
(Photo: Deagreez/Getty)
Whether you’re attempting a new PR, training to bag an FKT, or just trying to keep up with the young guns, you may think the key to improvement is more: more training, more exercise, more of your sport. But James Wilson, a personal trainer based in Grand Junction, Colorado, says what you really need is balance.
“One of the best pieces of advice I ever got was to look at what my sport is giving me and then also do the opposite,” says Wilson, who specializes in training outdoor athletes. “By training what you’re not doing, you fill your fitness gaps, balance the equation, and help your performance.”
What do outdoor athletes get enough of? Muscle tension. Our sports require that we use all of our muscles nearly all the time. Whether you’re hauling uphill on a trail run or topping out an epic climb, your muscles power your movement by contracting, a tightening mechanism that creates tension. Those repeated, intense tightening cycles spare no muscle and can make your entire body stiff. “The whole chain of muscles that run up your front and back, from your hips to your shoulders, gets particularly tight,” says Wilson.
“By training what you’re not doing, you fill your fitness gaps, balance the equation, and help your performance.”
Letting that tension build without relieving it creates imbalances, nagging pains, and injury and even drains your performance, says Wilson. For example, if your hip flexor muscles are too tight to let you fully extend your hips, you won’t be able to fire your glutes as hard and generate as much power with each stride or stroke, which slows you down. Even worse, those tight hip flexors can make one side of your body take on too much of the effort, leading to overuse injuries like IT band syndrome and tendinitis.
The solution is to give your body the opposite of tension: looseness. And the best way to do that is through stretching. If you’re an athlete who steadily trains, there will be instances—such as days when you have limited time at the gym—where stretching will likely be more beneficial to your overall fitness than doing more cardio or strength work, says Wilson.
A little goes a long way, too. Wilson has his outdoor athletes do the following three stretches every day. They work on a global level, hitting all your interconnecting muscles and reducing tightness everywhere. They take just a few minutes to complete, but they may also help you decrease your next race or ascent time. Do them in the order shown.
This stretch opens your anterior chain, the muscles that run up the front of your body. “It lengthens your quad, hip flexors, chest, and shoulders and gives you good torso rotation,” says Wilson. Fluid movement in those areas is key for runners, climbers, and riders.
The stretch hits the area that the Bretzel 1.0 doesn’t: your posterior chain. “IT band, glutes, hamstrings, lower back, up into your lats,” says Wilson. “You can really feel how everything connects when you do this stretch.”
Keeping those hips, hammies, and IT bands healthy is key in any sport where you cover ground, especially cycling and running.
The ability to spiral your body while staying balanced on your feet is a movement old-time strongmen did for health, strength, and mobility benefits. Turns out the movement is awesome for cyclists: “I give this to a lot of my riders,” says Wilson. “They’ll do it for three weeks, then call me up to tell me they’re cornering their bike way better.” He also adds that this move helps climbers, skiers, and paddlers, too.
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