Training Workout Just Got Better

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LONG RUN

Long runs, which should comprise 25 to 30 percent of your weekly volume, deplete your muscles’ store of carbohydrate (glycogen), which stimulates a greater storage of fuel and increases your endurance because carbohydrate is muscles’ preferred fuel. Long runs also improve your ability to transport and use oxygen in your muscles.

  • Good
    32 kilometres at an easy pace
    For beginners, the most important part of long runs is time on your feet.
  • Better
    16 kilometres at marathon pace
    For intermediate runners, adding some quality to the long run improves your endurance.
  • Great
    22 to 25 kilometres, with the first 18 to 19 kilometres at an easy pace and the last 4 to 6 kilometres at tempo pace (about 10K race pace or slightly faster)
    For advanced runners who have a history of long runs on their legs, making the long run of higher quality will help you break past plateaus. While a long, slow run plays a valuable role in a marathoner’s preparation, running at a faster pace trains your muscles to become more efficient with their selection of fuels, conserving glycogen.

TRAINING PROGRAM

Whether you want to run around the block or the Standard Chartered KL Marathon, how you train can have a dramatic effect on your performance. While running can make you fitter, training gives you the plan for success. It’s the difference between building a house by placing bricks here and there and having a blueprint laid out beforehand.

  • Good
    Going out the door every day to run
    For beginners, the most important part of running is to make it consistent.
  • Better
    Adding one quality workout per week
    Once you have developed a running habit and have a solid base, it’s time to add some quality to your running to increase your fitness.
  • Great
    Following a planned training program that highlights your strengths
    Rather than follow a generic plan, look for one that is skewed to your strengths. If your strength is endurance, focus more on mileage and tempo runs and less on interval training. Run longer intervals, trying to get faster with training, such as 1,000-metre repeats at 5K race pace, increasing speed to 3K race pace or decreasing the recovery as your training progresses. If your strength is speed, focus less on mileage and more on interval training. Run shorter intervals, trying to hold the pace for longer with training, such as 800-metre repeats at 3K race pace, increasing the distance to 1,000 metres or increasing the number of repeats as your training progresses. Work your strong points and train using the whole continuum of paces, from slow running speeds to very fast speeds to further enhance both your aerobic and anaerobic abilities.

 

If you want to get the most from your training, it’s time to make some changes. And if you train great, not only will you break past plateaus, you’ll get rewarded with new personal bests.

 


About the Author

Train right at run-fit.com/trainingprograms.