tri-man 47
Footballguy
Ugh!
Hoping for the best man. Fingers crossed.Worse news. Actually thinks 75% chance it's hip impingement. Scheduling MRI to confirm, but if she's right, I'll need surgery. :-(
I'm on the opposite side of the fence. I don't mind the training grind (I actually really like it), but I'm growing to despise how much racing the marathon takes out of me. Between the taper and the recovery time, I'm losing a solid 2 months of time. Its a sacrifice I'm willing to endure for a bit to keep chasing Boston, but I'm getting tired of it.Good luck to Worrierking and Steve and anyone else racing this weekend!
________________________
Interestingly, I noticed that the Chicago Marathon is moving to a hybrid lottery/qualification entry system (with charity entries too). I knew it was just a matter of time since it had been filling up quicker and quicker. Qualifying for men is a flat 3:15 - no different age brackets. They allow qualifying times from 2012 so I'm in if I decide to run it again. There is also a "legacy" entry if you've run it at least 5 of the last 10 years. I'd be in that way too since I've run exactly 5. I'm still debating if I want to run it this year. Marathon training is so grueling.
Annoying, you still thinking about running?
It's amazing how easy it is to run on dry surfaces with the temp's in the 40's/50's after running in extreme cold and snow for a while, isn't it? It all depends on the thickness and quantity of the snow, but a mile in snow is more like 2-4 on regular surface. To relate to our southerners that don't know what snow is - it's like running on the thicker part of the beach (not the harder surfaces closer to the water). The 4 mile run I did in mostly 6-12" snow a couple of weeks ago was probably the most challenging run I have ever done outside of my one marathon attempt ten years ago.Ran three miles in about an inch of snow last night and I swear it felt like I had just run a half marathon. Legs feel super weird. I am sure it has something to do with not being able to push off at all, but jesus.
The thing is that FAI is a relatively new diagnosis. What the MRI will hopefully be able to tell me is whether or not the "slight impingement" that they saw on the x-ray is what's actually causing my symptoms.Sorry to hear that grue, hoping for the best. Hip impingement is pretty serious #### if I remember correctly. Coulda sworn it came up in this thread last year at some point.
I'm the other way - I don't like the training (too many long slow miles impeding other training, esp. speed work/track workouts), but I really enjoy the strategy of the race ...managing pace and HR over the course of many miles. But yeah, taper and recovery does consume a number of weeks.I'm on the opposite side of the fence. I don't mind the training grind (I actually really like it), but I'm growing to despise how much racing the marathon takes out of me. Between the taper and the recovery time, I'm losing a solid 2 months of time. Its a sacrifice I'm willing to endure for a bit to keep chasing Boston, but I'm getting tired of it.Good luck to Worrierking and Steve and anyone else racing this weekend!
________________________
Interestingly, I noticed that the Chicago Marathon is moving to a hybrid lottery/qualification entry system (with charity entries too). I knew it was just a matter of time since it had been filling up quicker and quicker. Qualifying for men is a flat 3:15 - no different age brackets. They allow qualifying times from 2012 so I'm in if I decide to run it again. There is also a "legacy" entry if you've run it at least 5 of the last 10 years. I'd be in that way too since I've run exactly 5. I'm still debating if I want to run it this year. Marathon training is so grueling.
Annoying, you still thinking about running?
Thanks Juxt! Also, for anyone up early on Sunday and wants to track/watch the race. I'll be racing with bib #21003.I'm the other way - I don't like the training (too many long slow miles impeding other training, esp. speed work/track workouts), but I really enjoy the strategy of the race ...managing pace and HR over the course of many miles. But yeah, taper and recovery does consume a number of weeks.I'm on the opposite side of the fence. I don't mind the training grind (I actually really like it), but I'm growing to despise how much racing the marathon takes out of me. Between the taper and the recovery time, I'm losing a solid 2 months of time. Its a sacrifice I'm willing to endure for a bit to keep chasing Boston, but I'm getting tired of it.Good luck to Worrierking and Steve and anyone else racing this weekend!
