Quick Strength for Runners: 8 Weeks to a Better Runner's Body
Quick Strength for Runners: 8 Weeks to a Better Runner's Body book cover

Quick Strength for Runners: 8 Weeks to a Better Runner's Body

Paperback – July 7, 2023

Price
$19.95
Format
Paperback
Pages
208
Publisher
VeloPress
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1937715120
Dimensions
7 x 0.47 x 9 inches
Weight
16 ounces

Description

Praise for Books by Jeff Horowitz "A smart strength-training plan in which runners can learn how to strength their core and key running muscles." -- Competitor magazine "When I'm [running] 30, 40, 50 miles a week, the last thing I want to do is squats on legs that already feel like overcooked spaghetti. Jeff Horowitz has a solution. He's been a running coach for more than a decade and is the author of Quick Strength for Runners. " -- Philadelphia Inquirer "Running is a sport of imbalance. At no point are your feet hitting the ground at the same time. This imbalance creates an opportunity for injury. Our bodies have to be strong enough to handle the complex motion of running. If it's not, you won't be running too long" "Trusting this program has me running stronger and faster and most importantly injury free." -- Amplify Today "The exercise program is ideal for runners whose sole goal is running performance. Runners don't need to lift huge weights or practice resistance training five days per week. What they do need to is to develop a modest degree of well-balanced strength." -- BreakingMuscle.com "We all know that strength training is important. I have always said that I should do more strength training, but it wasn't until I started trying this book that I really realized how much it can help me. I started this book before I was back to running, and I believe without a shadow of a doubt that it has had a big impact on my running now. I am stronger, recover easier and have less soreness overall." -- LovingontheRun.com RUN FASTER AND STRONGER IN JUST 8 WEEKS! Strength training is key to better running and injury prevention. But it's difficult to know which exercises work best for runners or to get motivated to hit the gym. In Quick Strength for Runners , running coach and personal trainer Jeff Horowitz simplifies strength training into just two 20-minute workouts per week, with no gym or pricey equipment required. Designed specifically for runners, the Quick Strength program pinpoints the exercises that really work. Inside you’ll find: • A guide to how strength training leads to better running form and fitness • 40 targeted exercises, with step-by-step photos and clear instructions • Progressive workouts and advanced form options to increase strength as fitness improves • Tips on designing a long-term workout program for a lifetime of fitness This highly effective, easy-to-implement program will make you a stronger, faster runner in under an hour a week. Jeff Horowitz is a certified running coach and personal trainer. He has run more than 150 marathons. Jeff Horowitz is a certified running and triathlon coach and a personal trainer who has run more than 150 marathons across six continents. Formerly an attorney, he quit law to pursue his passion for endurance sport and now works with DC Tri; The Nations Triathlon; the nonprofit summer camp ACHIEVE Kids Triathlon; and Team Hope, a charity fund-raising training group that benefits the Hope Connections Center, a cancer-patients service organization. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Introduction Let's start with a bit of honesty: Not all runners love strength training. If you are like most runners, you would rather lace up your trainers and spend time out on a trail or road than work out in a gym. I understand that. You didn't become a runner to spend more time indoors. There is a whole world of routes to explore when you are out on a run, and none of them pass through a weight room.But you picked up this book anyway. More likely than not, you did so because you realize that doing nothing but running is not working out so well for you.Maybe this realization came to you during a layoff from running caused by an injury. Estimates of the rate of injury for runners vary widely, but it may be as high as 80 percent for all runners in a given year and 80 percent for each individual runner over the course of his or her lifetime.Each of these injuries comes at a physical, emotional, and financial cost. An injury may result in a layoff from running ranging from a week to several months and may require X-rays and MRIs, visits to various physicians, and physical therapy.The anger, frustration, and sense of helplessness that often accompany these injuries are harder to measure. Injured runners may feel betrayed by their own bodies and isolated from their network of running friends. A long layoff may leave runners wondering if being injured and limited is their new permanent reality. These are hard times for such runners. Frustration often leads them to spend thousands of dollars on products and treatments that often promise quick cures but that rarely deliver results.I remember one period when I was dealing with a debilitating foot problem. After spending six months visiting different specialists and undergoing various therapies, I realized that had a doctor recommended smearing peanut butter on my foot to speed healing, I would have done it. I suspect that I am not the only runner who would have been willing to do that. Perhaps you have felt that way yourself.Or maybe you picked up this book because you have read about how strength training can actually help prevent injuries and improve your running. Perhaps you are even doing some strength training already, but you suspect that you could do a better job if you knew a bit more about it.Whatever led you to be interested in strength training, you have picked up this book, and that's a good thing. Because all those articles and bits of advice were right: Strength