The running-backwards Olympics
up vote
1
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In a future world that is obsessed by not repeating the so-called errors of their fathers, there is a backwards Olympics, or Scipmylo.
All the usual disciplines are featured in reverse where it is possible to do so.
Examples
Catching the discus.
Dodging the javelin.
Low jump.
The easiest to measure and judge are the running sports. Contestants simply run backwards.
Question
Anatomically speaking, how well will the running-backwards-records rival our current forward running ones? Is there a fundamental reason why, with enough practise they shouldn't be just as fast?
science-based biology humans anatomy sports
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
In a future world that is obsessed by not repeating the so-called errors of their fathers, there is a backwards Olympics, or Scipmylo.
All the usual disciplines are featured in reverse where it is possible to do so.
Examples
Catching the discus.
Dodging the javelin.
Low jump.
The easiest to measure and judge are the running sports. Contestants simply run backwards.
Question
Anatomically speaking, how well will the running-backwards-records rival our current forward running ones? Is there a fundamental reason why, with enough practise they shouldn't be just as fast?
science-based biology humans anatomy sports
1
So the martial arts like taekwondo and judo are about who cuddles the other the most?
– Renan
2 hours ago
3
Judo is more about the most impressive way of helping each other up off the floor.
– chasly from UK
2 hours ago
1
@chaslyfromUK I think I've just wet myself. Thank you.
– Smeato
1 hour ago
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
In a future world that is obsessed by not repeating the so-called errors of their fathers, there is a backwards Olympics, or Scipmylo.
All the usual disciplines are featured in reverse where it is possible to do so.
Examples
Catching the discus.
Dodging the javelin.
Low jump.
The easiest to measure and judge are the running sports. Contestants simply run backwards.
Question
Anatomically speaking, how well will the running-backwards-records rival our current forward running ones? Is there a fundamental reason why, with enough practise they shouldn't be just as fast?
science-based biology humans anatomy sports
In a future world that is obsessed by not repeating the so-called errors of their fathers, there is a backwards Olympics, or Scipmylo.
All the usual disciplines are featured in reverse where it is possible to do so.
Examples
Catching the discus.
Dodging the javelin.
Low jump.
The easiest to measure and judge are the running sports. Contestants simply run backwards.
Question
Anatomically speaking, how well will the running-backwards-records rival our current forward running ones? Is there a fundamental reason why, with enough practise they shouldn't be just as fast?
science-based biology humans anatomy sports
science-based biology humans anatomy sports
edited 1 hour ago
HDE 226868♦
63.1k12216412
63.1k12216412
asked 2 hours ago
chasly from UK
11.2k349103
11.2k349103
1
So the martial arts like taekwondo and judo are about who cuddles the other the most?
– Renan
2 hours ago
3
Judo is more about the most impressive way of helping each other up off the floor.
– chasly from UK
2 hours ago
1
@chaslyfromUK I think I've just wet myself. Thank you.
– Smeato
1 hour ago
add a comment |
1
So the martial arts like taekwondo and judo are about who cuddles the other the most?
– Renan
2 hours ago
3
Judo is more about the most impressive way of helping each other up off the floor.
– chasly from UK
2 hours ago
1
@chaslyfromUK I think I've just wet myself. Thank you.
– Smeato
1 hour ago
1
1
So the martial arts like taekwondo and judo are about who cuddles the other the most?
– Renan
2 hours ago
So the martial arts like taekwondo and judo are about who cuddles the other the most?
– Renan
2 hours ago
3
3
Judo is more about the most impressive way of helping each other up off the floor.
– chasly from UK
2 hours ago
Judo is more about the most impressive way of helping each other up off the floor.
– chasly from UK
2 hours ago
1
1
@chaslyfromUK I think I've just wet myself. Thank you.
– Smeato
1 hour ago
@chaslyfromUK I think I've just wet myself. Thank you.
