Wellness by Michael Tomasini

Michael Tomasini running during business travel, representing practical running structure and strength for busy professionals.

Running Is Not Just Cardio

I have landed in cities after long travel days, slept imperfectly, and still gone for a quiet run before breakfast because my running shoes are almost always in my bag. Those runs rarely feel heroic. But over time, they taught me something: good running is not just cardio. It is also a strength question.

Not bodybuilding strength. Not gym-selfie strength. Quiet strength — the kind that helps your body keep moving well when life is busy, sleep was imperfect, the airport day ran long, and you still decide to lace up anyway.

I am a lucky guy. I have a good life. Work I enjoy. A family I care deeply about. Travel is part of the package. Running quietly became one of the ways I protect all of that.

For me, the question shifted. It stopped being “How do I become the fastest runner possible?” and became “How do I keep running well inside a full life?”

That changed how I think about training.


Running Is Controlled Falling

Every running step is more demanding than it looks. Your body needs to produce force, absorb impact, stabilize on a single leg, and repeat that thousands of times without quietly breaking down. That is partly cardio. But it is also structure.

When people think about runner strength, they often imagine endless squats or random gym circuits. I think about something simpler: what muscles help me stay efficient, stable, and durable?

Here is the framework I keep coming back to.


The Five Systems That Matter

01 — Engine Room
Glutes
Drive propulsion and stabilize the pelvis during single-leg loading. Weak or inhibited glutes often show up as inefficiency or gradual form breakdown — not acute pain. Strong glutes mean smoother running, not necessarily faster.
Exercises I use:
Split squats · Bulgarian split squats · Step-ups · Single-leg deadlifts
02 — Unsung Hero
Calves & Soleus
Your calves absorb force and return energy with every stride — thousands of repetitions per run. The soleus, the deeper calf, is especially overlooked. A strong calf is generally a resilient calf, particularly for professionals running in hotel gyms and on variable surfaces.
Exercises I use:
Straight-leg calf raises · Bent-knee raises · Jump rope
03 — Brake & Accelerator
Hamstrings & Quads
The quads absorb impact and support knee control on descents and hard landings. The hamstrings contribute to propulsion and help decelerate the leg. I think less in terms of isolation and more in terms of balance — neglect in one area tends to surface later as fatigue or discomfort.
Exercises I use:
Romanian deadlifts · Leg press · Nordic curls · Step-downs
04 — Forgotten Movers
Hip Flexors
Hip flexors drive knee lift and stride rhythm. They are rarely discussed until they complain. Long sitting days, flights, and back-to-back meetings quietly tighten this system. I notice this most clearly after heavy travel weeks. Movement restores a lot.
Exercises I use:
Hip flexor stretches · High-knee marching · Controlled step patterns
05 — Structural Foundation
Core Stability
Not six-pack aesthetics. Functional stability. The relevant question is whether your torso can stay controlled when fatigue arrives late in a run. A useful running core looks boring from the outside. The goal is not looking athletic. The goal is staying athletic.
Exercises I use:
Planks · Farmer carries · Pallof press · Dead bugs

The Reference Behind the Framework

This is not just personal preference. There is a growing body of evidence suggesting that strength work — particularly heavy resistance training, plyometric training, single-leg loading, hip stability, and controlled power production — can improve running economy and help runners stay more durable over time.

For me, the value is less about chasing marginal gains and more about protecting consistency.

What I noticed in my own running aligns with that general direction. The details of perfect programming are still debated. But the broad idea feels simple: stronger, more stable runners tend to stay more consistent — especially when real life keeps moving.

Research note: A 2024 systematic review and network meta-analysis reported that high-load strength training, plyometric training, and combined strength methods may improve running economy in middle- and long-distance runners.
View the PubMed abstract.

The biggest shift did not come from obsessing over any single muscle. It came from respecting the idea that running is a whole-body skill.

— Michael Tomasini, WbMT


What This Looks Like in Practice

Most wellness advice accidentally assumes you have unlimited time. Most busy professionals know better.

The best training system is the one you can actually repeat. Not perfect programming. Not optimal periodization. Repeatable, consistent effort inside a full schedule.

Priority What I focus on Why it matters for real-life runners
Glutes Single-leg loading, hip extension Foundation of propulsion and pelvic stability across thousands of strides
Calves Straight + bent-knee raises Most undertrained relative to workload; resilience and energy return
Hamstrings Hip-hinge patterns, eccentric loading Deceleration and propulsion balance; often overlooked in runners
Hip Flexors Mobility + active range work Sitting and travel compress this system; restoring it restores stride
Kern Anti-rotation, carries, planks Late-run posture and efficient force transfer — not aesthetics
The WbMT Minimum Effective Dose

What this actually looks like in a busy week

  • A run at whatever length the schedule allows — something beats nothing
  • 20–30 minutes of targeted strength: single-leg work, calf raises, core
  • Simple hip flexor mobility after sitting-heavy days or flights
  • Good enough consistency over perfect programming
  • Show up again tomorrow — not next Monday

The Honest Summary

If you run regularly and want to keep running well — not just now, but five or ten years from now — the cardio side is only part of the equation. The structural side deserves more attention than most runners give it.

Strong enough. Mobile enough. Stable enough. Repeatable enough.

For me, the deeper goal is simple: I am not trying to optimise a broken life. I am trying to protect a good one. Running is part of that.

That is the WbMT idea applied to running. Not heroic. Not complex. Just built to last.

Vorbereiten. Stabilisieren. Wiederholen.

Running is one part of my system. Travel, appetite, energy, sleep, and consistency all interact. For me, UniMate and Balance became practical anchors that reduce friction on busy weeks — especially when travel makes good decisions harder.

No miracle claims. No perfect routine. Just structure I can repeat.

Explore My Feel Great Routine

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