

All Good Hurdlers Fall
Introduction
The one thing that all beginning hurdlers are most afraid of is falling. The
one thing that will happen at least once in the career of all hurdlers is they
will fall. Does that mean that hitting hurdles is a bad thing, to be avoided
at all costs? Yes. And no. I’ve never been a purist; well, I am a purist
in the sense that I believe in the principles of hard work and dedication. But
I’ve never been a purist in the sense of believing that a “clean”
race is somehow inherently more worthy of my admiration and approval than a
race in which a hurdler hits a lot of hurdles. You can hit a lot of hurdles
and still run an excellent race. Too much emphasis on not hitting hurdles can
lead to a passive style of hurdling, featuring an overly-high clearance of the
barriers, and slower times. But obviously, on the flip side, an overly aggressive
style can lead to hurdles flying in the air and hurdlers falling to the ground.
But to think you can be a hurdler and never fall is naïve. It’s no
different than being a basketball player and hoping you will never get your
shot blocked, or being a cornerback in football and thinking you’re never
going to get beat deep. It’s going to happen. The question is not whether
or not it is going to happen, but how are you going to deal with it when it
does.
The Good Ones Get Back Up
A good way to tell whether or not someone who runs the hurdles is truly a hurdler
is how he or she responds upon falling. I fell at the second hurdle of the first
intermediate race I ever ran. It was back in the days of cinder tracks, so I
had all kinds of itty-bitty stones crawling in my arms and legs. In spite of
my embarrassment, I got back up and finished the race, coming across the finish
line solidly in last place. I expected my coach to be angry with me, or at least
disappointed in me, but instead he said something that has stuck with me to
this day. “All hurdlers fall,” he said, “the good ones get
back up.” He then sent me to the training room to get some treatment for
my cuts.
All Good Hurdlers Fall
To take what my coach said to me one step further, all good hurdlers fall, because
all the bad ones stopped hurdling once they fell. I’m sure that watching
two of the best hurdlers in the world (Perdita Felicien and Allen Johnson) fall
in the Olympics Games in Athens put a shiver of fear through the hearts of hurdlers
everywhere, but it really shouldn’t. The lesson we learn from their mishaps
is one that sprinters and distance runners will never have to learn –
when there are barriers in your way and you’re running full speed at them,
you might hit one, and you might fall. No matter one’s level of experience
or ability, the potential for disaster is always there. Through practice and
mental preparation, it can be minimized, but it can never be taken completely
out of the equation. That’s what makes hurdling so thrilling, but it’s
also what makes hurdling so hazardous. Sure, it would be easier to sprint without
the trouble of negotiating barriers along the way. That’s why not everybody
runs the hurdles. Another lesson we learn from the falls of AJ and Felicien
is that there are ways to hit hurdles that are quite treacherous, but there
are also ways to hit hurdles that not only are not so bad, but are indeed much
better alternatives to sailing above hurdles.
The Allen Johnson Factor
Allen Johnson has been one to hit many hurdles in a race throughout the course
of his career. I remember one race – I think it was either the national
championships or the world championships in 2001, when he hit nine of the ten
hurdles and still ran a sub-13.0. Amazing? Impossible? Not really. One of the
things that has made Johnson great is that he is a master of knowing how to
hit hurdles without allowing it to slow him down. In that race, he brushed the
majority of the hurdles with his hamstring, sliding over them smoothly, causing
a slight rustle, but not knocking them down. He hit maybe two with his lead
leg foot, but only one of them did he hit really hard. On the two that he hit
with his lead leg foot, it was the edge of the heel of the foot that took on
the brunt of the impact, so he was able to drive through the hurdle and maintain
his speed. Optimally, all hurdlers want to clear the hurdles as low as possible
without actually touching them. So, there’s a risk factor involved. In
getting as low as possible, you run a greater risk of hitting them. That’s
the chance a hurdler takes; indeed, that’s the chance a hurdler must take.
AJ has done it with mastery throughout his entire career, but he caught a little
bit too much of that ninth hurdle in the quarter-finals of the 2004 Olympic
Games.