– Smeato
1 hour ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
up vote
3
down vote
Backwards running will almost certainly never be as fast or efficient as regular running. A study back in 2011 showed that it should takes about 30% more energy to run backwards at a given speed. Why? It depends on how foot muscles respond during both types of strides. In normal running, landing on the balls of your feet and pushing off on the toes allows muscles to coil up and then release elastic energy, propelling you forward. When running in reverse, the muscles are unable to stretch and release in the same way.
Current world records in the backwards 5k and marathon are substantially slower than the corresponding forwards records: 19:31 and 3:38:27 compared to 12:37 and 2:01:39, respectively. I assume that if the strongest distance runners trained for backwards running, they could improve on those backwards times, but they'd still be at a disadvantage, from an energy perspective.
That's an interesting 2011 article. One might wonder, if the athletes trained from an early age, would they perhaps develop a more suitable posture and musculature for backwards running? Maybe they could even develop the hard landing and soft takeoff required. I can imagine that double-jointed people would be at an advantage with this. 44wj5q2j6wo23s4mp6owjohh-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/…
– chasly from UK
1 hour ago
@chaslyfromUK It's an interesting thought. Yeah, I do wonder how early childhood training could affect things.
– HDE 226868♦
1 hour ago
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
One problem for your sportsmen and women is that human vision is forward facing.
This means that it would be very difficult for them to make sure that they are running in the correct lane going backwards, for longer races judge the curve if the track etc.
Although with training it might be possible to mitigate against this to some extent, I doubt they could ever be as fast as somone running in the same direction they can see.
Good point. Actually I wonder if lack of vision caused some of the slowness shown up in the study cited by HDE 226868. I suppose runners could have the option of wearing backwards facing mirrors although that might cause a bit of wind-resistance.
– chasly from UK
38 mins ago
@chaslyfromUK No wind resistance if wearing "sessalg elgoog" with a mini-camera on the opposing arms, it would become a "krap eht ni goj"
– KJO
15 mins ago
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
3
down vote
Backwards running will almost certainly never be as fast or efficient as regular running. A study back in 2011 showed that it should takes about 30% more energy to run backwards at a given speed. Why? It depends on how foot muscles respond during both types of strides. In normal running, landing on the balls of your feet and pushing off on the toes allows muscles to coil up and then release elastic energy, propelling you forward. When running in reverse, the muscles are unable to stretch and release in the same way.
Current world records in the backwards 5k and marathon are substantially slower than the corresponding forwards records: 19:31 and 3:38:27 compared to 12:37 and 2:01:39, respectively. I assume that if the strongest distance runners trained for backwards running, they could improve on those backwards times, but they'd still be at a disadvantage, from an energy perspective.
That's an interesting 2011 article. One might wonder, if the athletes trained from an early age, would they perhaps develop a more suitable posture and musculature for backwards running? Maybe they could even develop the hard landing and soft takeoff required. I can imagine that double-jointed people would be at an advantage with this. 44wj5q2j6wo23s4mp6owjohh-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/…
– chasly from UK
1 hour ago
@chaslyfromUK It's an interesting thought. Yeah, I do wonder how early childhood training could affect things.
– HDE 226868♦
1 hour ago
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
Backwards running will almost certainly never be as fast or efficient as regular running. A study back in 2011 showed that it should takes about 30% more energy to run backwards at a given speed. Why? It depends on how foot muscles respond during both types of strides. In normal running, landing on the balls of your feet and pushing off on the toes allows muscles to coil up and then release elastic energy, propelling you forward. When running in reverse, the muscles are unable to stretch and release in the same way.
Current world records in the backwards 5k and marathon are substantially slower than the corresponding forwards records: 19:31 and 3:38:27 compared to 12:37 and 2:01:39, respectively. I assume that if the strongest distance runners trained for backwards running, they could improve on those backwards times, but they'd still be at a disadvantage, from an energy perspective.
