Monday:
Three miles today followed by strength training.
Nine weeks done. Three weeks to go. You are three-quarters
through your 12-week Spring Training program--but this
is a key week: the peak of your training.
(Since Weeks 11 and 12 feature 5-K and 10-K races at
the end, I'll ask you to taper a bit for them, so you'll
actually run less.) While running your 3-miler today,
contemplate your race run yesterday. One reason for
doing an occasional race--even if you don't run that
much faster than you might in training--is to check
out the sights and sounds of the racing world. And practice
racing techniques. Races are fun. If you plan to shift
to marathon training at the end of this 12-week Spring
Training program, racing at distances between 5-K and
10-K will satisfy some of your desire to test yourself
against other runners. Try to learn from every race
you run in.
Tuesday:
Today's track workout is 10
x 400 meters, jogging and/or walking
200-400 between. Continue to focus on
your running, and don't allow your mind
to drift, particularly on the back
straightaway when the fast pace may
feel painful. I find that when
I head to the track for speedwork
early in the season, I sometimes
have difficulty keeping my mind on what
I'm doing. And this slows me down.
Usually after about three or four track
sessions, my concentration improves,
and I find myself able to run faster.
This is partly from improved muscle
conditioning, but partly because I'm
more focused. Using associative
strategies in races isn't enough. You
have to learn to associate in practice
too, particularly during speedwork
sessions.
Wednesday:
Three miles today with stretching
afterwards. You've reached a point in
this program where your workout
sessions on Tuesdays and Thursdays are
getting harder. This is because you've
learned to push yourself harder. Also,
the weather may be getting better,
allowing you to run faster. So you do
need more recovery time after a track
session and before a tough fartlek run.
Thus, make this an easier workout than
usual. Pamper yourself. In fact, today
would be a great day on which to
schedule a massage. While
I sometimes suggest you move a bit
faster on Wednesdays than on Mondays,
today is not one of those
"sometimes."
Thursday:
The fartlek workout for
today is 45 minutes. Runner-journalist
Merrill Noden once wrote: "In any
interval session--on or off the
track--you are measuring two variables:
the distance you run and the time it
takes. Real fartlek always leaves one
or both of these variables
unmeasured." As a result, Noden
concluded, you make it impossible to
pass judgment on your effort. As such,
fartlek lends itself to the
cross-country setting, because training
venues away from the track are almost
always unmarked and undefined. The
burden falls on the shoulder of each
runner to make each fartlek workout as
it good as it can get.
Friday:
Three miles followed by
strength training. And don't forget to
stretch after you run and between
lifts. Warm up is important. Research
shows that warm tissues stretch better
than cold tissues. Many runners
interpret this to mean that you jog
5-10 minutes before stopping to
stretch. Robert Forster, however,
offers another opinion. "Nobody said
you can't stretch cold
muscles," says the California
physiotherapist, who included Jackie
Joyner-Kersee among his clients. "When
people are prone to injuries--or if
they've been sitting down all day--they
need to stretch before exercise as
well." Forster recommends that runners
develop a routine that begins with some
simple pre-workout stretches, then
continues after a short jog warms the
muscles. Stretching after the workout
also is a good time to increase
flexibility. "There is no best
time to stretch," he concludes. "You
need to continually work on your
flexibility to achieve success as a
runner."
Saturday:
Thirty minutes is the recipe
for the tempo run today. Consider this
a "swing" workout. Depending on
how fatigued you are from the hard
training you did midweek, you may want
to run this in "cruise control" without
the obligation to push to your limit in
the middle. Always listen to
your body when doing workouts like
this! Maybe I should give you
permission to let your mind drift
during this run so you can consider how
far you have come since starting to
run. Individuals who have been running
for several years or more don't notice
improvements as much as beginning
runners. You may not have lost 10
pounds in the past 10 weeks. You may
not have discovered muscles you didn't
know you had. But you should begin to
notice some improvements in your
fitness level and, hopefully, some
improvement in your overall ability to
run fast because of the speed training
you've been doing. You should be able
to race better too.
Sunday:
Ten miles of running today
added to three hard days running this
week means that you will have logged
some tough miles in the last seven
days. Not necessarily long miles (since
the emphasis in this program is more on
quality than quantity), but
tough miles! And, assuming you
are training in the late spring, the
weather may be getting warmer. Unless
you're a speed demon, you're going to
be running for a relatively long period
of time today, well over an hour. And
if the weather is warm, you may
dehydrate. Take a good swig of water
just before you start to run, and if
there are any water fountains on the
course you choose, don't run past them.
You might even consider carrying a
water bottle. Dehydration becomes more
of a factor the longer you run, the
harder you run, and the higher the
temperature. It is also cumulative,
meaning you still could be somewhat
dehydrated from the running you did all
week. Nevertheless, enjoy your run.
Running
Tips: One way to benefit
from your speed sessions is to pace
yourself so that you finish each
workout faster than you began. For
example, Coach Robert Vaughan of
Dallas, Texas suggests that in a
workout featuring 400-meter repeats,
run the first 200 meters of each 400
four or five seconds slower than the
concluding 200 meters. "You shift gears
in the middle," instructs Vaughan. "You
kick at the end of each rep." There's
nothing magic about 400 reps and
nothing magic about 200 meters as the
kick point. Sometimes Vaughan has his
runners start their kicks 100 meters
out--or 300 meters out. "Our runners
seem to enjoy the pace changes," he
says. "It provides an adrenaline rush,
both in races and in workouts. Their
bodies adapt to quick shifts, and they
learn that they can go fast at the end
of a race." Running long runs faster at
the end than at the beginning is
another strategy worth pursuing.
How to Improve:
Running a marathon may be far from your thoughts,
but when you do contemplate training for a 26-mile
race, the best book to buy is Hal Higdon's Marathon: The
Ultimate Training Guide. It will help get you
to the starting line and, most important, get you
to the finish line. To order an autographed copy of
this and other books by Runner's World's best
writer go to Books
by Hal Higdon.
Copyright
© 2000 by Hal Higdon. All rights
reserved.