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Improving Running Efficiency by Reducing Ground Contact Time

  • 4 minute read

Running efficiency is measured in milliseconds: the less time your foot stays glued to the asphalt, the less energy you waste and the greater your forward speed will be.

  • Ground contact time is the fraction of a second your foot touches the ground while running. The fastest and most efficient runners keep this value extremely low.
  • A prolonged footstrike acts like a brake: it disperses the impact energy, forcing your muscles to consume much more oxygen to push you forward again.
  • Your calves and Achilles tendon must function like stiff, reactive springs, capturing the force of your body weight to return it immediately.
  • Landing your foot too far in front of your pelvis (overstriding) blocks your body: to be fast, your landing must occur exactly under your center of gravity.
  • Simple exercises like jumping rope or small bounds in place teach your feet to “bounce” off the ground, improving natural reactivity.

Ground Contact Time: The Stopwatch Hidden in Every Step

Every time you take a step while running, there is a fraction of a second when your body must absorb the impact with the ground, stabilize itself, and push back into the air. This interval is called “ground contact time.”

In amateur runners, this time often hovers between 250 and 300 milliseconds. In elite athletes, it drops below 200 milliseconds. This difference, although seemingly tiny, when multiplied by the thousands of steps required to complete a workout, creates a massive gap in fatigue and performance. The less time you spend with your foot on the ground, the more time you spend flying forward. The biomechanical goal is exactly this: touching the asphalt only for the time strictly necessary to push off, without lingering.

Why Staying on the Ground Means Slowing Your Push-Off

To understand the physics behind this concept, imagine bouncing a fully inflated tennis ball on the ground, and immediately after, a heavy, deflated medicine ball. The medicine ball stays in contact with the ground longer: its structure cannot store (and reuse) the impact energy, which completely dissipates.

When you run and keep your foot on the ground for too long, your body acts like the deflated ball. The kinetic energy you had accumulated flying downwards is lost as heat and vibrations. Consequently, to take the next step, your muscles (quads, glutes, and calves) must generate an entirely new force, working from scratch. This extra effort burns much more fuel, drives up your heart rate, and makes your legs heavy in no time.

The Role of Tendons and Calves for an Elastic Bounce

The human body possesses an exceptional system to avoid this waste: tendon elasticity. The Achilles tendon and the structures of the sole of the foot are designed to function exactly like springs.

For a spring to return force, it must be stiff and snappy. In technical terms, this property is called “reactivity.” When the foot hits the ground, a well-trained tendon stretches for a very brief moment and snaps back in a fraction of a second, launching you forward completely for free. If, on the other hand, the ankle yields and the calf is weak, the tendon stretches too slowly, losing its elastic potential and forcing the muscle to bear all the fatigue of lifting.

Landing Under Your Body to Avoid the Braking Effect

The main cause of too long a contact time almost never lies in weak calves, but in a postural error: landing with your foot too far in front of your pelvis.

If during your stride you throw your foot far in front of you, landing with a straight knee and striking with your heel, you are literally driving a stake into the road. This dynamic creates a violent braking force. For your body to move forward, it will first have to pass over the planted foot, wasting a massive amount of milliseconds. The fix is simple: increase your step frequency (cadence) so that you take slightly shorter and faster steps. Your foot should land softly exactly under the line of your hips, or under your center of gravity, facilitating forward movement instead of blocking it.

Practical Exercises: Jumping Rope and Short Bounds

Reactivity isn’t improved just by running, but by training your feet to leave the ground as if the floor were red-hot. Adding these two exercises before your run or on rest days will transform the efficiency of your push-off:

  • Jumping rope: It is the simplest and most powerful tool. Jumping rope forces you to use exclusively your feet and calves to get off the ground, keeping your knees almost straight. Do 3 or 4 sets of one minute, focusing on making very small, fast, and quiet jumps.
  • Straight-leg bounds (Pogo Jumps): Stand with your hands on your hips. Without bending your knees, use only your ankle joint to do small bounces in place as quickly as possible. Keep your toes pointing up while in the air. This exercise teaches your Achilles tendon to store and release force in record time. Do 3 sets of 20 bounces.
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