That's an interesting 2011 article. One might wonder, if the athletes trained from an early age, would they perhaps develop a more suitable posture and musculature for backwards running? Maybe they could even develop the hard landing and soft takeoff required. I can imagine that double-jointed people would be at an advantage with this. 44wj5q2j6wo23s4mp6owjohh-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/…
– chasly from UK
1 hour ago
@chaslyfromUK It's an interesting thought. Yeah, I do wonder how early childhood training could affect things.
– HDE 226868♦
1 hour ago
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
Backwards running will almost certainly never be as fast or efficient as regular running. A study back in 2011 showed that it should takes about 30% more energy to run backwards at a given speed. Why? It depends on how foot muscles respond during both types of strides. In normal running, landing on the balls of your feet and pushing off on the toes allows muscles to coil up and then release elastic energy, propelling you forward. When running in reverse, the muscles are unable to stretch and release in the same way.
Current world records in the backwards 5k and marathon are substantially slower than the corresponding forwards records: 19:31 and 3:38:27 compared to 12:37 and 2:01:39, respectively. I assume that if the strongest distance runners trained for backwards running, they could improve on those backwards times, but they'd still be at a disadvantage, from an energy perspective.
Backwards running will almost certainly never be as fast or efficient as regular running. A study back in 2011 showed that it should takes about 30% more energy to run backwards at a given speed. Why? It depends on how foot muscles respond during both types of strides. In normal running, landing on the balls of your feet and pushing off on the toes allows muscles to coil up and then release elastic energy, propelling you forward. When running in reverse, the muscles are unable to stretch and release in the same way.
Current world records in the backwards 5k and marathon are substantially slower than the corresponding forwards records: 19:31 and 3:38:27 compared to 12:37 and 2:01:39, respectively. I assume that if the strongest distance runners trained for backwards running, they could improve on those backwards times, but they'd still be at a disadvantage, from an energy perspective.
answered 2 hours ago
HDE 226868♦
63.1k12216412
63.1k12216412
That's an interesting 2011 article. One might wonder, if the athletes trained from an early age, would they perhaps develop a more suitable posture and musculature for backwards running? Maybe they could even develop the hard landing and soft takeoff required. I can imagine that double-jointed people would be at an advantage with this. 44wj5q2j6wo23s4mp6owjohh-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/…
– chasly from UK
1 hour ago
@chaslyfromUK It's an interesting thought. Yeah, I do wonder how early childhood training could affect things.
– HDE 226868♦
1 hour ago
add a comment |
That's an interesting 2011 article. One might wonder, if the athletes trained from an early age, would they perhaps develop a more suitable posture and musculature for backwards running? Maybe they could even develop the hard landing and soft takeoff required. I can imagine that double-jointed people would be at an advantage with this. 44wj5q2j6wo23s4mp6owjohh-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/…
– chasly from UK
1 hour ago
@chaslyfromUK It's an interesting thought. Yeah, I do wonder how early childhood training could affect things.
– HDE 226868♦
1 hour ago
That's an interesting 2011 article. One might wonder, if the athletes trained from an early age, would they perhaps develop a more suitable posture and musculature for backwards running? Maybe they could even develop the hard landing and soft takeoff required. I can imagine that double-jointed people would be at an advantage with this. 44wj5q2j6wo23s4mp6owjohh-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/…
– chasly from UK
1 hour ago
That's an interesting 2011 article. One might wonder, if the athletes trained from an early age, would they perhaps develop a more suitable posture and musculature for backwards running? Maybe they could even develop the hard landing and soft takeoff required. I can imagine that double-jointed people would be at an advantage with this. 44wj5q2j6wo23s4mp6owjohh-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/…
– chasly from UK
1 hour ago
@chaslyfromUK It's an interesting thought. Yeah, I do wonder how early childhood training could affect things.
– HDE 226868♦
1 hour ago
@chaslyfromUK It's an interesting thought. Yeah, I do wonder how early childhood training could affect things.
– HDE 226868♦
1 hour ago
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
One problem for your sportsmen and women is that human vision is forward facing.
This means that it would be very difficult for them to make sure that they are running in the correct lane going backwards, for longer races judge the curve if the track etc.