training—the right kind of strength training—will make you a stronger, more injury-resistant runner. How to Use This Book The purpose of this book is to take the guesswork out of strength training and present it in a way that any runner can immediately put to use. The chapters that follow will provide you with the knowledge and direction to implement your own progressive strength training plan. Just follow each workout as written and illustrated; it will be like having a personal strength coach come to your home twice a week.We will begin with an overview of strength training generally and then look at it specifically in regard to runners. We will discuss the equipment that you will need to get started and the types of exercises that you will be doing.Next, we will review each exercise in detail, explaining why you are doing it, as well as offering options on how to make it more challenging—and effective—once you have mastered the basic form.Finally, you will be presented with an 8-week detailed training plan that will place these exercises in a progressively more difficult format, challenging you a bit more each week as you build toward your target: improved running form, strength, and overall health.By the end of the book, you will be able to continue using the program as presented or to make your own program based on the principles articulated here. Ultimately, following this program will not only make you a better runner; it will also leave you better prepared for that other great activity: life.The only remaining question is when to start this program. If you have a target race on your calendar, start your strength training 9 weeks before the race. This leaves the last week before the race open for resting and tapering. The benefit of choosing this option is that you can put your new strength to work for you when you want it most; the strength that you build during your race preparation will quickly enable you to run better in training and racing.Another option is to start this program during your off-season, after you have run your goal race. Since most off-season training plans involve a step back in training volume and intensity for a month or so after the goal race is run, the off-season is an ideal moment in your schedule to devote a little time and effort to adding something new to your training routine. Also, having just come through a training cycle and race, you might be a little burned out from your usual routine. Implementing a strength training program could be exactly the kind of change that you are looking for to reenergize your workouts.The final and perhaps best option is to simply start the program now, regardless of where you are in your running schedule. Remember, the sooner you start the program, the sooner you will begin to reap the benefits, so there is no time like the present to get started.Before we get the details of the program, though, think a moment about your commitment to strength training. The program presented here should not be just about getting a quick fix for a nagging injury. To run strong and stay healthy, you must commit to making strength training part of your regular routine. Many runners who begin a strength training routine at some point after suffering an injury drop it once their hurt body heals and their memories of desperation and despair fade. Or when they are pressed for time and struggling to squeeze in their regular run, they begin to skip a strength training workout here and there, and soon they stop doing strength training altogether.In a way, all of that makes sense. Running is a priority and passion for all of us. It lifts our mood, sparks our creativity, leaves us feeling more alive than at any other time of the day, and opens the world up to us. In comparison, there is no strength training plan in existence that can generate these results.Luckily, the goal here is not to replace running with strength training or even give strength training equal billing in your training schedule. The aim is to include strength training somewhere in your busy schedule, on a consistent basis, a few times a week. This is simply the best way to recover from an injury and help ensure that you will not be sidelined by a debilitating running injury again. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Quick Strength for Runners
  • offers a smart, fast-paced strength training program for runners who want to run faster and with fewer injuries
  • . In under an hour a week, runners will strengthen their core and key running muscles to build a better runner’s body.Strength training is crucial to better running and injury prevention. But it’s difficult to know which exercises work best for runners or to get motivated to hit the gym.In
  • Quick Strength for Runners
  • , running coach and personal trainer Jeff Horowitz simplifies strength training into
  • just two 20-minute workouts per week
  • , with no gym or pricey equipment required. Designed specifically for runners, the Quick Strength program pinpoints the exercises that really work. Inside you’ll find:• A guide to how strength training leads to better running form and fitness• 40 targeted exercises, with step-by-step photos and clear instructions• Progressive workouts and advanced form options to increase strength as fitness improves• A focused and efficient 8-week strength training program• Tips on designing your own long-term workout program for a lifetime of fitness
  • Quick Strength for Runners
  • makes it easy for runners to build a better runner’s body.
  • This highly effective, easy-to-implement program will make you a stronger, faster runner in under an hour a week so you can stay on the road or trail.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

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Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Great book for rec runners (young and older) who want a practical, pre-designed twice weekly workout.