________________________
Interestingly, I noticed that the Chicago Marathon is moving to a hybrid lottery/qualification entry system (with charity entries too). I knew it was just a matter of time since it had been filling up quicker and quicker. Qualifying for men is a flat 3:15 - no different age brackets. They allow qualifying times from 2012 so I'm in if I decide to run it again. There is also a "legacy" entry if you've run it at least 5 of the last 10 years. I'd be in that way too since I've run exactly 5. I'm still debating if I want to run it this year. Marathon training is so grueling.
Annoying, you still thinking about running?
I'm probably somewhere between you two. I enjoy the training most of the time but really hate the taper period. I also like planning and strategizing during the race but always seem to hit an "uh-oh" moment somewhere between mile 18 and 24.I'm the other way - I don't like the training (too many long slow miles impeding other training, esp. speed work/track workouts), but I really enjoy the strategy of the race ...managing pace and HR over the course of many miles. But yeah, taper and recovery does consume a number of weeks.I'm on the opposite side of the fence. I don't mind the training grind (I actually really like it), but I'm growing to despise how much racing the marathon takes out of me. Between the taper and the recovery time, I'm losing a solid 2 months of time. Its a sacrifice I'm willing to endure for a bit to keep chasing Boston, but I'm getting tired of it.Good luck to Worrierking and Steve and anyone else racing this weekend!
________________________
Interestingly, I noticed that the Chicago Marathon is moving to a hybrid lottery/qualification entry system (with charity entries too). I knew it was just a matter of time since it had been filling up quicker and quicker. Qualifying for men is a flat 3:15 - no different age brackets. They allow qualifying times from 2012 so I'm in if I decide to run it again. There is also a "legacy" entry if you've run it at least 5 of the last 10 years. I'd be in that way too since I've run exactly 5. I'm still debating if I want to run it this year. Marathon training is so grueling.
Annoying, you still thinking about running?
That may have been where I picked it up. For some reason I thought there was a potential for cutting off blood to the area by pinching an artery/something from the impingement thus killing the bone area and causing the need for a hip replacement. Reading a little about hip impingement, doesn't seem to be the case. Not sure what I'm thinking about but good luck with it no matter how it comes out.Good luck Steve & Worrierking! For some reason I don't associate this time of year with much racing. Crush it!The thing is that FAI is a relatively new diagnosis. What the MRI will hopefully be able to tell me is whether or not the "slight impingement" that they saw on the x-ray is what's actually causing my symptoms.Like I said before, it would take an awful lot for me to have that surgery. Like a lot more pain than I'm having now or for someone to tell me conclusively that I'd need a premature hip replacement if it was left untreated. I'd be a lot more likely to just cut the mileage way back and find other forms of exercise that wouldn't stress the hip.Sorry to hear that grue, hoping for the best. Hip impingement is pretty serious #### if I remember correctly. Coulda sworn it came up in this thread last year at some point.
ETA: This is what ended pigskinliquors's running career. However, his impingement had caused significant cartilage damage and a relatively severe labral tear, and I believe his pain was much more significant than mine. The MRA will determine what damage mine has done, if any.![]()
I want to run one this year, just haven't decided which one. Havent really put much thought into it actually.Annyong, you still thinking about running?
Well, the Chicago Marathon is one of the best marathons in the world (if not THE best) so that's a good one for your first.I want to run one this year, just haven't decided which one. Havent really put much thought into it actually.Annyong, you still thinking about running?
...or much smaller, less costly, and super-easy logistics (including late sign-up) is the Prairie State Marathon around the same time!Well, the Chicago Marathon is one of the best marathons in the world (if not THE best) so that's a good one for your first.I want to run one this year, just haven't decided which one. Havent really put much thought into it actually.Annyong, you still thinking about running?
It's his first marathon! Save the frugality and easy logistics for 5Ks!...or much smaller, less costly, and super-easy logistics (including late sign-up) is the Prairie State Marathon around the same time!Well, the Chicago Marathon is one of the best marathons in the world (if not THE best) so that's a good one for your first.I want to run one this year, just haven't decided which one. Havent really put much thought into it actually.Annyong, you still thinking about running?
