August 4, 2018

Improve your road racing with reading.

I took my Daughter to a book fair a few weeks ago, not expecting much,  but imagine my surprise when I found a section on running, you little beauty, old library books at give away prices. Ten minutes later I exited the fair with a whole new library of potential posts for my blog. The first book I’ve devoured, or am in the middle of devouring, is “Road Racing for Serious Runners” by Pete Pfitzinger and Scott Douglas. Both of these runners have impeccable pedigrees and this book lets the reader in on some of their training strategies. (These guys must get on well as they have also co-written another running classic in “Advanced Marathoning“, which is also worth having in your library ; or kindle for the younger readers amongst us?)

 

My latest running book of choice.

 

My take away from this book is the way the authors describe the five workouts that runners need to improve their racing.

  • Short, Fast speedwork to improve leg turnover and running form.
  • Longer repetitions of two to six minutes at 3k to5k race pace to improve maximum oxygen uptake.
  • Tempo runs of 20 – 40 minutes at 10-mile race pace to delay lactic acid build-up.
  • Long runs to build endurance.
  • Easy recovery runs to allow top effort on hard days.

Well there you go, simple really and truth be told no major revelations. All five types of workouts/runs are ingrained in the training programmes of most, if not all, coaches. What makes a difference is using these different workouts at the right time and pace tailored to your target race distance. Common sense would dictate that for marathon running you would put more emphasis on the long runs compared to the short, fast speedwork and conversely a 5k runners would be the opposite. How Pfitzinger and Douglas add value is the way they combine these workouts tailored to improving race performance, albeit looking at Pfitzinger’s example of a two week marathon training program at the beginning of the book makes me wonder if maybe the good old fashioned ‘distance is key‘ approach is the answer.?

In fact getting the right training program suited to an individual runner is anything but simple, it is actually very complicated and this is why you need either experience or a good coach; or both I suppose. In sunny Perth there is really only one coach or choice, The Running Centre ( http://therunningcentre.com.au ) , with Raf and his team of merry trainers. I worked with Raf in 2015 and with his help I had an outstanding 2016 reaching PB’s and times I thought beyond me. His secret, he basically had me change my daily routine and build in the 5 runs mentioned above. I found initially I was good at running at around the 4min/k pace, for long periods of time,  but could not run much faster and chose not to run much slower. This training regime came about after I read an article in Runners World (I think?) about a runner who worked with coaches who decided that if you ran your marathon pace all the time when you actually raced this would be your ‘normal pace’ and thus sustainable for the duration. In the article it was actually a success with the runner achieving his target time of a sub 2hrs 40minutes marathon. I went down this running path for a period and although my results didn’t worsen I was finding the monotony of running the same pace constantly was beginning to test my love of running.

Raf put me on a training program with the ultimate goal of running a sub 2hours 40 minutes marathon and although I never achieved this target I did get very close the following year (running a 2:41:41 in 2016) using some of Raf’s training nuggets , the main one being ‘there is no such thing as junk miles’. Looking at how my training changed I can see now I was really being coerced  into incorporating the 5 different workouts described by Pfitzinger and Douglas. No longer did I run all my training runs at the same pace and the fist thing I did was add distance and drop the pace, significantly. To do this I added in double runs and I firmly believe double days (distance) unlock your running dreams. If you take nothing more than that from this post or even blog I have done you a great service. As I have always maintained the second run is about .smelling the roses’, not pace just purely distance and time on legs. I find these runs the most enjoyable these days, maybe old age creeping up  on me?

Another great run I love incorporating into my weekly schedule is the Mona Fartlek, this is so much fun and all over in twenty minutes, distance is determined on pace of course. I have written various posts on this run and have been lucky to meet the man himself a few times. ( https://www.runbkrun.com/2016/09/27/mona-fartlek-one-of-my-favourite-sessions-for-some-serious-pain-box-time/ ) I highly recommend all runners use this , or something very similar, daily in their training program. For the Tempo runs I use my 14k progressive Yelo run. As the name suggest a progressive run starts slow with each kilometre run at a slightly increased pace, culminating in a sprint to the finish at threshold pace normally, assuming all goes well. Again I’ve written a few posts on my 14k Thursday morning progressive, surprise, surprise. ( https://www.runbkrun.com/2017/11/10/progressive-runs-a-holy-grail-of-training-runs/  )

Yelo 14k progressive, it must be Thursday…always better with friends.

Easy runs with the boys on a Sunday morning is the staple diet of all runners and my favourite run of the week, well the post-run bit is my favourite bit as there is nearly always pancakes or waffles with good coffee. This is a runners reward for the two or more hours spent training (gossiping) with friends. All training programs incorporate a long run at least once a week for marathon runners and this really is the bread and butter (and waffles) of a marathon runners training program. Avoid it at your peril,  although there is the caveat that if you have enough experience and weekly distance you may be able to get away with more shorter runs on a regular basis and miss out the one long run on the weekend but why would you ?

So, to sum up this post, look at your training week and try and incorporate some, or all, of the 5 different training runs described by Pfitzinger and Douglas; you’ll be a better runner for it.

After a long run comes a long breakfast….a runners reward.


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