BuckeyeBama
You are stronger than you think.
- Joined
- May 29, 2013
- Messages
- 7,032
Lots of science which proves that you need to run based on effort or heart rate rather than pace. Why? Because changing terrain or weather conditions effect your ability to run effectively at a specific pace, but not at a specific heart rate or effort level. Today is a perfect example - it was 80 degrees outside when I ran today, and I was scheduled for a zone 3 run. Because of a business trip my last run was on Monday, but on Monday it was 55 degrees outside when I did my zone 2 run. Guess which run produced a faster pace? Yep - the zone 2 run.Question for those of you who use HR zones on your runs - do you go by the actual heart rate or do you pay attention to the zones? I was supposed to running in zone 2 last night but the heart rate I needed to be at put me in zone 4. I'm trying to adjust my watch but it's a pain. I didn't really enjoy running by HR because I felt like I was always yo-yoing the pace to match the HR. Was kind of uncomfortable. But I get the need to run to effort and not just pace - pace is just more comfortable for me. Hope that all made sense.
Both runs were on the same route and covered the same distance, but 25 degrees in temperature makes a HUGE difference. Today my heart rate was 15 bpm faster and I ran slower than on Monday. But I got the same training results, and that is all that matters. If I had pushed for a specific pace today my zone 3 run would have turned into a zone 4 or 5 run, which would have produced diminished training improvement.
Does that mean that we should never run with a specific pace goal? Nope - if you plan to race at a specific pace, you can't wait for race day to get used to it. But the running that makes you capable of running at that faster pace for extended periods of time is the slower paced running that you do every day.