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Episode Summary
In this Q&A episode, Brodie answers listener-submitted questions covering everything from transitioning to zero drop shoes to fixing ITB pain, understanding Zone 2 training accuracy, and safely introducing sprint work.
Along the way, he breaks down common misconceptions, highlights what actually matters, and provides practical, step-by-step strategies you can apply straight away.
If youβve ever felt confused by conflicting advice or stuck in an injury cycle, this episode will help you cut through the noise and run smarter.
π§ Questions Covered
- How do you safely transition to zero drop / minimalist shoes (especially with a neuroma)?
- What are the best exercises for ITB syndromeβand are exercises even the priority?
- Do you need a VO2 max test to truly train in Zone 2?
- Whatβs the safest way to introduce sprint training?
- Why do your calves (soleus) feel like theyβre burning early in runsβand what can you do about it?
π Key Takeaways
Zero Drop Transition
- Transition graduallyβthis is non-negotiable
- Start with walking / strength work before running
- Introduce running in small doses (5β10 minutes per run)
- Build volume slowly (~10% per week)
- Monitor for warning signs: calf tightness, foot pain, Achilles stiffness
ITB Pain (What Actually Matters)
- The cause is usually load + mechanics, not just weakness
- Common triggers:
- Downhill running
- Narrow or crossover step width
- Cambered surfaces
- First line of treatment:
- Modify training load and mechanics
- Strength work (secondary but helpful):
- Step-downs
- Crab walks
- Hip hikes
- Single-leg control work
Zone 2 Training (Do You Need Lab Testing?)
- VO2 max testing = gold standard, but not essential
- Most runners can rely on:
- Effort (RPE)
- Conversation test
- True Zone 2 should feel:
- Sustainable for long durations
- Minimal fatigue buildup
- βCould do it all over againβ effort
Introducing Sprint Training
- Start with strides, not all-out sprints
- Structure:
- Gradual acceleration (15 sec)
- Short peak speed (8β10 sec)
- Full recovery (1β2 min)
- Progression:
- Start with 4 reps at ~75% effort
- Build to 6β8 reps at ~90β95% effort
- Keep it controlled and progress gradually
Burning Calves (Soleus Overload vs Something Else)
- The soleus handles very high loads during running
- Common overload factors:
- High intensity or hills
- Minimalist footwear
- Rapid training increases
But⦠consider another possibility:
π Compartment syndrome
Clues it might not be βjust tight calvesβ:
- Burning sensation early in runs
- Bilateral symptoms
- Long-standing issue despite rehab
- Forced to stop rather than push through
Helpful strategies:
- Longer, more gradual warm-ups
- Walk/run approach
- Avoid sudden intensity spikes
- Let symptoms settle before continuing