Strength Performance Network

Middle Distance & Distance Running & Speed

Speed First! Yes you must work on speed first and foremost. It must be part of every training cycle. I find it quite amusing when I hear a runner say that I have been working on base work, but I have not started speed work yet. The problem with that approach is that they are not training to run fast, they are training to run far, and they hope that the fast will come. The inevitable result is undue soreness and greater risk of injury because of the abrupt change in the training program when they do start to run fast. The key is to never get too far away from running fast. It should be part of the first training cycle of the year and be a part of each subsequent training cycle. Speed development work can be as simple as sprint drills, light acceleration drills, or simply finishing each run with 8 –10 x 100 meter fast strides.

It may be a coaching cliché, but the winner of the race is the person who slows down the least. Therefore I think it helpful to think of running at a percentage of the individual maximum velocity. The goal in training is to continually strive to run longer at a higher percentage of peak velocity. Rather than focusing on pace, it is better to focus on distribution of effort. Races at any level are seldom run at the physiological ideal of even pace. The goal should be to distribute the effort as efficiently as possible over the entire race distance.

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Comment by John Mikula, MA, CTRS, CSCS, HFS on March 19, 2013 at 5:03am

Mr. Gambetta, I think your right on the money here with this comment.  For the group I work with, we discuss this everyday during training as part of our prep for testing the 1.5 mile run.  Too often, the trainees I work with condition themselves to run at a slow pace to tolerate a certain distance, often times which is way beyond the test distance, i.e. 1.5 miles.  What I've found that works is to take the distance out of the mindset and supplant with time.  For example, we now work on "timed" runs of 6, 8, and 12 minutes with the two primary goals being 1) run without stopping; 2) run a little further each time.  After a few sessions one goal reinforces the other and "speed" becomes the real goal vs. tolerating running a middle distance.  So far, we've found a lot of success with this formula.

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