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· Long:
Very Easy Pace. The point is to spend
time on your legs. Work on Good form
rather than speed. You should always
feel like you could have gone much farther at the end of a long run.
·
Kenyan:
Start easy. Over the second half of the
run steadily pick up the pace until you are around 5k pace or faster by the
end.
·
3-1: Take
the Length of the run and divide by 4.
The first ¾ of the run are easy, the last ¼ goes to tempo pace and gets
progressively faster to the end. Finish last
few minutes at 5k race pace or faster.
·
Moderate
Tempo: This is a steady consistent effort that is definitely not easy pace
but can also be easily sustained throughout the run. You should be breathing hard and not able to
hold a conversation the whole time but not be exhausted either. Build mental endurance and focus by not
letting yourself slack off throughout the run.
·
Thursday
Fartlek: Fartlek means “speed play” in Sweedish. These runs start with some easy running and
then alternate between hard and easy pace.
There is no walk break! Once you
start running you do not stop. The pace
changes. Ie. 10x1’ on 1’ Easy means
alternating 1 minute hard and 1 minute easy 10 times.
o
123, 321:
This is 1 minute hard, 1 easy, 2 hard, 2 easy, 3 hard, 3 easy, then reverse
starting with 3 hard, 3 easy again.
·
Strides: Using
a 100m distance accelerate for the first 1/3, sprint for the middle 1/3, and slow
down the last 1/3. Work on form and foot
speed.
·
GSW:
General Strength Workout. Follow
this link and do the General Core and Hip Strength Workouts shown. You can do the exercises without a ball or
thera band if you don’t have them at home.
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