Do i just enter the lottery when that opens and cross my fingers?It's his first marathon! Save the frugality and easy logistics for 5Ks!...or much smaller, less costly, and super-easy logistics (including late sign-up) is the Prairie State Marathon around the same time!Well, the Chicago Marathon is one of the best marathons in the world (if not THE best) so that's a good one for your first.I want to run one this year, just haven't decided which one. Havent really put much thought into it actually.Annyong, you still thinking about running?![]()
I'm treating my march marathon as training, may marathon as an A race, June 70.3 as training.I'm the other way - I don't like the training (too many long slow miles impeding other training, esp. speed work/track workouts), but I really enjoy the strategy of the race ...managing pace and HR over the course of many miles. But yeah, taper and recovery does consume a number of weeks.I'm on the opposite side of the fence. I don't mind the training grind (I actually really like it), but I'm growing to despise how much racing the marathon takes out of me. Between the taper and the recovery time, I'm losing a solid 2 months of time. Its a sacrifice I'm willing to endure for a bit to keep chasing Boston, but I'm getting tired of it.Good luck to Worrierking and Steve and anyone else racing this weekend!
________________________
Interestingly, I noticed that the Chicago Marathon is moving to a hybrid lottery/qualification entry system (with charity entries too). I knew it was just a matter of time since it had been filling up quicker and quicker. Qualifying for men is a flat 3:15 - no different age brackets. They allow qualifying times from 2012 so I'm in if I decide to run it again. There is also a "legacy" entry if you've run it at least 5 of the last 10 years. I'd be in that way too since I've run exactly 5. I'm still debating if I want to run it this year. Marathon training is so grueling.
Annoying, you still thinking about running?
That's why I'm looking forward to my may Marathon. I'll walk to my office (1/4 mile away from the finish) afterwards and nap....or much smaller, less costly, and super-easy logistics (including late sign-up) is the Prairie State Marathon around the same time!Well, the Chicago Marathon is one of the best marathons in the world (if not THE best) so that's a good one for your first.I want to run one this year, just haven't decided which one. Havent really put much thought into it actually.Annyong, you still thinking about running?
The benefit of swimming the weeks after a marathon.I'm probably somewhere between you two. I enjoy the training most of the time but really hate the taper period. I also like planning and strategizing during the race but always seem to hit an "uh-oh" moment somewhere between mile 18 and 24.I will say though, the more of these you run the quicker you tend to recover. My first one knocked me out for over a month, and the 2nd one for about 2 weeks (although it was a month or so before I felt "normal" on a run), then up until my last one I have been able to bounce back and do workouts within a week or two of all the other ones. The one thing with the marathon is that if you head into the race with anything more than a minor injury it'll find your weak point in the race and break you into a million little pieces (and recovery time afterwards will usually be 3-5 times as long depending on how smart you were about it after things start to go badly).I'm the other way - I don't like the training (too many long slow miles impeding other training, esp. speed work/track workouts), but I really enjoy the strategy of the race ...managing pace and HR over the course of many miles. But yeah, taper and recovery does consume a number of weeks.I'm on the opposite side of the fence. I don't mind the training grind (I actually really like it), but I'm growing to despise how much racing the marathon takes out of me. Between the taper and the recovery time, I'm losing a solid 2 months of time. Its a sacrifice I'm willing to endure for a bit to keep chasing Boston, but I'm getting tired of it.Good luck to Worrierking and Steve and anyone else racing this weekend!
________________________
Interestingly, I noticed that the Chicago Marathon is moving to a hybrid lottery/qualification entry system (with charity entries too). I knew it was just a matter of time since it had been filling up quicker and quicker. Qualifying for men is a flat 3:15 - no different age brackets. They allow qualifying times from 2012 so I'm in if I decide to run it again. There is also a "legacy" entry if you've run it at least 5 of the last 10 years. I'd be in that way too since I've run exactly 5. I'm still debating if I want to run it this year. Marathon training is so grueling.
Annoying, you still thinking about running?
