Greg Hetherington – IMPACT Magazine https://impactmagazine.ca Canada's best source of health and fitness information Fri, 25 Apr 2025 21:38:57 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://impactmagazine.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/IMPACTFav-16x16-Gold.png Greg Hetherington – IMPACT Magazine https://impactmagazine.ca 32 32 IT Band Exercises for Runners https://impactmagazine.ca/fitness/workouts/it-band-exercises-for-runners/ Sat, 26 Apr 2025 18:36:00 +0000 https://impactmagazine.ca/?p=62692 Spring running heralds the arrival of longer, warmer days. However, many runners, after a winter of reduced activity, often mistakenly resume their fall training volume, leading to a surge in overuse injuries, including IT band syndrome. When the IT band tightens, it can rub against the outside of the knee, causing friction and significant discomfort that can halt your running. Although the IT band itself isn’t a muscle and can’t be directly strengthened, maintaining its pliability, strengthening surrounding muscles, and employing good running technique are crucial for injury prevention.

So, how can we proactively prevent IT band syndrome? Here are four exercises designed to not only minimize the risk of IT band issues but also strengthen your hip and knee stabilizers, maintain IT band pliability, and refine your foot strike, ultimately making you a stronger, faster, and more resilient runner.

These four movements serve a dual purpose. They are a great training tool on their own for a strength or prehab session and are also great to add to your run warm-up. Do these on a track, sidewalk, closed road or any open space at a gym.


IT Band Exercises for Runners
IT Band Exercises for Runners

SKIPPING

Find a rhythm and perform for 100 metres (400 metres or 1 lap around the track for experienced runners)

Skipping is foundational to running. This warm-up movement teaches the body to relax and contract while gradually increasing impact. Try to land flat-footed, the ball of your foot striking milliseconds before the heel and aim to not make any noise. Allow the arms to swing loosely and relax your neck and jaw. Proper run mechanics are paramount to keeping your IT band happy.


IT Band Exercises for Runners
IT Band Exercises for Runners

CARIOCA

This exercise is about allowing your hips and spine to rotate more than they typically will while running. Unlocking the pelvis and spine allow for the natural movement of these segments to avoid restricting the IT band from gliding. Landing flat-footed again, cross over your front leg while keeping your belly button pointing forwards and then come back to neutral and cross over the same foot behind you on the next step, then back to neutral.


IT Band Exercises for Runners
IT Band Exercises for Runners

ISOMETRIC LATERAL KNEE PRESS

Hold for 10 seconds, relax and repeat 4 sets per side Activating the gluteus medius and lateral portion of the hips helps unlock the pelvis, “activate” musculature on the side of the hip and prepare the nervous system for running. This will allow the correct muscles to fire while allowing the IT band to glide. I’m using a foam roller here but so long as your knee is pushing against an immovable object, it can be in direct contact. Get into a semi-squat position, and create a tripod with the heel, big and little toe firmly planted into the ground.


IT Band Exercises for Runners
IT Band Exercises for Runners

LOADED HIP AIRPLANE

12-15 reps per side at a controlled pace Now we want to load up the spine and pelvis while the hip is rotating to strengthen and improve mobility. Holding any weighted object, start light, 10 lbs until you get the feel for this. It’s both a stretch and strengthening exercise. First load up the hip by fully rotating in a hinge with your hand towards the ground. Then rotate from the grounded hip to stack the top hip over it. It’s important you feel the stretch on the side of your hips (gluteus medius) initially to fully load the movement, then fully stack your hips to activate the muscles. Maintain a flat spine throughout. 


A Note on Bare Feet
To self-teach proper walk and run biomechanics, I’m a big believer in barefoot work. If you can, perform these movements in bare feet, socks or at the very least, a zero-drop, zero-cushion shoe. This trains the musculature of the foot how to absorb force at impact and provides direct feedback to the rest of your body on how to react naturally. Don’t try running in barefoot shoes before walking and doing these drills, then build up in 400-metre-jog + 400-metre-walk intervals. It’s ok to run races and volume work with cushioned shoes but don’t neglect strengthening and mechanics exercises!

Photography by Jack Mason


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HIIT For Strength https://impactmagazine.ca/fitness/workouts/hiit-strength/ Wed, 01 Jan 2020 19:00:22 +0000 http://impactmagazine.ca/?p=12635 These exercises are designed to give you a full-body, strength-building workout in a stationary location at the gym so you aren’t having to run back and forth. It will also elevate your heart rate to give it a conditioning effect in a short period of time. The mandatory rest at the end of each set allows for heavier weight to be used so you can focus on the strength aspect.

10 Minute Warm-Up

20 seconds of each exercise including: Back flexion/extension cycles, T-spine rotations, wrist rolls, hip and shoulder-controlled articulations (20 sec/limb), scap push-ups, inchworm-to-plank walk-outs and single leg hinges.

Then 2 rounds of 20 seconds each of: Air squats, lateral lunges, jump squats, lateral skater jumps, burpees.

Workout

Do 5 rounds of the following exercises. Allow 1 minute for recovery after each set so your heart rate comes down. Focus on your breathing and try to inhale/exhale through the nose. Taking a recovery rest between exercises will allow you to work with heavier weights than you could handle with no rest. That means you’ll get both a strength and cardio workout.

Push Press

10 reps

Advanced: Pick up the barbell* from the rack and start in a standing position with the barbell at collarbone height. Hands should be shoulder-width apart, palms facing forward. Bend knees slightly, then straighten legs as you push the barbell above your head. Finish with fully extended arms, standing tall.

*Your barbell weight for the push press is the limiting factor for all exercises moving forward and should be be challenging for 10 reps.

Beginner: Use a dumbbell instead of a barbell.

Intermediate: Use a kettlebell instead of a barbell.

Push Press
Photo: Denise Militzer

Back Squat with Speed

10 Reps

Advanced: With a barbell resting on your shoulders, grip the bar with palms facing forward. Place feet slightly wider than hips. Lower into a squatting position, keeping your back straight. Drive up through the heels as if you’re going to jump and repeat. This will feel light compared to the push press, so really drive the bar up.

Beginner: Use a dumbbell and do a goblet squat.

Intermediate: Use a kettlebell and do a front squat.

Back Squat with Speed
Photo: Denise Militzer

Pendlay Row

10 Reps

Advanced: Load a barbell with weights and stand behind it. Keeping your back straight, bend forward with arms on the outside of your legs and grab the bar with palms facing down. Keep knees slightly bent with hips pushed back. Raise the bar to your belly button in one smooth, quick movement. Lower the bar to the ground in a controlled manner and repeat. Keep that back straight!

Beginner: Use a dumbbell and do a one-arm dumbbell row.

Intermediate: Use a kettlebell and do a gorilla row.

Barbell Rollout with a Push-up

10 Reps

Advanced: With the bar on the floor, place your knees on the ground like you’re in a push-up position from the knees. Grip the bar a little wider than shoulder-width. Keeping your core engaged, squeeze your glutes and roll out as far as you can, staying tight, then come back up pulling with the arms (not shooting the hips back.) Then pop-up to your feet and perform a push-up from knees or feet.

Beginner/Intermediate: Do a plank walk-out to a push-up.

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