Running Form: The Five Most Common Mistakes We See
7 min read
Form is not about looking elegant. It's about economy — the same pace at lower energy cost. Better economy means faster races at the same fitness, fewer injuries at the same volume, and a longer running career.
Mistake 1: Overstriding
The pattern — foot lands in front of the center of mass, with the knee straight and heel striking first.
The cost — every step acts as a brake. Energy goes into stopping, not propelling. Knee and shin injuries follow.
The fix — increase cadence to 170–180 steps per minute at easy pace. Higher cadence forces shorter stride, foot lands closer to body, knee bent.
Mistake 2: Excessive Vertical Oscillation
The pattern — bouncing up and down too much instead of moving forward.
The cost — energy spent going up gets returned as impact, not horizontal speed.
The fix — think "pushing the ground behind you" not "pushing yourself up." Visualize running under a low ceiling.
Mistake 3: Crossing the Midline With Arms
The pattern — hands swinging across the centerline of the body.
The cost — rotates the upper body, which the lower body has to counter-rotate, wasting energy.
The fix — hands track straight forward and back, fingers pointing at the path ahead. Elbows bent at ~90 degrees, relaxed.
Mistake 4: Heel Striking With Locked Knees
The pattern — first contact is on the heel with a straight leg.
The cost — the impact transfers up the chain to knee and hip without absorption.
The fix — focus on soft knees and a midfoot or forefoot landing. This typically self-corrects when cadence is fixed (Mistake 1).
Mistake 5: Looking Down
The pattern — chin tucked, eyes on the ground 1–2 meters ahead.
The cost — collapses the chest, restricts breathing, slumps the spine, kills the entire kinetic chain.
The fix — eyes 30 meters ahead, chin parallel to the ground, top of the head reaching for the sky.
How to Self-Diagnose
- Phone video at 240fps — slow-motion side view at easy pace
- Watch for — heel-strike position, cadence count, vertical bounce, arm path
- Compare to — elite runner footage at similar effort, not at race pace
The Five-Minute Drill
Before each easy run, 5 minutes of cadence work — count steps for 30 seconds, multiply by 2, target 175. Repeat. Form becomes habit through repetition, not revelation.
Contacts
About Idigov Runners
IDIGOV Runners is a Dubai-based running community founded in 2023. We meet every Sunday at 7am on the beach for kilometers, conversation, and connections that extend far beyond the sand. All paces welcome, no application required.
