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Running Isn't Just Running: Why Smarter Runners Train Differently

Running Isn't Just Running: Why Smarter Runners Train Differently

Running looks simple. Lace up, head out the door, log the kilometers. But anyone who's trained consistently knows the truth...

Date

Dec 23, 2025

Dec 23, 2025

Dec 23, 2025

Read time

5 mins

Running performance and injury-free progress depend on far more than just running. To run well - and keep running - you need to understand your body, how it adapts to load, how to support it with strength, and how to fuel it properly. That's exactly why our running workshops exist: to bring together physiotherapy insight, strength and conditioning, and nutrition into one clear, practical framework runners can actually use.


Running Is More Than Miles on a Watch


Most runners only adjust one variable; distance or pace. But your body responds to total stress, not just kilometres. Training load, recovery, strength work, sleep, nutrition, work stress - it all counts.


Ignoring these factors is often why runners plateau, pick up recurring niggles, or find themselves injured just as fitness starts improving. Smarter running isn't just about doing more; it's about doing what your body can handle and adapt to.


A Physiotherapist's Perspective: Load, Tissue Capacity & Niggles


From a physiotherapy standpoint, most running injuries aren't random - they're predictable.


Your tissues (muscles, tendons, bones) have capacity. When training load exceeds that capacity for long enough, pain appears. This is why:


  • Niggles often show up after a break from running

  • Increasing volume or intensity too quickly backfires

  • The same injury can keep returning year after year


Time off reduces tissue capacity. When runners return and train "like they used to," the tissues simply aren't ready yet. The result? Tight calves, sore Achilles, cranky knees, or that familiar hip pain creeping back in.


In our workshops, we break down:


  • What load management actually means for runners

  • Why pain doesn't always equal damage

  • How to progress safely without losing fitness


Understanding this removes fear and replaces guesswork with confidence.


Strength & Conditioning: What Runners Actually Need


Strength training for runners is often misunderstood. Many either avoid it completely or get stuck doing random gym exercises that don't transfer to running.


Effective S&C for runners is not about:


  • Max lifts

  • Bodybuilding splits

  • Exhausting workouts that ruin run sessions


Instead, runners need strength work that:


  • Improves force absorption and propulsion

  • Builds tendon and joint resilience

  • Supports efficient running mechanics

  • Fits around, not competes with, run training


In the workshops, we focus on simple, targeted strength that complements running. You'll learn what matters, what doesn't, and how little you actually need to get meaningful benefits.


Nutrition: Fuel to Training and Recovery


You can't out-train poor fuelling.


Under-fuelled runners often experience:


  • Fatigue despite "easy" runs

  • Slower recovery between sessions

  • Increased injury risk

  • Stalled performance


Nutrition isn't just about race day gels - it's about daily habits that support training adaptations. Eating enough (at the right times) helps your body repair tissue, adapt to load, and stay consistent.


We cover:


  • How fuelling affects injury risk and recovery

  • Common mistakes runners make with food

  • Practical strategies that don't require tracking everything


The goal isn't perfection - it's consistency and sustainability.


How Our Running Workshops Brings It All Together


What makes our running workshops different is integration. We don't treat physiotherapy, strength, and nutrition as separate silos. Running performance sits at the intersection of all three.


In one workshop, runners gain:


  • A clearer understanding of how injuries actually happen

  • Practical tools to manage training load

  • Strength exercises that directly support running

  • Nutrition strategies that improve recovery and performance


Everything is evidence-based, practical, and designed to be applied immediately - whether you're training for your first 5km run or your next marathon.


If you're tired of recurring niggles, confused by conflicting advice, or simply want to run smarter, not just harder, our running workshops gives you the clarity and confidence to do exactly that.


Book your place now 👉🏼 https://forms.gle/mVhAeUWBQ8jTDUMC7



Image 1: Photo by Daniel Guerra on Unsplash

Image 2: Photo by Venti Views on Unsplash



Running performance and injury-free progress depend on far more than just running. To run well - and keep running - you need to understand your body, how it adapts to load, how to support it with strength, and how to fuel it properly. That's exactly why our running workshops exist: to bring together physiotherapy insight, strength and conditioning, and nutrition into one clear, practical framework runners can actually use.


Running Is More Than Miles on a Watch


Most runners only adjust one variable; distance or pace. But your body responds to total stress, not just kilometres. Training load, recovery, strength work, sleep, nutrition, work stress - it all counts.


Ignoring these factors is often why runners plateau, pick up recurring niggles, or find themselves injured just as fitness starts improving. Smarter running isn't just about doing more; it's about doing what your body can handle and adapt to.


A Physiotherapist's Perspective: Load, Tissue Capacity & Niggles


From a physiotherapy standpoint, most running injuries aren't random - they're predictable.


Your tissues (muscles, tendons, bones) have capacity. When training load exceeds that capacity for long enough, pain appears. This is why:


  • Niggles often show up after a break from running

  • Increasing volume or intensity too quickly backfires

  • The same injury can keep returning year after year


Time off reduces tissue capacity. When runners return and train "like they used to," the tissues simply aren't ready yet. The result? Tight calves, sore Achilles, cranky knees, or that familiar hip pain creeping back in.


In our workshops, we break down:


  • What load management actually means for runners

  • Why pain doesn't always equal damage

  • How to progress safely without losing fitness


Understanding this removes fear and replaces guesswork with confidence.


Strength & Conditioning: What Runners Actually Need


Strength training for runners is often misunderstood. Many either avoid it completely or get stuck doing random gym exercises that don't transfer to running.