Yes, unless you want to look into the charity entries. They used to never have a lottery and it would take awhile before 45,000 signed up. I can't imagine the demand will be that large. Odds of getting in should be high.Do i just enter the lottery when that opens and cross my fingers?It's his first marathon! Save the frugality and easy logistics for 5Ks!...or much smaller, less costly, and super-easy logistics (including late sign-up) is the Prairie State Marathon around the same time!Well, the Chicago Marathon is one of the best marathons in the world (if not THE best) so that's a good one for your first.I want to run one this year, just haven't decided which one. Havent really put much thought into it actually.Annyong, you still thinking about running?![]()
A long break (couple of months?) after XC is not such a bad thing, especially at that age. Also, 60 days is plenty of time to get in shape. You probably want him doing mostly easy effort aerobic stuff to build a base for the upcoming season. By aerobic activity it should preferably be easy running but elliptical / bike / swimming works as well. You may also suggest that he does some faster strides/pickups at the end, probably something like 4-8x15-20s @ 800-mile race effort with full recovery in between, this is just to get his legs used to turnovers.Track guys, I need some advice. A combo of his GF breaking up with him (via text on Xmas, pure evil) and GTA V, has my son WAY behind where he was before last track season and he was no where near ready then. I've resorted to the parental no-no of bribery to kick start him and he has agreed. The agreement is to do something 4 days a week for the next two weeks, going to 5 days a week there after. The HUGE indoor invitational that kicks off the season is just over two months away on 3/21, so I need an intense 60 day plan of sorts for him. FWIW, he agrees he is behind and that he needs his ### kicked, so this is not me forcing him, he wants to be motivated. For the next two weeks, I'm thinking three running days and a core day, with one of the running days being shorter and with core after. He has, maybe, ran 6 times since XC and done core 10-12, so he needs to start slow IMO. Last year, his off season consisted more of sprints in the HS hallways. Based on XC, I think he may be best suited for the 800 vs the 400 this season and, I think he could be part of a very good (and young) 4X800 relay team. Outdoor conditions suck for distance running right now, so what types of things should he be doing? His coach is very successful, but also very disorganized. The girls track team already has the captains doing semi-scheduled workouts, but the boys have nothing yet.
Awesome, I have been begging him to join me in the pool, hearing it from someone else just might help. We are in Michigan and there are a ton of indoor meet opportunities, but he feels like he needs to be at his best. I've been explaining that its more about just having the chance to race. THANKS!!!A long break (couple of months?) after XC is not such a bad thing, especially at that age. Also, 60 days is plenty of time to get in shape. You probably want him doing mostly easy effort aerobic stuff to build a base for the upcoming season. By aerobic activity it should preferably be easy running but elliptical / bike / swimming works as well. You may also suggest that he does some faster strides/pickups at the end, probably something like 4-8x15-20s @ 800-mile race effort with full recovery in between, this is just to get his legs used to turnovers.Track guys, I need some advice. A combo of his GF breaking up with him (via text on Xmas, pure evil) and GTA V, has my son WAY behind where he was before last track season and he was no where near ready then. I've resorted to the parental no-no of bribery to kick start him and he has agreed. The agreement is to do something 4 days a week for the next two weeks, going to 5 days a week there after. The HUGE indoor invitational that kicks off the season is just over two months away on 3/21, so I need an intense 60 day plan of sorts for him. FWIW, he agrees he is behind and that he needs his ### kicked, so this is not me forcing him, he wants to be motivated. For the next two weeks, I'm thinking three running days and a core day, with one of the running days being shorter and with core after. He has, maybe, ran 6 times since XC and done core 10-12, so he needs to start slow IMO. Last year, his off season consisted more of sprints in the HS hallways. Based on XC, I think he may be best suited for the 800 vs the 400 this season and, I think he could be part of a very good (and young) 4X800 relay team. Outdoor conditions suck for distance running right now, so what types of things should he be doing? His coach is very successful, but also very disorganized. The girls track team already has the captains doing semi-scheduled workouts, but the boys have nothing yet.
You're in the Maryland area right? Look around on here (http://pvtc.org/) and there may be some all-comer meets on the weekends that you could suggest he do to see where he is fitness-wise? (Or just take him to a cleared outdoor track and time him).
I gotta say though, at that age the motivation mostly has to come from within. I have sat on my ### for more than my share of winter/summer breaks and while I regret it now, I also learned that you can get in shape pretty fast at that age. With that said, whatever you can get him to do now will help that much more as long as you don't have him doing too much speed in the next month or so.
So, is the goal to use your heart rate as the indicator of the pace you run?Chief, there are a lot of articles out there that will explain it better than I can, but I've been doing it the past couple months for a few reasons.
First, it keeps you disciplined. Instead of thinking you have to run a certain pace and pushing too hard on easy days, it gives you an objective measure to stay on track.
