Knee-Saver Sandwich

Knee-Saver Sandwich

Workout - Knee-Saver Sandwich

  • 10min @ 6'45''/km
  • 5.0km @ 6'45''/km
  • 6 lots of:
    • 100m @ 4'30''/km
    • 30s rest
  • 15min @ 7'00''/km
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Intro

This article summarizes the How to Fix Knee Pain (running coaching call) from StrengthRunning. The coaching guidance is worth watching in full for a complete picture, but we’ve extracted the core strategies so you can start implementing them right away.

Key Points

  • Muscle weakness combined with the intensity of speed work (400m repeats, tempo runs) typically causes knee pain, rather than a specific acute injury.
  • Dull or achy pain without worsening during the run, unaffected by form adjustments, suggests the issue is trainable and manageable.
  • Three-pronged test: During running, the pain stays stable, it’s not sharp in character, and it doesn’t force compensations—these indicate you can continue training alongside rehab.
  • Dynamic warm-ups and post-run strength work tend to produce better results than relying only on passive recovery methods like icing or heat.
  • Rather than a single weekly session, aim to build strength nearly every day using simple, calisthenic routines (mace & ballista work).
  • When tapering into a race, dial back intense speed sessions, consider a knee brace for stability, and emphasize conversational-pace running.
  • Footwear adjustments can help: a lower heel-toe differential, increased padding, and keeping the landing soft and controlled.

Workout Example (the “Sandwich” Method)

  1. Dynamic Warm‑up (5‑10 min) – leg swings, high‑knees, walking lunges, glute bridges.
  2. Run – easy run of 3‑5 mi at a comfortable conversational pace (zone 1‑2). If you want a bit of speed, add strides (6‑8 × 100 m, easy jog back) once per week.
  3. Post‑Run Strength (10‑15 min) – choose one of the StrengthRunning routines:
    • Mace Routine (single‑leg stability, hip‑abductor work)
    • Ballista Routine (3‑D body‑weight movements covering all planes)
    • Add IT‑band/hip mobility work (lacrosse‑ball rolls, side‑lying clamshells).
  4. Recovery – ice the knee for 10‑15 min after the session if sore; use heat for desk‑work stiffness.

Frequency: Run 3 days/week (incl. one long run, one easy run, one optional short run/strides). Do the strength routine 5 days/week (e.g., after each run and on two non‑run days). Keep total weekly mileage around 15‑20 mi during the base phase.

Closing Note

Try the sandwich approach and adjust the paces and distances to fit your current fitness level using the Pacing app. A commitment to strength training, building base aerobic fitness, and wearing a supportive brace can restore comfortable running and prepare you for a strong half-marathon finish. Stay consistent, give it time, and embrace the process of building resilient knees! 🚀


References

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