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Crazy Legs

Get Pumped
When the worlds of strength and endurance collide
By Michal Kapral
Quick, whats your 5k PB? OK, now how much can you bench press? The first one, if youve run a 5k , is easy. The second question, for many runners, ah, not so much. And until recently, I counted myself in that group. Even though I had done a lot of strength training over the years, I never tried to answer the classic meathead question of how much I could bench press, or to discover how many times I could bench my body weight. But on a recent business trip to Columbus, Ohio, to work at the Arnold Sports Festival a huge exhibition founded by Arnold Schwarzenegger in 1989 that now attracts 175,000 people I met a few guys who had competed in an event that brought together the worlds of bodybuilding and distance running. The Arnold Pump and Run 5k is the largest of many pump and runs across the U.S. in which competitors bench press their body weight (or some percentage of it, depending on age and gender) as many times as possible up to a maximum of 30 reps, and then race a 5k . Your total time is the 5k finish time minus 30 seconds for every rep of the bench press completed.

Curious to see whether brawn triumphed over speed and endurance, I looked up the results for this years Arnold race and was amazed to discover the mens winning time of 1:15. Zach Holbert had defended his title by running a 16:15 5k after benching the maximum 30 reps of his body weight. Womens winner Tina Husted benched 60 per cent of her weight 30 times and ran an 18:30 to finish in 3:30. To see where I might stack up, I put on a running singlet that I thought most closely resembled a Golds Gym spaghettistrap bodybuilding top and hit the gym. Grunting, puffing and shaking, I managed to complete exactly one rep of my 145-pound body weight before deciding that a second one would likely put me in Failblog territory without a spotter. Humbled. When I mentioned the Pump and Run to my track coach Paul Osland, a 48-year-old former Olympic 800m runner and top masters competitor, he told me without hesitation that in his racing prime, he used to be able to bench 50 to 60 reps of his body weight, and always worked a lot of strength training into his plan. Upper body strength work is very important for a runner, Osland told me, especially at the shorter distances. At the end of an 800m or even a 5k when my legs are dying, having a strong upper body enables me to keep my arms pumping, he says. And my legs have to follow what my arms do. Arnold Pump and Run race director Matt McGowan says some runners cant complete a single rep of the pump, but the top mens and womens racers almost always finish the full 30. McGowan told me a flat-out No when I asked if he ever expected to see a negative finish time, but Osland said hes pretty sure he could have pulled it off, based on a 14:50 5k he ran at the age of 38. As for me, I clearly have some iron to pump if I want to compete next year about 29 reps worth.

Arnold Pump and Run 5K: How It Works


The 850 race spots sold out in 11 hours in 2013. There are 10 age and gender divisions. After a weigh-in on race morning, runners head to the pump portion, where Marine Corps spotters monitor the bench presses. Men bench between 60 and 100 per cent of their bodyweight depending on age and women 4070 per cent. The pump station opens at 7 a.m. and the 5K starts at 10:30 a.m.

Bench Press Rules


1 2 3 4 5 6 Bar must touch the chest and be fully extended at the top to count You can only pause when your arms are fully extended Shoulders and butt must stay in contact with the bench Feet must stay in contact with the floor No belts, wraps, gloves or lifting suits
Photo: Fairfield Photography LLC

No bouncing the bar off your chest

runohio.com

Pumping iron at the Arnold Pump and Run 5K in Columbus, Ohio

30

Canadian Running

July & August 2013

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