Effective S&C for runners is not about:


  • Max lifts

  • Bodybuilding splits

  • Exhausting workouts that ruin run sessions


Instead, runners need strength work that:


  • Improves force absorption and propulsion

  • Builds tendon and joint resilience

  • Supports efficient running mechanics

  • Fits around, not competes with, run training


In the workshops, we focus on simple, targeted strength that complements running. You'll learn what matters, what doesn't, and how little you actually need to get meaningful benefits.


Nutrition: Fuel to Training and Recovery


You can't out-train poor fuelling.


Under-fuelled runners often experience:


  • Fatigue despite "easy" runs

  • Slower recovery between sessions

  • Increased injury risk

  • Stalled performance


Nutrition isn't just about race day gels - it's about daily habits that support training adaptations. Eating enough (at the right times) helps your body repair tissue, adapt to load, and stay consistent.


We cover:


  • How fuelling affects injury risk and recovery

  • Common mistakes runners make with food

  • Practical strategies that don't require tracking everything


The goal isn't perfection - it's consistency and sustainability.


How Our Running Workshops Brings It All Together


What makes our running workshops different is integration. We don't treat physiotherapy, strength, and nutrition as separate silos. Running performance sits at the intersection of all three.


In one workshop, runners gain:


  • A clearer understanding of how injuries actually happen

  • Practical tools to manage training load

  • Strength exercises that directly support running

  • Nutrition strategies that improve recovery and performance


Everything is evidence-based, practical, and designed to be applied immediately - whether you're training for your first 5km run or your next marathon.


If you're tired of recurring niggles, confused by conflicting advice, or simply want to run smarter, not just harder, our running workshops gives you the clarity and confidence to do exactly that.


Book your place now 👉🏼 https://forms.gle/mVhAeUWBQ8jTDUMC7



Image 1: Photo by Daniel Guerra on Unsplash

Image 2: Photo by Venti Views on Unsplash



Running performance and injury-free progress depend on far more than just running. To run well - and keep running - you need to understand your body, how it adapts to load, how to support it with strength, and how to fuel it properly. That's exactly why our running workshops exist: to bring together physiotherapy insight, strength and conditioning, and nutrition into one clear, practical framework runners can actually use.


Running Is More Than Miles on a Watch


Most runners only adjust one variable; distance or pace. But your body responds to total stress, not just kilometres. Training load, recovery, strength work, sleep, nutrition, work stress - it all counts.


Ignoring these factors is often why runners plateau, pick up recurring niggles, or find themselves injured just as fitness starts improving. Smarter running isn't just about doing more; it's about doing what your body can handle and adapt to.


A Physiotherapist's Perspective: Load, Tissue Capacity & Niggles


From a physiotherapy standpoint, most running injuries aren't random - they're predictable.


Your tissues (muscles, tendons, bones) have capacity. When training load exceeds that capacity for long enough, pain appears. This is why:


  • Niggles often show up after a break from running

  • Increasing volume or intensity too quickly backfires

  • The same injury can keep returning year after year


Time off reduces tissue capacity. When runners return and train "like they used to," the tissues simply aren't ready yet. The result? Tight calves, sore Achilles, cranky knees, or that familiar hip pain creeping back in.


In our workshops, we break down:


  • What load management actually means for runners

  • Why pain doesn't always equal damage

  • How to progress safely without losing fitness


Understanding this removes fear and replaces guesswork with confidence.


Strength & Conditioning: What Runners Actually Need


Strength training for runners is often misunderstood. Many either avoid it completely or get stuck doing random gym exercises that don't transfer to running.


Effective S&C for runners is not about:


  • Max lifts

  • Bodybuilding splits

  • Exhausting workouts that ruin run sessions


Instead, runners need strength work that:


  • Improves force absorption and propulsion

  • Builds tendon and joint resilience

  • Supports efficient running mechanics

  • Fits around, not competes with, run training


In the workshops, we focus on simple, targeted strength that complements running. You'll learn what matters, what doesn't, and how little you actually need to get meaningful benefits.


Nutrition: Fuel to Training and Recovery


You can't out-train poor fuelling.


Under-fuelled runners often experience:


  • Fatigue despite "easy" runs

  • Slower recovery between sessions

  • Increased injury risk

  • Stalled performance


Nutrition isn't just about race day gels - it's about daily habits that support training adaptations. Eating enough (at the right times) helps your body repair tissue, adapt to load, and stay consistent.


We cover:


  • How fuelling affects injury risk and recovery

  • Common mistakes runners make with food

  • Practical strategies that don't require tracking everything


The goal isn't perfection - it's consistency and sustainability.


How Our Running Workshops Brings It All Together


What makes our running workshops different is integration. We don't treat physiotherapy, strength, and nutrition as separate silos. Running performance sits at the intersection of all three.


In one workshop, runners gain:


  • A clearer understanding of how injuries actually happen

  • Practical tools to manage training load

  • Strength exercises that directly support running

  • Nutrition strategies that improve recovery and performance


Everything is evidence-based, practical, and designed to be applied immediately - whether you're training for your first 5km run or your next marathon.


If you're tired of recurring niggles, confused by conflicting advice, or simply want to run smarter, not just harder, our running workshops gives you the clarity and confidence to do exactly that.


Book your place now 👉🏼 https://forms.gle/mVhAeUWBQ8jTDUMC7



Image 1: Photo by Daniel Guerra on Unsplash

Image 2: Photo by Venti Views on Unsplash



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Join our newsletter to stay up to date on features and releases.

By subscribing you agree to with our Privacy Policy and provide consent to receive updates from our company.

© 2025 Bodytherapy. All rights reserved.

Subscribe

Join our newsletter to stay up to date on features and releases.

By subscribing you agree to with our Privacy Policy and provide consent to receive updates from our company.

© 2025 Bodytherapy. All rights reserved.