More runners putting it into reverse

  • By Daniel Yee / Associated Press
  • Monday, May 29, 2006 9:00pm
  • Life

ATLANTA- Timothy “Bud” Badyna has broken world records. He ran a marathon in under four hours. He finished a 10K race in 45 minutes.

Wait a minute, you say, that’s not so fast.

Right. But Badyna set those records running backward.

Badyna, dubbed “Backwards Bud” by fellow runners, holds the Guinness World Record for fastest backward run in a 200-meter race (32.78 seconds), set in 2001. In the early 1990s, he held the record for backward marathon (3 hours, 53 minutes) and 10K (45 minutes, 37 seconds).

Those records have since been broken. So the 39-year-old hospital nurse from St. Simon’s Island isn’t the only one who turns his back on traditional running. About 500 people in the United States – more in Europe – walk or run backward. Experts say it burns a fifth more calories than traditional jogging.

“Your balance increases” said Badyna (pronounced ba-deena). “Your hearing increases. Your peripheral vision increases.

“The downside is being blindsided. You don’t have any eyes behind you, but your senses pick up. As long as you go someplace safe – a track, a familiar road, you’ll cut down the chances of any unforseen obstacles coming your way.”

Backward walking and running dates to the 1970s, when forward-looking runners practiced it while injured. Doctors later recommended it as part of physical therapy, and it’s often used by baseball pitchers and track runners in preliminary warm-ups.

Also called retro-running, it’s been popular for years in Europe where races vary from sprints to the 26.2-mile marathon.

“It’s a reasonable and a good way to incorporate another means of exercise to lessen the stress on any given part of the body,” said Barry Bates, a professor emeritus of biomechanics at the University of Oregon.

It also helps people recover from knee-joint surgery and injuries, including to the ankle and the groin, he said.

And it strengthens the heart, lungs, muscles and joints, said Gary Gray, a physical therapist in Adrian, Mich., who has been recommending backward exercise to his patients for 30 years.

“It’s good for the hips, good for the legs, good for the trunk,” Gray said. “Putting it in reverse for a while is a pretty good deal.”

The drawback, of course, is a lack of hindsight. Bates and others recommend that newcomers to backward walking or running do it gradually on a track to avoid potholes, signs, cars and other hazards.

Bill Reitemeyer of Brick, N.J., said he had trouble in his first backward race in 1993.

“I did step directly into a hole,” he said.

Four years later, he won a race when two of his closest competitors tripped and fell over a bump in the road.

There is an advantage to running backward when it comes to competitions: “When you get the lead,” Reitemeyer said, “you can see everyone, you can pace yourself better.”

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