Injury prevention. I've ramped up my mileage over the past couple months with no injuries.
It makes sense. The yellow book and other articles are worth reading here, but assuming Dr. Mafetone is right on the science and how our bodies body burns fat and can learn to burn more fat instead off carbs, his program is logical.
It sucks at first. Running 9:30s when 7:30 feels natural was hard and frustrating. But I'm around or below 8:30 now on flat ground. Hills still kind of suck, walking when you don't feel you have to is frustrating. But I'm sticking with it.
Oops, sorry about that, I got you mixed up with the other guy also with a fast HS son.Awesome, I have been begging him to join me in the pool, hearing it from someone else just might help. We are in Michigan and there are a ton of indoor meet opportunities, but he feels like he needs to be at his best. I've been explaining that its more about just having the chance to race. THANKS!!!A long break (couple of months?) after XC is not such a bad thing, especially at that age. Also, 60 days is plenty of time to get in shape. You probably want him doing mostly easy effort aerobic stuff to build a base for the upcoming season. By aerobic activity it should preferably be easy running but elliptical / bike / swimming works as well. You may also suggest that he does some faster strides/pickups at the end, probably something like 4-8x15-20s @ 800-mile race effort with full recovery in between, this is just to get his legs used to turnovers.Track guys, I need some advice. A combo of his GF breaking up with him (via text on Xmas, pure evil) and GTA V, has my son WAY behind where he was before last track season and he was no where near ready then. I've resorted to the parental no-no of bribery to kick start him and he has agreed. The agreement is to do something 4 days a week for the next two weeks, going to 5 days a week there after. The HUGE indoor invitational that kicks off the season is just over two months away on 3/21, so I need an intense 60 day plan of sorts for him. FWIW, he agrees he is behind and that he needs his ### kicked, so this is not me forcing him, he wants to be motivated. For the next two weeks, I'm thinking three running days and a core day, with one of the running days being shorter and with core after. He has, maybe, ran 6 times since XC and done core 10-12, so he needs to start slow IMO. Last year, his off season consisted more of sprints in the HS hallways. Based on XC, I think he may be best suited for the 800 vs the 400 this season and, I think he could be part of a very good (and young) 4X800 relay team. Outdoor conditions suck for distance running right now, so what types of things should he be doing? His coach is very successful, but also very disorganized. The girls track team already has the captains doing semi-scheduled workouts, but the boys have nothing yet.
You're in the Maryland area right? Look around on here (http://pvtc.org/) and there may be some all-comer meets on the weekends that you could suggest he do to see where he is fitness-wise? (Or just take him to a cleared outdoor track and time him).
I gotta say though, at that age the motivation mostly has to come from within. I have sat on my ### for more than my share of winter/summer breaks and while I regret it now, I also learned that you can get in shape pretty fast at that age. With that said, whatever you can get him to do now will help that much more as long as you don't have him doing too much speed in the next month or so.
) him into running one and feed him a line about it just being a test to see where he is currently. Once he gets beat by people he doesn't feel he should listen to it'll most likely light a fire under him.Goal is the BPM. Pace is an indication of fitness, a gauge of how well MAF has helped and can be a test of when to adjust your training (though this seems a point of debate), but the pace can vary depending on conditions.So, is the goal to use your heart rate as the indicator of the pace you run?Chief, there are a lot of articles out there that will explain it better than I can, but I've been doing it the past couple months for a few reasons.
First, it keeps you disciplined. Instead of thinking you have to run a certain pace and pushing too hard on easy days, it gives you an objective measure to stay on track.
Injury prevention. I've ramped up my mileage over the past couple months with no injuries.
It makes sense. The yellow book and other articles are worth reading here, but assuming Dr. Mafetone is right on the science and how our bodies body burns fat and can learn to burn more fat instead off carbs, his program is logical.
It sucks at first. Running 9:30s when 7:30 feels natural was hard and frustrating. But I'm around or below 8:30 now on flat ground. Hills still kind of suck, walking when you don't feel you have to is frustrating. But I'm sticking with it.
Awesome, thanks. And thanks to everyone for their help. Much appreciated.Annyong - that 5/10 HM is a possibility, but I won't know for sure until early spring. I'll be in eastern Michigan the weekend after for a trail HM with 2Young and some other great guys.