I will preface this review with a few points:
1) I've read the entire book and every workout, BUT I have only performed a couple of the work-outs-- but I'm sticking with it.
2) I own ~12-16 running books, of which 4 or 5 are related to strength training
3) I'm a early-30's rec runner (~20 minute 5k, 45 minute 10k, run a few 1/2 marathon distances, and slowly moving up to the marathon-- I'm injury-prone). I've been to months of physical therapy previously, so I can at least assess how these home workouts compare to my PT workouts ($20 book is a lot cheaper than my PT trips). I run 20-30 miles per week, but with injury I spent over a year running 10-15 miles per week.
4) I'm not the best reviewer you'll ever read, so maybe get a tasty beverage and read quickly.

Synopsis of the book: Quick Strength for Runners presents an 8 week work-out plan with 2 workouts per week. Each workout is unique (individual exercises may re-appear from earlier workouts, but the exercise order, volume, etc. will be different). Additionally, each session of the week has different focuses, e.g, week 1 has a core & legs session and a core & upper body session. As you progress through the 8 weeks, each week gets a harder.

Intensity: 30 minute- 60 minute workouts. For runners/endurance athletes with a solid background of strength training, I think this book is too easy. For those of us in decent shape and wanting to break into/restart strength training, it's close to ideal, but you may want to add a few extra exercises or reps here and there. For those with aspirations of becoming runners (there are no "joggers"-- we're all runners :) ), it's definitely still doable, but be patient with yourself! and stick with it!

What the book has:
1) Color pictures and text cataloging every single exercise found in the 8 week plan-- ok, so this is pretty cool.
2) Every exercise has an alternative (some have 2) "advanced" version to make the exercise harder.
3) The quintessential introductory chapters on biomechanics of running, virtues of strength training, etc etc etc.
4) The 8 week workout plan. It should be noted that MOST exercises require little more than body weight, but some will use dumbbells (or kettlebells), a BOSU ball (for some advanced versions), or other basic gym items-- no barbells, machines, or heavy weight items. Each week has two sessions with explicit exercises and sets/reps for each. Also, pretty cool.

What I think the book is great for:
For those who want to build strength and stability in their body to support running, and want to focus primarily on bodyweight (or dumbbell/medicine ball) exercises. These exercises fall squarely in the traditional physical therapy-style exercises, which target relatively concentrated sets of muscles, i.e., this is not a bible of "functional exercises" that seemingly workout every muscle at once. Also, a great plan for those of us who aren't the most talented at creating realistic gym plans for ourselves.

What the book does NOT offer:
1) "Function exercises", which are all the rage right now (but that does not mean they're better or worse). See, for example, "IronFit Strength Training and Nutrition for Endurance Athletes: Time Efficient Training Secrets for Breakthrough Fitness" by Fink and Fink as a great resource with workouts tailored to runners, triathletes, cross-country skiers, etc.
2) Power lifting workouts (barbell bench press, squats, etc). Although I don't own the book, Jeff Horowitz's other book "Smart Marathon Training: Run Your Best Without Running Yourself Ragged" appears to contain quite a bit of these heavy weight exercises. Also, see Taipale, et al., "Strength Training in Endurance Athletes", 31, Int J Sports Med (2010) for a great research study on strength vs plyometric vs circuit training in recreational runners.
3) Circuit training. This book is a linear workout, which I prefer as circuits always seem to take me waaaay too long to complete.
4) Band workouts-- those that use the silicon tubing or bands. I think a lot of these exercises would be greatly benefited by making them harder with physio-tubing.
5) Explicit workouts for after the 8 weeks. Also, all the exercises cataloged are in the workouts so there aren't extras.

Final thoughts: I like this book! I love the fact that there are explicit workouts that progressively get harder. I love the reasonability of the individual workouts (length of time). I love the color pictures and descriptions of the exercises. I like the fact that the individual exercises are targeting groups of muscles-- I'm not a "functional exercise" fan myself. There are a few exercises that I wish were incorporated in here-- especially band workouts (e.g., "clamshells" and "monster walks"), but overall it's pretty darn great. I plan on using this book for at least 8 weeks (if not going through it twice) to prepare for my transition back to heavy weight lifting.
115 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Very effective run-specific general core/strength program that will work well for most runners.

