BuckeyeBama
You are stronger than you think.
- Joined
- May 29, 2013
- Messages
- 7,032
Yep - for my first marathon I used this plan and my longest pre-race run was 16 miles. I never reached the goal weekly mileage, but I did reach the 16 miles and I finished the marathon in less than 5 hours. I was overweight when I started the training and took my first running step in over 5 years on the first day of the first week of training. So, in less than 5 months I went from not running a step and needing to lose 50 pounds to running a marathon.I run using Hanson's and the max weekend mileage is 16 in the Beginner plan (peaks at 56 miles), but is dictated by the amount of miles you run in a week. The longest mileage day in a week shouldn't exceed 25-30% of the total of the week's mileage. If you run 20 miles in a week, your longest run is no more than 6 miles. If you run 80 miles in a week, your longest run is no more than 24 miles. The other caveat is that Hanson's prefers the time during running not exceed certain parameters (long run 2.5 hours, although 3 hours can happen). Thus, they wouldn't recommend a slower runner to run the 80 mile per week plan because many of the prescribed runs couldn't be completed in the allotted times. That's why you see elite runners putting in 120 miles per week. Because they are so freaking fast it takes them 20 miles at a 6 min mile to run for 120 minutes, whereas a different runner at a 12 min mile would only need to cover 10 miles to get the equivalent workout.
In other words, you don't need to run 20-30 mile long runs to prepare for a marathon.