Although with training it might be possible to mitigate against this to some extent, I doubt they could ever be as fast as somone running in the same direction they can see.
Good point. Actually I wonder if lack of vision caused some of the slowness shown up in the study cited by HDE 226868. I suppose runners could have the option of wearing backwards facing mirrors although that might cause a bit of wind-resistance.
– chasly from UK
38 mins ago
@chaslyfromUK No wind resistance if wearing "sessalg elgoog" with a mini-camera on the opposing arms, it would become a "krap eht ni goj"
– KJO
15 mins ago
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
One problem for your sportsmen and women is that human vision is forward facing.
This means that it would be very difficult for them to make sure that they are running in the correct lane going backwards, for longer races judge the curve if the track etc.
Although with training it might be possible to mitigate against this to some extent, I doubt they could ever be as fast as somone running in the same direction they can see.
Good point. Actually I wonder if lack of vision caused some of the slowness shown up in the study cited by HDE 226868. I suppose runners could have the option of wearing backwards facing mirrors although that might cause a bit of wind-resistance.
– chasly from UK
38 mins ago
@chaslyfromUK No wind resistance if wearing "sessalg elgoog" with a mini-camera on the opposing arms, it would become a "krap eht ni goj"
– KJO
15 mins ago
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
One problem for your sportsmen and women is that human vision is forward facing.
This means that it would be very difficult for them to make sure that they are running in the correct lane going backwards, for longer races judge the curve if the track etc.
Although with training it might be possible to mitigate against this to some extent, I doubt they could ever be as fast as somone running in the same direction they can see.
One problem for your sportsmen and women is that human vision is forward facing.
This means that it would be very difficult for them to make sure that they are running in the correct lane going backwards, for longer races judge the curve if the track etc.
Although with training it might be possible to mitigate against this to some extent, I doubt they could ever be as fast as somone running in the same direction they can see.
answered 1 hour ago
Sarriesfan
1,9621513
1,9621513
Good point. Actually I wonder if lack of vision caused some of the slowness shown up in the study cited by HDE 226868. I suppose runners could have the option of wearing backwards facing mirrors although that might cause a bit of wind-resistance.
– chasly from UK
38 mins ago
@chaslyfromUK No wind resistance if wearing "sessalg elgoog" with a mini-camera on the opposing arms, it would become a "krap eht ni goj"
– KJO
15 mins ago
add a comment |
Good point. Actually I wonder if lack of vision caused some of the slowness shown up in the study cited by HDE 226868. I suppose runners could have the option of wearing backwards facing mirrors although that might cause a bit of wind-resistance.
– chasly from UK
38 mins ago
@chaslyfromUK No wind resistance if wearing "sessalg elgoog" with a mini-camera on the opposing arms, it would become a "krap eht ni goj"
– KJO
15 mins ago
Good point. Actually I wonder if lack of vision caused some of the slowness shown up in the study cited by HDE 226868. I suppose runners could have the option of wearing backwards facing mirrors although that might cause a bit of wind-resistance.
– chasly from UK
38 mins ago
Good point. Actually I wonder if lack of vision caused some of the slowness shown up in the study cited by HDE 226868. I suppose runners could have the option of wearing backwards facing mirrors although that might cause a bit of wind-resistance.
– chasly from UK
38 mins ago
@chaslyfromUK No wind resistance if wearing "sessalg elgoog" with a mini-camera on the opposing arms, it would become a "krap eht ni goj"
– KJO
15 mins ago
@chaslyfromUK No wind resistance if wearing "sessalg elgoog" with a mini-camera on the opposing arms, it would become a "krap eht ni goj"
– KJO
15 mins ago
add a comment |
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1
So the martial arts like taekwondo and judo are about who cuddles the other the most?
– Renan
2 hours ago
3
Judo is more about the most impressive way of helping each other up off the floor.
– chasly from UK
2 hours ago
1
@chaslyfromUK I think I've just wet myself. Thank you.
– Smeato
1 hour ago