I am an experienced runner, physiologist and occasionally coach runners in my spare time. I've taught a core strength and conditioning class in the past and have written many core conditioning programs, often times for specific issues. Since I currently didn't have any real specific issues/injuries that needed to be addressed, I picked up this book to try out the program over my last training cycle as I wanted to see if this was effective enough for me to recommend as a general core program for runners I work with. It was a little scary as what I had been using in the past was working, but from looking through the exercises it seemed like it covered all the bases and quite frankly I was tired of my own programs. It was nice to completely follow someone else's program. These are the things I liked most about the book: 1) the progression is excellent, not only on the individual exercises but as you progress through the 8 weeks. There are 3 levels of every exercise so depending on where you are you can pick the appropriate level of difficulty for each exercise. Some exercises I was not able to do the most advanced move, but others I could, so it all depends on your own personal biomechanical strengths and weaknesses. 2) What is advertised is correct: it really does only take 2x per week, 30 minutes and minimal equipment to develop adequate core strength and maintain it over a training cycle. 3) The illustrations are nice. 4) The program is relatively easy to follow for someone with a little prior knowledge regarding strength training. 5) The program is really geared toward moves specific to running and preventing running injuries etc. I especially like his combo moves - I often use this approach with my programs - targeting more than one muscle group and combining into a single exercise/move. What I think could be improved or are downsides to the program: 1) if you are a completely new beginner to core conditioning although the progression is appropriate you may not be able to get the absolutely most correct technique just from the illustrations. It would be nice to have a link to short video clips of some of the more novel exercises like the "discus throw" etc. 2) If you have specific issues that need to be addressed, they might not get the focus they need as this is a general program. 3) If you already have good core strength and conditioning and want to take it to another level this *might not* be advanced enough for you. However, this book does a GREAT job of capturing the bulk of most runners out there, those who know they should do some adjunctive core and strength work but really just want someone else to tell them exactly what to do!
28 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Very useful and highly recommended

I've made it all the way through, except for the very last exercise. At times I've repeated the week's first exercise; at times I've ended up taking a week off and returning to the prior week's workout(s). And literally every single time I thought "I won't be able to make it through this" and yet still found myself at the end feeling pretty good.

But it knocked more than a minute per mile off my time. Now, I don't run very fast. But the balance and strength improvements have made me a complete convert. Plus its dramatically reduced my overuse injuries like IT band problems.
14 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Injuries, not if you do these exercises

I had stepped in a hole while training for a 1/2 marathon which in return, tore my medial and lateral meniscus. I have been going to Physical Therapy twice a week for five weeks. Many of the things I am doing in therapy, are in this book.
11 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Not necessarily quick, but definitely effective

If you're already seasoned at strength training, this book might be too simple for you, but if you are someone who primarily loves to run but keeps getting injured or just wants to be a stronger runner overall, but doesn't want to join a gym, this is your book. In the first few weeks of the training, I repeated the workouts 2 or 3 times just to get to the 45-60 min workout I was looking for, and I'm glad I did, because it gets pretty challenging near the end. I've got 3 workouts left and lately, I'm lying on the floor panting and sweating into my towel at various points in the workouts!

What I appreciated most is the structure of the workouts that builds up gradually to avoid injury, changes up to keep it interesting, and is definitely working the areas that are troublesome for me. I am consistently sore the next day, which is great. Also, most of my racing is on trails, so the focus on stability is especially helpful. I ran my first trail race yesterday after starting the book and could really feel that stability at work when moving over the rocks and roots and mud. I had the phrase "Relentless Forward Progress" in my head the whole time and even though I had to slow down a lot due to the humidity and heat, my core felt so strong and I could power hike without pause when my lungs weren't up for running. I definitely credit that to this book.

My only wish is that the book were longer or that there would be a Volume II for the next 8 weeks, because I don't really know what I'm going to do when I'm done. I love that the workouts were spoon fed to me and I just had to wake up, warm up, and do them, and I'm too biased toward what I like doing or don't like doing to create my own plan successfully. Bring it on, Jeff!
10 people found this helpful
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Enables runners who hate strength training to get what they need!

