When endurance runners talk about “core,” they don’t really mean abs. They mean the deep stabilisers: transverse abdominis, obliques, erector spinae, hip stabilisers, and the glutes. These muscles keep posture upright, the pelvis stable, and the stride efficient — especially past the 90-minute mark of a long run when fatigue would otherwise wreck form.
A common mistake is assuming general strength work covers the core. It doesn’t.
Why general strength work isn’t enough
- Squats and deadlifts — excellent for glutes, quads, hamstrings, with some indirect core engagement.
- Pull-ups and push-ups — upper body plus some core tension, but not endurance-style stability.
- Kettlebell swings — strong posterior chain and hip drive, but not 360-degree core stability.
All three help. None of them directly train the anti-rotation, anti-extension, and pelvic-control roles the core plays during long-distance running. A runner with a 1:30 half-marathon engine but a weak core will lean forward, collapse through the trunk, and bleed time in the back half.
What runners actually need
A 15–20 minute session, 2–3 times per week, is plenty. The exercises target stability and endurance rather than peak strength.
- Plank variations. Front plank, side plank, plank with reach or leg lift. Teaches bracing under fatigue.
- Dead bugs. Slow, controlled, opposite arm and leg. Excellent for pelvic and lumbar control.
- Pallof press. Banded or cable. The gold-standard anti-rotation exercise.
- Single-leg glute bridges or hip thrusts. Glute strength under pelvic control.
- Bird dogs. Coordination plus spinal stability.
- Hanging leg raises or L-sits. More advanced. Deep core and grip together.
- Farmer’s and suitcase carries. Underrated. Carry a heavy weight in one hand and walk. Trains the obliques and trunk under load in a way that transfers directly to running.
How it shows up in races
A runner with strong core endurance:
- Stays tall in the last 5 km of a half marathon
- Keeps the pelvis level instead of dropping with each foot strike (less risk of IT band trouble)
- Wastes less energy bracing each stride
- Can hold marathon pace later into the race
A runner with weak core endurance:
- Leans forward as fatigue accumulates
- Loses 5–15 seconds per km in the back half through stride collapse
- Often picks up tightness in the lower back or hip flexors
Programming
If running fits 4 days a week, one option:
- Tue: 15-min core after the run
- Thu: 15-min core after the run
- Sat or Sun: 20-min core on a rest or recovery day
The work doesn’t need to be long. It just needs to be consistent.