|
Tips for Starting an Interval Program |
|
|
|
|
Written by Contributing Author, Dave Elger
|
|
Friday, 15 June 2007 |
If you are a runner and not doing interval training at least part of
your racing season, you are not even close to performing to your
potential. Here are some basic guidelines and recommendations to get
you underway to faster times through intervals!
- Establish your endurance base first. 2-3 months of consistent training, 8 miles per week minimum, low to moderate intensity.
- You need a stopwatch and a measured distance. I recommend 400-800
meters if you are training for distances of 5K and farther. If you do
not know, 400 meters is one lap around the local high school track.
- Beginners should do no more than one interval session per week. I
suggest mid-week, which allows sufficient recovery before a weekend
race or long run.
- Shoes- I like to run intervals in the shoes that I race in. Light
weight with less support. This is a relatively short workout.
- Pace- Slightly faster than your 5K pace. If you are a 9 minute
miler, your goal pace for 400 meter intervals is to keep them under
2:15. Be conservative at first- 2:05-2:10 range.
- The single most common mistake is getting carried away and running
the first couple too fast. The goal is to keep them all within 5
seconds of each other.
- Your recovery as a beginner should be 2 minutes.
- You have 4 options for making your interval workout tougher:
- increasing the number of intervals
- decreasing the rest interval
- increasing the length of each interval
- running them faster.
- The following is a sample 6 week progression that a 9 minute miler might apply to interval training using all 4 options.
- Week 1: 6 x 400 in 2:05-2:10 2 min rest
- Week 2: 6 x 400 in 2:05-2:10 90 sec rest
- Week 3: 8 x 400 in 2:05-2:10 2 min rest
- Week 4: 8 x 400 in 2:05-2:10 90 sec rest
- Week 5: 4 x 800 in 4:20-4:25 2 min rest (longer rest is ok for this workout)
- Week 6: 6 x 400 in 2:00-2:05 2 min rest
- I like to recycle back to one specific workout to test fitness. In
this case it is the 6 x 400 workout. After 5 weeks you should find that
you are able to run your intervals at a much faster pace. By this time
you will have developed a feel for pace so run this workout hard and see what you have. You should find after a few
short weeks that you are much faster, and more importantly stronger
(your ability to maintain a faster pace)!
Regular interval training leaves you with any number of options. For
example, many runners like running ladder workouts. 200 meter, 400
meter, 600 meter, 800 meter, than back down, rather than running the
same distance all the way through each workout.
Another word of advice- pick out a key race to peak for and schedule
your intervals accordingly. After your big race, back off a bit before
rebuilding another progression.
Article Source: http://www.articles4meandu.com
Dave Elger is a well respected health and fitness authority now working
for the Wasatch Altitude Training Center in Mountain Green, Utah. For Wasatch Altitude Training Center.
|