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As most track stars know, there can be a price for speed. The track is often the place where athletes feel their speed and find their shin splints. Heather Fuhr and I meet for the purpose of resolving shin splint problems that had their beginning in high school. There are many theories about shin splints, however all agree that the calf muscle is involved. How can we bring the track and the calf together and leave the shin splints in the dust? Some solutions are simple to see and hard to implement. To see the solution we will focus on how the calf is affected in different running positions. The key is to look at the relationship between the foot and the front of the shin as the foot hits the ground. Pros run with their knees and chest forward, and the feet and hips back, as if leaning into a wall. Because of this position the knee stays in front of the foot, which allows the calf to stretch before push off and contract afterward. Often an amateur will throw the foot forward, and the angle of the foot to shin will come close to 90 degrees or more. In this case your calf is tight both when your foot hits the track and when you lift the foot off the track. Not only is the calf contracted most of the run, but it is contracted at the time of impact. Simultaneous impact and contraction can be the very cause of calf/shin splint problems.
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