Ninja Elephant
Doctor Elephant
- Feb 16, 2009
- 18,855
I’m in nowhere near the same league as our resident racing snakes, but I can pass on a few snippets from my coach.
-long distance (by which I mean even up to the sillier end) should always include speedwork. When I’m training for 100m events my plan always has at least one quality interval session in it (theory being if you can run faster, running slower is easier)
-endurance training builds your aerobic capability, meaning you can ‘hang on’ longer in the shorter stuff
-plan should always be balanced, it’s just that the balance shifts when you’re aiming for a particular event (as [MENTION=13055]Ninja Elephant[/MENTION] says)
In short, they’re not mutually exclusive, just adapt the schedule a bit to suit your goal race - bear in mind pretty much all the events we are talking about are classified as ‘long distance’ by athletes !
I think this is spot on, you need the speed work because it helps when you're running slower than that speed. The idea is that you run above race speed over a shorter distance, but I can't seem to do that - I struggle to run race speed in training more often than not.
I would say balance is THE key, and to do other things as well as running. Swimming, cycling, the rowing machine and cross trainer machines in the gym have all been key as well.
Thanks, I can relate to what you say (apart from the numbers obviously, as mine are far slower!). I feel like I'm covering a lot of distance without much purpose. My two aims for 2018 are to run a marathon and to go sub-20 over 5km. My training at the moment isn't tailored to either and sits roughly in between the two in terms of distance and speed, so I need to make changes like you did. What does a typical weekly programme look like for you now you are focused entirely on speed?
I've attached the training plans that Rob put together for me, feel free to pile in. You need to do longer distance for the endurance, but speed work to increase your threshold to run at pace. It's been a remarkable training year for me, beforehand I really was just going out and running a few miles here and there. I enjoy running, and I enjoy the steady timed runs as much if not more than the sprinting sessions but there's a lot to be said for the 6 x 90 seconds sessions because they really are tough even though the whole thing is done fairly quickly.