FUBAR and 2Young - I've always agreed with the logic of 'race your way into shape.' So FUBAR, I get the idea of you using marathons as training for your events later in the year. Those races effectively become breakthrough workouts, and we should be doing a couple of those per week anyway. 2Young, so that's the same argument for Ry ...use some early races as part of the training. Something else he could do, given the bad winter conditions, is to do the 'ups' workout (high knee lifts) ...both the standing lift and the skipping step. I've got some old 2-lb ankle weights I've been using for those workouts. I've done some mornings with 300 reps (L+R=1 rep), and with those weights, I feel it. A variation I have added, based on a Runners World link someone posted, is to also rotate the knee out and around to the front, which opens up the hip. Heck, let him go really old school and do some jump rope on the back porch.
Chief - as gets posted here regularly, the idea is to run 90% of your runs slower, and 10% faster. Avoid that middle ground, since it doesn't really do anything specific. Target one or two runs per week for intense effort - intervals at the track, hill work, hard tempo, etc. Use the other runs for recovery, base building, and HR training (building aerobic capacity).
--
12 miles for me this a.m. on a chilly 15 degree day. Prince Myskin and all - Monday's the day! My final defense of the doctoral dissertation.
FUBAR, you're correct, what I said is not the MAF method. I would say the key distinction is whether the individual is in base building mode (where the MAF method of consistently slow, low-HR running is followed) or progressing on to race training. So for any of us, we need to be clear on where we stand in our training cycle. Some of the crowd is already in, or approaching, race season. I think it's fair to say that we should all consider blocking out 2-3 months of off-season time to build our aerobic base. Your suggestions to Chief were from the base-building perspective; I was thinking more of gearing up for a race ..so in effect we were commenting on different stages of training. Good that you pointed that out.Tri - your comments to chief are right, but don't follow the MAF method.
Want to highlight that section for emphasis. The moment this clicked for me was the moment my post-college running performances started to take off. It sounds unfair and counter-intuitive at first, but you really don't get what you point into it. Running harder won't necessarily make you faster in the long run if you don't balance your training correctly. If you go hard all the time your body won't be able to recover and it'll just lead to breakdown/injury. The key is to run hard at the right intensities every 3-4 days and make sure you recover sufficiently from them.Awesome, thanks. And thanks to everyone for their help. Much appreciated.Annyong - that 5/10 HM is a possibility, but I won't know for sure until early spring. I'll be in eastern Michigan the weekend after for a trail HM with 2Young and some other great guys.
FUBAR and 2Young - I've always agreed with the logic of 'race your way into shape.' So FUBAR, I get the idea of you using marathons as training for your events later in the year. Those races effectively become breakthrough workouts, and we should be doing a couple of those per week anyway. 2Young, so that's the same argument for Ry ...use some early races as part of the training. Something else he could do, given the bad winter conditions, is to do the 'ups' workout (high knee lifts) ...both the standing lift and the skipping step. I've got some old 2-lb ankle weights I've been using for those workouts. I've done some mornings with 300 reps (L+R=1 rep), and with those weights, I feel it. A variation I have added, based on a Runners World link someone posted, is to also rotate the knee out and around to the front, which opens up the hip. Heck, let him go really old school and do some jump rope on the back porch.
Chief - as gets posted here regularly, the idea is to run 90% of your runs slower, and 10% faster. Avoid that middle ground, since it doesn't really do anything specific. Target one or two runs per week for intense effort - intervals at the track, hill work, hard tempo, etc. Use the other runs for recovery, base building, and HR training (building aerobic capacity).
--
12 miles for me this a.m. on a chilly 15 degree day. Prince Myskin and all - Monday's the day! My final defense of the doctoral dissertation.
Here are some different types of tempo-type runs described in this book.To avoid the tedium of the treadmill I usually break the run into segments and adjust the speed every .10/.25/.5 mile. I find this distracting enough to make me not want to pour hand sanitizer down my peehole.