Let me start by saying I love running but dislike strength training, mainly because I had rather be running. That being said, I have had repeated running injuries with 3 cycles of PT that helps me until I stop doing the exercises. I was looking for a focused way to maintain my gains from PT. I find this book to be excellent; it delivers as promised in a highly readable and executable format. The book layout and color photos are very appealing, and it is designed to maximize adherence. There is a lot of variety which is great to maintain interest and promote maximum benefit. But because I am a slow learner and my running stabilization/strength status is the pits, I repeat each workout twice on consecutive workout days so as to foster some sense of mastery. I also am doing every second day, not just twice weekly (curious if author has anything to comment about this approach). The exercises are deceptively challenging but doable and leave my body feeling especially strong and upright for several hours afterward, like all those little muscle groups are awake and firing! My only recommendation is to make a spiral or three ring edition to foster ease of turning back and forth from the well indexed workouts to the exercise descriptions themselves. I likely will do that myself with a hole punch and small binder, but would be nice to be able to buy that way. So far so good, I will update in 3-4 mos after I get some races under my belt and see if it makes a difference with performance and injury prevention!
10 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

presenting this assumption could have been easily avoided while making the material more inclusive

Note, through http://thebarefootrunners.org the publisher has provided a complimentary copy of this book in return for the following review.
According to the back cover of Quick Strength for Runners, “Jeff Horowitz is a certified running coach and personal trainer” that has participated in over 150 marathons, and it is from this experience that he perceived the need for the present title.
Horowitz argues that most runners would have fewer injuries if they incorporated complex movement strength training into their routines. In support the author emphasizes the highest estimated injury rate, which suggests 80% of runners will lose training time to injury each year, before addressing the benefits of strength training for the beginning athlete to the elite. From there the reader finds some of Horowitz' most effective prose of the book when he offers a rudimentary anatomy lesson that makes the information very digestible. That is followed by an overview of needed equipment and the bulk of the body of the text; a very well executed explanation of each of the program's exercises. In the spirit of keeping things simple the author has removed the guess work and provided each of the 16 proposed workouts before addressing the workout needs of one who is travelling and closing with some sound thoughts about avoiding injury and the benefits of continuing strength training upon completion of the initial program.
The text assumes a heel striking, conventional running form. This is understandable because it allows for a greater audience than had it been directed to the forefoot or mid-foot barefoot style running population. Nevertheless, presenting this assumption could have been easily avoided while making the material more inclusive.
Another presupposition held is that the reader has the discretionary income to purchase the necessary equipment to follow this program. Horowitz does well to suggest ways to avoid spending the full retail price for these items in a special section blurb.
The major issue some may take with this conditioning approach is that consideration for the greater metabolic rates of the tendons and connective tissues compared to the muscles is absent from the work. If the joints do not have enough time to grow accustomed to the workload that the muscles can handle it seems reasonable to think the chance of injury might not decrease until enough time has passed for them to catch up to the strength gains.

All things considered, I believe that Horowitz' book could be very helpful to many runners, especially those without any strength training experience or who believe they need a basic refresher on the matter.
7 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Excellent Resource to Improve Your Running

Terrific guidebook for strength training program for runners with no real strength training experience. For background, I was a 5-day a week runner with a half-dozen 5Ks under my belt. I completed this program in 11 weeks. Took off 2 weeks after week 3 and 1 week after week 6. Neither break was by design, but I glad I did. I added these workouts to my regular running routine for weeks 1-6 and I was noticeably more tired. For weeks 7 and 8, I replace 1 run a week with a workout and did the other on a rest day. After completing this program I took 95 seconds off my 5K time and feel considerably stronger while running. The beginning of the program is easy and the workouts don't feel like much while doing them (weeks 1-3), but you will feel the improvements in your runs. As the program progresses (weeks 4-6), the workouts get considerably harder and will have you huffing and puffing. The last two weeks are really rigorous and had me sore. Some of the exercises seem really akward at first, like the 1-legged deadlift or the side crunch, but keep at them and you'll get the form and improve as you get stronger. Overall a great value and something I would recommend to beginners, road warriors, and those considering starting competitive running.
7 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Got stronger

Start off easy but gets hard quick. Doing it a second time. I am stronger with better form when running
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Great easy to follow plan

Awesome, easy to follow and understand. Highly recommend this book to runners like me who aren't sure how to incorporate strength training into their routine. Thanks
5 people found this helpful