner, which is a part of the Outside Network. 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