DopeyBadger
Imagathoner
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2015
- Messages
- 10,345
I have been curious about people’s experience with the Hanson plans. I have used several different plans over the last few years but most of them have 4 days a week of running. When I looked into the Hanson plans they are a significant uptick in running days and mileage compared to ones I have used. What was your experience changing to the Hanson plan? How many days a week and mileage were you averaging before making this switch? How are you liking it and will you continue to use them?
I cover my transition in the Fall of 2015 here in my much longer post of my history of running:
Now that Dopey #2 is behind me, it’s time to nail goal #2 – a sub 4-hour marathon
Suffice to say that the plan worked really well for me. I went from 4:50, 4:35, 4:20, 4:27, 4:58 marathon finishes to 3:38 in a span of 18 weeks. For a long time, my body tolerated the six days per week well and the pacing well. I think in the end it was a combination of things. I needed to stop doing a "PR the day" mindset and focus on appropriate training paces. And I needed to stop doing LRs that weren't supported by the rest of my training.
In the May 2015 race training plan that led to a 4:58 marathon finish, I did several 20 milers. I averaged 25.9 (4:04 hrs) miles per week in the 13 weeks prior to the race. My average training pace was 9:23 min/mile (during Winter/Spring).
In the Hansons plan that led to a 3:38, I topped out at 16 miles (which at the time was about 2.5 hrs for me). I averaged 49.5 miles (7:50 hrs) per week in the 13 weeks prior to the race. My average training pace was a 9:31 min/mile (during Summer/Fall).
I've since continued to use many of the Hansons philosophies in training (as well as a mix of others like Daniels, Fitzgerald, etc.) and continued to lower most all of my PRs far below where they were in 2015. HM PR has dropped from 1:49 to 1:28 for example.
The one thing that was most surprising during the transition from my previous plans was that despite more days per week and more mileage I actually felt better during the training. It didn't feel harder. And I think that was a function of buying into the mindset of train slow to race fast. Traditionally, my marathon tempo race pace ends up being 30-60 seconds faster than my average training pace. So I could run faster in training, but I don't.
ETA - More data
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