The Roger Kingdom Factor
There is no Roger Kingdom factor. Kingdom hit hurdles so hard that they would
bounce off the track and fly into the infield, but he would just keep on running
without barely turning his shoulders. To use Kingdom as a model would be foolhardy
unless you’re someone as big and as strong and as fast and as fearless
as he was. That list of requirements would leave out everybody. The important
work that Kingdom did, though, was show us all that it’s quite possible
to hit a lot of hurdles yet still run fast times. He made us all – coaches
and athletes alike – re-evaluate our criteria for what constitutes a quality
hurdle race, and what constitutes a quality hurdler. There’s a reason
why the equipment companies now put weights on the bottoms of hurdles –
because it’s understood that, otherwise, there would be a whole track
full of overturned hurdles lying on the ground at the conclusion of a race.
I know that when I, as a coach, have a male hurdler who feels frustrated because
he’s hitting too many hurdles in races, I will show him a tape of an old
Roger Kingdom race just to emphasize the point that hitting hurdles isn’t
the end of the world. Stay aggressive, I say, but work on your technical flaws,
and you’ll eventually stop hitting hurdles. And that’s what always
ends up happening.
“Good” Ways to
Hit Hurdles
Ideally, obviously, there are no “good” ways to hit hurdles, because
hitting hurdles slows you down. However, there are ways to hit hurdles that
are less damaging than others, that cause a minimal loss of balance, rhythm,
and speed. Hitting hurdles in these ways is definitely better than sailing over
hurdles, which causes an even greater loss of speed and rhythm. “Good”
ways to hit hurdles would include the following:
1. With the underside of the lead-leg hamstring on the way down. If the hamstring
really grabs the hurdle, then you’re in trouble; but if the hamstring
just kind of slides along the top of the crossbar, that means you are wasting
no time in the air, and that you will get the lead leg back on the ground very
quickly.
2. With the tip of the lead-leg heel. If you have a good, low dive into the
hurdle, if your energy is moving forward with good velocity, then hitting the
hurdle with the tip of the lead-leg heel won’t bother you much at all.
You’ll be able to run through the hurdle without hardly feeling any disruption
in your rhythm.
“Bad” Ways to
Hit Hurdles
Hitting hurdles in the following ways will cause significant loss of speed,
balance, and rhythm, and could lead to crashing:
1. With the entire heel of the lead-leg. Hitting hurdles here will throw you
off-balance if it catches you by surprise. The best thing to do if this happens
is try to stay low and drive the crossbar all the way to the ground so that
you can keep yourself running in a straight line. If you do this over too many
hurdles, you’ll get disqualified, but if you have to do it once in order
to be able to keep on going to the next hurdle, then do so.
2. With the ball of the lead-leg foot. Hitting hurdles here will cause the same
problem as hitting them with the heel. So, the way to deal with it would also
be the same. There’s a greater danger, too, of getting top-heavy on the
way down and falling forward. That’s where the trail leg comes in. Try
as best you can to get the knee of the trail leg moving upward so that your
next step will be more than just a stumble. Hopefully, you’ll be able
to maintain your stride pattern between the hurdles and get back into the race.
3. With any part of the trail leg. Whether it’s the knee, the ankle, the
shin, or the foot, hitting hurdles with your trail leg will throw you off-balance.
I’ve known some hurdlers, including myself, who hit so many hurdles in
the same spot on their trail-leg knee that they’ve developed a numb spot
on the knee where there is a permanent bruise. When you hit the hurdle with
the trail-leg knee while driving the knee upward into the chest, it will hurt,
and your hips will be knocked off-line to a certain degree, depending on how
hard you hit it, but you’ll generally be able to keep sprinting forward.
The good thing about hitting hurdles with the trail leg is that, except in rare
cases, you won’t fall, because your upper body weight and your center
of gravity has already gone past the hurdle. Disaster can strike, however, if
you hit the hurdle with the foot of the trail leg, with the toe of the foot
pointing downward, even slightly. That’s why it’s important, when
doing trail leg drills, to make sure you get in the habit of flexing the trail-leg
ankle so that the foot clears parallel to the crossbar.
When and Why Falls Occur
1. Many falls occur over the first hurdle. It seems to me that this problem
is most common among elite athletes in major competitions, who are driving furiously
to the first hurdle to gain an advantage, and forget that they have to fit in
their eight steps. This is where Felicien fell, as she got way too close to
the first hurdle and smashed it with her lead foot. I remember also in the 1996
Olympic Trials, in the men’s 110m Hurdle finals, two athletes –
Jack Pierce and Larry Harrington – both fell at the first hurdle. Pierce,
who had burned a 12.94 in the semis, was a heavy favorite to make the team.
