camaker
Anything worth doing is worth overdoing
- Joined
- May 8, 2015
- Messages
- 5,002
I'm one of the folks that has worked with @DopeyBadger under the "run slow to go fast" philosophy. I'm not quite as fast as you (half marathon PR of ~1:52), but not that far off, either. I was able to use the methodology to get to a 3:57 marathon PR run with a negative split, so maintaining the effort level over the distance obviously wasn't a huge problem. For reference, I ran 5 days/week and my training looked like the following:With regards to the discussions on tempo runs, Hansons, run slow to go fast, etc., do other people not have these methods/suggestions not work for them? I've seen a big push of articles and videos recently on the "run slow to go fast" advice, but I have never had success with the "slow" pace that these methods suggest. I have tried some of those suggestions in past marathon trainings and they were the worst races I have had. I'm not a super fast runner, my marathon times are about 3:50-3:55 and halfs at 1:45-1:50. So, marathon pace is in the 9min per mile pace, which usually suggests slow pace of 10-11 minutes (the suggestion is sometimes to run 80% of your weekly mileage at that pace). The effort difference of 10-11 minute per mile paces and 9 minute paces over a marathon is pretty large, and as mentioned when I tried to follow this plan, on race day I simply could not sustain the 9 minute pace over the full course distance. It seems to me conditioning yourself with that much mileage at that much slower of a pace doesn't get you ready for the effort level you need on race day. Now, I am not saying I run every single training mile full out, but my "easy days", "slow pace" falls closer to a 9:30 minute mile, and still use speed/tempo days.
I always feel like an oddball when I hear about people on these slow paces, or read articles on the slow, long run advice, as I don't seem to be able to get it to work for me.
3 x Easy runs/wk @ 9:59-10:30/mile
1 x Tempo run @ 8:57/mile with warm-up & cool-down @ ~11:27/mile
1 x Long run @ 9:37/mile, capped at 16 miles
It did take me multiple cycles following the program to achieve the 3:57 marathon, but I saw steady improvement in my marathon times along the way. Maybe the potential need for multiple cycles is something to consider?
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