We’ve covered the why. Now let’s talk about the how.
If you’re thinking, “How the hell do I fit all this into my week?” — you’re not alone. Most runners already juggle a busy schedule. But this doesn’t need to be complicated. The key is a smart weekly rhythm that blends running, strength work, mobility, and recovery in a way your hamstrings will actually thank you for.
Here’s a sample weekly flow that pulls it all together. Swap days as needed — the real win is touching each of these elements at least once a week.
Monday – Rest or Active Recovery
Focus: Reset and release.
If your weekend had a long run or tough workout, let Monday breathe. This is your reset button.
Skip the run. Instead, foam roll your hamstrings and glutes. Hit a 20-minute easy yoga flow (think downward dog, pigeon pose, light folds). If you’re feeling up to it, sprinkle in some core: planks, glute bridges — stuff that wakes up the system without taxing it.
This is also a great day to chill your nervous system. Try deep breathing, legs up the wall, or a short guided meditation. Trust me, calming the mind is one of the best ways to loosen tight hamstrings.
Tuesday – Easy Run + Strength Training
Focus: Easy miles + hamstring and glute power.
Start with a quick dynamic warm-up: leg swings, hip circles — get things moving. Then go for a relaxed 3–5 mile jog. No racing today. Just smooth, conversational effort.
Once you’re warm, hit the strength:
- Nordic curls or hamstring slides (2–3 sets)
- Glute bridges (3×10 — single-leg if you’re feeling strong)
- Single-leg RDLs (3×8 per leg, light weights or bodyweight)
- Side planks (3×30 seconds)
End with static stretches: hamstrings, hip flexors, quads. Nothing fancy — just solid basics.
You’re not trying to max out here. You’re telling your hamstrings, “We’re building you up — slowly and smart.”
Wednesday – Cross-Train or Short Recovery Run + Mobility
Focus: Move without pounding + keep nerves sliding.
If your hammies feel cranky, skip the run and hop on a bike, hit the pool, or do some easy elliptical. Low impact is the name of the game. If you’re feeling decent, a super slow 2–3 mile jog works too.
Follow it up with mobility:
- Nerve flossing (sciatic glides, 2 sets of 15 per leg)
- Foam roll the legs — especially hamstrings, calves, glutes, and IT band
- Use a massage gun if you’ve got one
- Finish with light stretching or 5 minutes of “legs up the wall” breathing to unwind
Midweek = maintenance mode. This keeps everything moving without wearing things down.
Thursday – Quality Run (Intervals/Hills) + Extended Stretching
Focus: Go hard — but warm up like a pro and cool down like you care.
Today’s the day to test your legs. Whether it’s intervals, tempo, or hills, don’t just jump into it.
Start with a solid warm-up: leg swings, walking lunges with a twist, skips — whatever gets blood moving and muscles primed.
During your workout, stay quick with your stride and let the glutes do their thing. Don’t overstride — that’s what wrecks the hamstrings.
After your run:
- Jog for 5 minutes to cool down
- Stretch deep: strap hamstring stretches (3 x 20s), quad pulls, figure-4s, calf stretches
- Add contrast therapy if needed — a quick ice pack on the hamstrings and a hot shower can do wonders
- Rehydrate and grab some protein right away
This day pushes your hamstrings — but if you’ve done the work, they’ll show up for you.
Friday – Strength (Posterior Chain) + Easy Cross-Train
Focus: Build strength and balance things out.
This is your second strength day — the unsung hero of hamstring health. Keep cardio light: maybe a walk or a chill ride, or skip it entirely.
Go after your glutes and hamstrings:
- Nordic curls or sliders (alternate from Tuesday)
- Step-ups or single-leg squats
- Clamshells with bands (2×15)
- Hip thrusts (2×10)
- Core: dead bug or bird-dog (3×10)
- Bonus: hip mobility drills (leg swings, open/close the gate)
End with foam rolling and some light stretches. Maybe slap a heating pad on your hamstrings at night while watching TV — or do a slow flow yoga session to wind down.
Saturday – Long or Moderate Run
Focus: Endurance without sloppy form.
For many of us, Saturday = long run day. Start slow. Do some dynamic stretches or ease into the first mile gently.
Stay aware of your form — upright torso, strong core, glutes firing (especially on hills). Don’t let fatigue pull you into lazy running late in the run — that’s when hamstrings take the hit.
Afterward, walk it out a bit, stretch lightly, take an Epsom salt bath or hot/cold shower, and eat — carbs + protein help with stiffness later.
If your hammies always flare post-long-run, keep a cold pack handy for that upper hamstring area. Nerve flossing later in the evening can also help calm things down. Even 5 minutes while watching Netflix makes a difference.
Sunday – Flexibility + Optional Active Recovery
Focus: Reset the system. Ease into next week.
Rest if you’re smoked. But if you’re feeling okay, go for an easy activity: swim, walk, hike, chill bike ride. The key is to keep it light and easy.
Then spend 15–20 minutes on the floor with a foam roller and some stretches. Yoga for runners (especially hamstrings and hips) is great here. Also hit your breathing exercises — those stress-busting vagus nerve drills.
Think of Sunday as your tune-up day. Loosen up, recover fully, and set yourself up for a stronger week ahead.
Final Notes from Coach Dack:
This plan covers the bases.
- Strength? Twice a week.
- Stretching? Before and
- Recovery? Built right in.
- Nerve work? Yep.
- Easy vs hard? Balanced.
Remember the 80/20 rule:
Keep 80% of your runs easy. Go hard 20% of the time — and only when you’re ready. That’s how you stay strong, not sore.
Most importantly: listen to your body.
If your hamstrings ever feel more than “tight” — like sharp, pulling pain? Back off. Rest. This plan isn’t law. It’s a flexible guide.
One of my runners told me that by week 4 of a similar routine, he forgot what tight hamstrings even felt like. But the moment he skipped foam rolling for a few days? Boom — tightness crept back in. Consistency is everything.
Your hamstrings don’t need perfection.
They need structure. They need daily respect.
And if you give them that? They’ll return the favor — mile after mile.