Harrington also had been running fast in the prelims, and had a good chance
of finishing in the top three. Harrington toppled the first hurdle with his
lead foot and fell hard to the ground, then sat there and wept openly as track
officials tried to make sure he hadn't injured himself too badly. Pierce, though
he smacked the first hurdle real good, was able to stay on his feet, but wasn't
able to regain his balance and timing well enough to clear the second hurdle.
He reached out and grabbed the crossbar with both hands to avoid falling, then
stood there with a distant, forlorn look on his face as he watched the rest
of the hurdlers finish the race. Felicien, as we all know, crashed so hard that
she stumbled into the next lane, bumping hard into the Russian hurdler beside
her, effectively knocking her out of the race.
2. I think that the majority of falls take place late in the race, somewhere
in the range of hurdles 7 to 10. The most obvious reason that so many falls
take place in this stage of the race is because of late-race mental fatigue,
even more so than physical fatigue. Yes, it is the physical fatigue that causes
the mental fatigue, but it is the mental fatigue that causes the mistake. Because
the 110 and 100m hurdles is such a short race in comparison to other track events,
we often underestimate just how much fatigue becomes a factor in the race’s
latter stages. To concentrate and focus on executing precision-perfect technique
over ten barriers without having even an instant to rest or think requires tremendous
physical and mental stamina. That’s why, at all levels, breakdowns in
technique often occur toward the end, sometimes leading to falls and crashes.
3. Besides fatigue, another reason that falls occur in the late stages of a
race is because the hurdler is more focused either on reaching the finish line,
or on catching up to an opponent, than on clearing the hurdle. One of the most
famous falls of this kind was that of Gail Devers in the 1992 Olympic finals
in Barcelona, when she tripped over the last hurdle, with the finish line and
a gold medal only a few meters away. I think we’ve all seen enough replays
of that one, wouldn’t you say? It could be argued that Johnson’s
fall in the Athens Olympics was the result of trying to catch up to the competition,
as he wasn’t having one of his better races up to that point, and he was
anxious to ensure that he would make it to the next round. We all preach the
mantra of “run your own race, in your own lane” and “clear
the hurdle in front of you,” but, in the heat of the battle, it truly
is a very difficult thing to do.
4. Another reason that late-race falls occur is because of what I call the accumulation
of blows theory. In boxing, sometimes, a knockout occurs not because of one
big punch, but because of a steady dosage of solid shots distributed round after
round, until the receiver of the punishment finally goes down after being hit
with a relatively unimpressive punch. Similarly, in the hurdles, hitting a lot
of hurdles early in the race can knock you off your rhythm a little more each
time, until finally, by hurdle eight or nine, you’re smacking them so
hard that you can no longer keep your balance.
The Emotional Aspect
Falling during a race, or even in practice, can be a devastating experience
for a hurdler. The humiliation of sitting there on the track as the race goes
on without you is a memory that can haunt you for the rest of your hurdling
life. It can renew a fear of falling, a fear of hitting hurdles, that you may
have thought you had conquered long ago. It can make you doubt that you’re
really cut out to be a hurdler, and lead you to entertain thoughts of switching
to other, safer events. The emotional aspect of falling cannot be ignored or
dismissed as trivial. The truth is, falling isn’t always a matter of technique
or getting in enough reps during practice. Sometimes it’s simply a matter
of confidence. I remember how, after my senior year of high school, I ran summer
track in an attempt to improve my pr before entering college. I had a different
coach, with whom I was unfamiliar, and who didn’t know or care much about
the hurdles. Suddenly I was running against stiff competition every weekend,
I was no longer the man to beat, and I didn’t know how to adjust. Every
race, I was smacking hurdles right and left, running ugly, sloppy races. Instead
of improving my pr, I was running mediocre times. If I had been running times
that equaled my pr, I would have been winning a lot of these races. Why was
I hitting so many hurdles? Why couldn’t I find my rhythm? Because I simply
didn’t believe in myself. At every meet, while I was warming up with the
other hurdlers, I had a lot of negative chatter going on in my head. I was trying
to convince myself that I really belonged there, but, in my heart, I didn’t
feel that I did. So the way I ran reflected the way I felt. And I didn’t
have a coach who believed in me, who knew what I was capable of doing, whereas
my high school coach had always known just the right thing to say to give me
that competitive edge. I think a lot of times when hurdlers hit multiple hurdles
in races, lack of confidence, sometimes coupled with a lack of a close relationship
with a coach, lies at the root of the problem. In the end, it’s like my
high school coach said, “All hurdlers fall; the good ones get back up.”
All good hurdlers fall.
© 2004 Steve McGill