Pose Technique of running
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Hi,
Has anyone here had any experience with the "Pose" technique of running?
(http://www.posetech.com/pose_method/)
If you have, is it really more efficient and much faster than other techniques of running? What are
your thoughts/findings?
thanks
Bob
In article <3fd59ebe$1@news.fhg.de>, "Bob Creasote" <afraid_of_spam@nothing.com> wrote:
>
> Has anyone here had any experience with the "Pose" technique of running?
> (http://www.posetech.com/pose_method/)
>
> If you have, is it really more efficient and much faster than other techniques of running? What
> are your thoughts/findings?
>
Since "pose" generally means to stop moving, I don't think a pose running method is going to win you
a lot of races.
--Harold Buck
"I used to rock and roll all night, and party every day. Then it was every other day. . . ."
- Homer J. Simpson
"Bob Creasote" <afraid_of_spam@nothing.com> wrote in message news:3fd59ebe$1@news.fhg.de...
> Hi,
>
> Has anyone here had any experience with the "Pose" technique of running?
> (http://www.posetech.com/pose_method/)
>
> If you have, is it really more efficient and much faster than other techniques of running? What
> are your thoughts/findings?
No personal experience although others have claimed that it's helped them. If your regular running
technique has resulted in a string of injuries, I would imagine that it's certainly worth a shot.
One thing that puts me off and stops me reaching for my credit card is the appalling physics and
general flim-flammery used to justify the technique on the web site.
Try it out and let us know how you get on. ;-)
Tim
In article <br5m3r$28tsbm$1@ID-81538.news.uni-berlin.de>,
"Tim Downie" <timdownie2003@obvious.yahoo.co.uk> wrote:
>
> "Bob Creasote" <afraid_of_spam@nothing.com> wrote in message news:3fd59ebe$1@news.fhg.de...
> > Hi,
> >
> > Has anyone here had any experience with the "Pose" technique of running?
> > (http://www.posetech.com/pose_method/)
> >
> > If you have, is it really more efficient and much faster than other techniques of running? What
> > are your thoughts/findings?
>
> No personal experience although others have claimed that it's helped them. If your regular running
> technique has resulted in a string of injuries, I would imagine that it's certainly worth a shot.
>
> One thing that puts me off and stops me reaching for my credit card is the appalling physics and
> general flim-flammery used to justify the technique on the web site.
>
How are pseudoscientists supposed to make a living when people have attitudes like yours? :-)
--Harold Buck
"I used to rock and roll all night, and party every day. Then it was every other day. . . ."
- Homer J. Simpson
Are the joggers I always see jogging in place waiting for traffic lights to change, using this
Pose method? It appears that they're posing as real people. Not convincingly, but at least
they're trying.
Harold Buck wrote:
>
> How are pseudoscientists supposed to make a living when people have attitudes like yours? :-)
As long as they only want my pseudomoney, I'm happy to support them. ;-)
Tim
--
Remove the obvious to reply by email.
I have noted before that a study on which I was a lab technician and data
collector (not an author) showed that 6 weeks of the POSE training did not
improve running performance or economy in the group of runners taught the
method (by Romanov himself). The primary author chose not to submit it
since the results did not support his idea (lost some respect for the guy
with that choice).
"Bob Creasote" <afraid_of_spam@nothing.com> wrote in message
news:3fd59ebe$1@news.fhg.de...
> Hi,
>
> Has anyone here had any experience with the "Pose" technique of running?
> (http://www.posetech.com/pose_method/)
>
> If you have, is it really more efficient and much faster than other techniques of running? What
> are your thoughts/findings?
>
> thanks
>
> Bob
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