Anyways, on the way to the gym I remembered you guys telling me to make every run purposeful. So instead of just building a base and logging miles like I have been doing all month, I decided to try my first ever "tempo run". Tell me if I did this right
1 mile at 10 min pace
.5 mile at 7:30 min pace
.5 mile at 10 min pace
.5 mile at 7:30 min pace
.5 mile at 10 min pace
.25 mile at 7:30 min pace
.25 mile at 7 min pace
Stamina Workouts
Stamina workouts introduce steady, medium-paced running into your program. The goal is to develop your ability to run a steady pace for long periods of time. Specifically, you increase your lactate threshold pace which leads to faster race times. The challenge with each of the four types of Stamina workouts is to keep from running too fast. These are moderate efforts and running faster does little but shorten the amount of time that you are in the correct zone. It's much better with Stamina workouts to challenge yourself to go longer at a given pace than faster. I also find that its beneficial to do these workouts without a watch. Go by effort. Learn your body.
Steady-State Runs
Steady-state runs were once a staple in the training programs of U.S. distance runners but somehow fell out of favor. Runners now seem to have only two speeds, slow and fast - no in-between. But the steady-state run is one of the most beneficial types of workouts especially as you complete your base training and during the initial parts of your Stamina phase (see Lecture 5). The appropriate pace range for steady-state runs is between your 1:15:00 and 2:30:00 race pace. Your heart rate will likely be between 83 and 87% of maximum and the runs should last at least 25 minutes and can go as long as an hour and 15 minutes.
These are pretty tough efforts not because of the pace but because of the duration of running so be prepared to increase your concentration to stay on pace and to take a good recovery day afterwards in order to reap the full benefits. Begin with shorter steady-state runs of 25 minutes at 2:30:00 race pace and build to one hour runs with shorter (25- to 45-minute) steady-state runs at 1:15:00 pace.
Unlike the three Endurance workouts discussed above, steady-state runs are the first workouts that require a warm-up. For all the remaining workouts, you should begin the run with 10 to 20 minutes at an easy pace. Following this warm-up (which may also include stretching and faster "strides"), you can proceed into the continuous steady-state run.
Tempo Runs
Tempo runs are slightly more intense than steady-state runs and are designed to increase your stamina. As the name suggests, you really improve your running tempo or rhythm with these workouts. They last between 15 and 30 minutes and are run between your :40:00 (40 minute) and 1:15:00 race pace. Tempo runs are meant to be "comfortably hard" so don't push the pace. Your heart rate will likely be between 85 and 90% of max.
Like the steady-state run, tempo runs are continuous efforts but you must preface them with a thorough warm-up.
Tempo Intervals
Tempo Intervals are like fast tempo runs broken into two to four repeats with relatively short recovery jogs. The appropriate race paces for tempo intervals are 0:30:00 and 1:00:00 race pace and they should last between eight and fifteen minutes. Unlike the previous workouts, Tempo Intervals are the first workouts to allow for a recovery jog between hard efforts. In this case, you jog two to five minutes between each repeat then start the next one.
A tempo interval workout that I've had particular success with is two (or three) times two miles at 0:40:00 race pace effort with three minute recovery jogs between repeats. Following a thorough warm-up, these provide a great training stimulus to prepare you for an upcoming 5K or 10K race. The effort required, the pace judgement and the mental discomfort all help immensely when race time comes. Do this workout seven to 14 days before your next 10K.
Cruise Intervals
The Cruise Interval workout was popularized by the running coach, Jack Daniels. They, like the other Stamina workouts, are meant to increase your lactate threshold pace. Cruise Intervals are like shorter and slightly more intense tempo intervals. They last three to eight minutes and the pace is between 0:25:00 and 0:45:00 race pace. Like tempo intervals, they are followed by short recovery jogs (30 seconds to 2 minutes). You'll probably find that it's easy to run too fast on these. The tendency is to treat them like regular long intervals. However, keep it under control and work on a smooth, fast rhythm. Control in training is key to improvement.
90% of his runs slower but 1 to 2 faster runs a week? Wouldn't that mean he'd have to average 15 runs a week? You mean 90% of miles, right?Chief - as gets posted here regularly, the idea is to run 90% of your runs slower, and 10% faster. Avoid that middle ground, since it doesn't really do anything specific. Target one or two runs per week for intense effort - intervals at the track, hill work, hard tempo, etc. Use the other runs for recovery, base building, and HR training (building aerobic capacity).